4

Im wondering which way of using OOP in Javascript ist best way to go with.

There is this prototype thing and you have the function style way. But both have very bad ways to inherit a base class.

So I tried to build a way to make this possible without having to use prototype and such.

function Car(name) {
    this.Name = name;

    this.FullName = function () {
        return this.Name;
    }
}

function SpecialCar(name, variant) {
    //BaseClass.apply(this, PARAMS AS ARRAY);
    Car.apply( this, [name] );

    //new property
    this.Variant = variant;

    //override function
    this.FullName = function () {
        return this.Name + " " + this.Variant ;
    }
}

var audi = new Car("audi");
$("#result").append(audi.FullName() + "<br>");

var audia3 = new SpecialCar("audi", "a3");
$("#result").append(audia3.FullName()+ "<br>");

You can check the jsFiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/vu9ZF/2/

Is this okay or is it just bad-practice?

Would be very nice to get some answers why other ways are better because I just dont get it.

EDIT: Thank you all for answering me so fast! I was trying to find some way of OOP in javascript for myself, not answering on how to do oop in javascript. I dont like the way of using prototype for that because im using c# most of my worktime and its a bit confusing to switch between "c#-like oop" and "prototype oop". But someone in the comments told me that avoiding prototype isnt a good idea, soo ill drop that.

Thanks stackoverflow your all awesome & saved me so much time =)

10
  • I'd checkout Mootools if I were you. It has a Class system built into into thats very easy to understand.
    – Dampsquid
    Feb 23, 2012 at 14:50
  • :/ I cant use other frameworks than kendoui and jquery in my project Feb 23, 2012 at 14:51
  • @ChaosPandion Because its completely different than in other languages. Feb 23, 2012 at 14:52
  • 2
    @SSchnitzler - Think about it for a second... does that reason make much sense logically? Feb 23, 2012 at 14:53
  • 1
    @SSchnitzler that's because it is a different language. It is not C(++|#) or Java and will require learning new ways of doing things to use correctly.
    – dtanders
    Feb 23, 2012 at 14:56

5 Answers 5

4

This is how it's done:

function Car ( name ) {
    this.name = name;
}

Car.prototype.fullName = function () {
    return this.name;
}

function SpecialCar ( name, variant ) {
    Car.apply( this, arguments );
    this.variant = variant;
}

SpecialCar.prototype = Object.create( Car.prototype );

SpecialCar.prototype.fullName = function () {
    return this.name + ' ' + this.variant;
}; 

(You need to shim Object.create for IE8)

Live demo: http://jsfiddle.net/3Rehr/


So, the methods should be assigned to the constructor's prototype object, not to the instances themselves.

Also, in order to pre-process the instance with the super-constructor, simply do this:

Car.apply( this, arguments );

so the this.base thing is not needed.

14
  • I know how to do classes and how to inherit them. Its just that i want to know why its done this way and if my way is bad practice. But anyway thanks for your answer. My way shown above works too. Feb 23, 2012 at 14:55
  • I believe he wants to know why other ways are better?
    – Ramesh
    Feb 23, 2012 at 14:56
  • @SSchnitzler The code shown in your question is not optimal. You're assigning the methods directly to the instances. You want to assign the methods to the constructor's prototypes instead. Also, the this.base is also not optimal. You can work with the this value directly. Feb 23, 2012 at 14:59
  • 1
    @SSchnitzler Ah, I see, you explicitly tried to avoid the prototype objects. Well, that is definitely not a good idea. The methods should be inherited from the prototype. That way, there exists only one instance of each method which is inherited by all instances. Feb 23, 2012 at 15:01
  • 1
    @SSchnitzler Just look at my answer. The Car.prototype.fullName has to be outside of the constructor's body. Also, you need to manually set up the inheritance (B.prototype = Object.create( A.prototype );. It's all in my answer. Feb 23, 2012 at 15:32
3

It's not particularly recommandable because you actually return a Car instance and not a SpecialCar instance.

audia3 instanceof Car === true;
audia3 instanceof SpecialCar === false;

This is confusing because you do execute new SpecialCar. Also properties of SpecialCar.prototype wouldn't be available on the instance, but you seem to be using a custom inheritance copying pattern.

