4

I always get the following exception in Firefox (3.6.14):

TypeError: Object.create is not a function

It is quite confusing because I am pretty sure it is a function and the code works as intended on Chrome.

The lines of code responsible for this behavior are the following:

Object.create( Hand ).init( cardArr );
Object.create( Card ).init( value, suit );

It is from a poker library gaga.js if someone wants to see all the code: https://github.com/SlexAxton/gaga.js

Maybe someone knows how to get it working in Firefox?

1
  • Alex is on SO now and then so maybe he'll answer :-)
    – Pointy
    Mar 4, 2011 at 20:54

3 Answers 3

13

Object.create() is a new feature of EMCAScript5. Sadly it is not widely supported with native code.

Though you should be able to add non-native support with this snippet.

if (typeof Object.create === 'undefined') {
    Object.create = function (o) { 
        function F() {} 
        F.prototype = o; 
        return new F(); 
    };
}

Which I believe is from Crockford's Javascript: The Good Parts.

1
  • 5
    I wouldn't recommend the Crockford's Object.create shim, since there are some things that the ES5 Object.create method can do and there's no way to emulate on an ES3 environment... With this kind of shims one ends up having two inconsistent implementations, the native and expected ES5 method, and a non-standard one. More info Mar 4, 2011 at 21:04
0

Object.create is part of ES5 and only available in Firefox 4.

As long as you are not doing any add-on development for browsers, you should not expect browsers to implement ES5 features (especially older browsers). You'd have to provide your own implementation then (like the own provided by @Squeegy).

0

I use this way(also working in ECMAScript 3):-

function customCreateObject(p) {
   if (p == null) throw TypeError(); // p must be a non-null object
   if (Object.create)  // If Object.create() is defined...
     return Object.create(p);  // then just use it.
   var t = typeof p; // Otherwise do some more type checking
   if (t !== "object" && t !== "function") throw TypeError();
    function f() {}; // Define a dummy constructor function.
   f.prototype = p; // Set its prototype property to p.
   return new f(); // Use f() to create an "heir" of p.
}

var obj = { eid: 1,name:'Xyz' };
customCreateObject(obj);

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