2
  • Ooh, good point. +1. I've abandoned all pretense of a reliable instanceof, but still, it's a good point.
    – Ryan Kinal
    Feb 23, 2012 at 15:04
  • instanceof is reliable, it's just the way he did inheritance is wrong. Jan 21, 2013 at 16:37
3

The way I usually go is the one described in this page

It gives the code a more structured link, even thou I like the feature in your code of being able to call the parent's constructor.

function Car( name ) {
  this.Name = name;
}

Car.prototype.FullName = function FullName() {
  return this.Name;
}


function SpecialCar( name, variant ) {
  this.Name = name;
  this.Variant = variant;
}

SpecialCar.prototype = new Car();
SpecialCar.constructor = SpecialCar;

SpecialCar.prototype.FullName = function FullName() {
  return this.Name + " " + this.Variant; 
}
2
  • What's the difference between SpecialCar.prototype = Object.create( Car.prototype ); and how you did it: SpecialCar.prototype = new Car(); SpecialCar.constructor = SpecialCar;, is there no shim required for IE8? Jan 21, 2013 at 16:39
  • 1
    @Knownasilya Using Object.create is the proper way to set up inheritance. new Car() also works but it it flawed as it pollutes the object with unnecessary instance properties (.Name in this case). And yes, you'll need to polyfill Object.create for IE8 (use es5-shim). Jan 21, 2013 at 17:26
2

As far as the constructor pattern goes, I actually prefer your method, rather than using apply or anything similar. It might get a little confusing due to the necessity of return, but it doesn't feel quite as dirty as apply to me.

However, I prefer using prototypal inheritance a little more directly, with Object.create:

var Car = {
    fullName: function() {
        return this.name;
    }
}

var SpecialCar = Object.create(Car);
SpecialCar.fullName = function() {
    return this.name + ' ' + this.variant;
};

var audi = Object.create(Car);
audi.name = 'audi';

var audiA3 = Object.create(SpecialCar);
audiA3.name = 'audi';
audiA3.variant = 'A3';

Some browsers don't support Object.create natively, but it is shimmable.

2
  • Your code won't work - the second argument of Object.create has to be a hash of property descriptors. A simple hash of properties is not valid. So: Object.create( Car, { fullName: { value: function () { ... }, enumerable: true }); Feb 23, 2012 at 15:16
  • 2
    Although I wish that your method was valid. Property descriptors suck :P Feb 23, 2012 at 15:22
1

This is how I would do it. Needs some sugar code for it to work. You can find OoJs on github. OoJs covers most of the OOP features from C++, except for multiple inheritance and enforcing pure virtual functions...

;( function class_Car( namespace )
{
    'use strict';

    if( namespace.Car ) return    // protect against double inclusions

        namespace.Car = Car
    var Static        = TidBits.OoJs.setupClass( namespace, "Car" )


    // constructor
    //
    function Car( name )
    {
        this.Name = name               // data member, private by default

        return this.Public( FullName ) // method FullName will be public
    }


    function FullName()
    {
        return this.Name;
    }

})( window )




;( function class_SpecialCar( namespace )
{
    'use strict';

    if( namespace.SpecialCar ) return    // protect against double inclusions

        namespace.SpecialCar = SpecialCar
    var Static               = TidBits.OoJs.setupClass( namespace, "SpecialCar", "Car" )


    // constructor
    //
    function SpecialCar( name, variant )
    {
        this.Super( name )

        this.Variant = variant

        return this.Public( FullName )
    }


    function FullName()
    {
        return this.Car.FullName() + " " + this.Variant
    }

})( window )


var audi = new Car("audi");
$("#result").append(audi.FullName() + "<br>"); // output: audi

var audia3 = new SpecialCar("audi", "a3");
$("#result").append(audia3.FullName()+ "<br>"); // output: audi a3

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