2

I have an object:

function Shape(color, position, coordinates){
    this.color = color;
    this.position = position;
    this.coordinates = coordinates;
    this.shrink = function(){
        reduce(coordinates);
    };
};

And one of many objects with a 'is a' relationship to the previous object.

function Sphere(color, position, coordinates, radius){
    this.radius = radius;
    this.role = function(){
        move(coordinates);
    };
};

And a separate Draw function which draws the shapes

function draw(shape){
    moveTo(shape.position);
    setColor(shape.color);
    sketch(shape.coordinates);
}; 

I know I should try use composition where possible but in some cases such as the one above, inheritance is a much more fitting model.

Without frameworks and as simply as possible how could I use prototypal inheritance or any other form to inherit the functionality and attributes of shape so I don't have to redefine them for every shape type I create and be able to pass arguments into the constructor of the inheriters object so they are passed to the object being inherited from.

EDIT

I searched the posts with similar titles and non of them provided examples regarding my specific situation, passing arguments in constructor and inheriting variables and functions. Also I find answer regarding this subject tend to present multiple options and I was looking for a more definitive answer on the standard approach (by way of example)

With regard to the so called definitive answer Performing inheritance in JavaScript I find that if I was to define all my attributes as described in prototype functions my script would be a mess, also it doesn't present what to do with arguments passed to the constructor.

18
  • 1
  • @Ajai, "...you could definitely guess this out (prototyping)..." what do you mean exactly? Because the standard prototype property of a constructor only lets you define "class variables" (if I may use this term, by lack of a better one). Mar 12, 2012 at 21:49
  • To be fair about the votes, the question is fairly useful and clear. On the other hand, it doesn't show any research effort.
    – outis
    Mar 12, 2012 at 21:49
  • @whatsthebeef: note the syntax you have when setting methods within the constructor is wrong; you've reversed function and the method name. Since you're setting a property to an anonymous function, it should be this.shrink = function() {...}. Better still, set the methods on the prototype: Shape.prototype.shrink = ....
    – outis
    Mar 12, 2012 at 21:52
  • ... CMS' answer to "Performing Inheritance in Javascript" is the definitive one. Posting the same question, hoping for different answers isn't how SO works; it's supposed to be a sort of giant collection of FAQs. And be careful about your tone; Ajai may not have been kind, but that doesn't give you license to call him names.
    – outis
    Mar 12, 2012 at 21:54

2 Answers 2

1

Javascript does not have any native construct to achieve this. However, there are utility libraries that help you achieve this.

If you're interested in doing this, take a look at Dean Edward's Base library:

http://dean.edwards.name/weblog/2006/03/base/

You can probably use this as is to achieve what you want. At any rate, I can recommend every javascript prorammer to to read that code and try to understand how it works - it will make you a better programmer.

A very simple solution that does not rely on inheritance at all and also solves the problem of passing in the arguments would be to use object literals as arguments. To assign you simply copy all of the fields from the object literal like so:

//copy instance variables from source to target 
function copyInstanceVars(source, target){
    var p,v;
    for (p in source){
        if (source.hasOwnProperty(p)) {
            v = source[p];
            target[p] = v;
        }
    }
    return target;
}

//Shape, base class.
var Shape;
(Shape = function(config) {
    copyInstanceVars(config, this);  //copy instance variables from the config
}).prototype = {          //class members go in the prototype
    shrink: function(){
        reduce(coordinates);
    }
};

//Sphere, subclass of Shape
var Sphere;
(Sphere = function(config){
    Shape.apply(this, arguments);
}).prototype = copyInstanceVars(Shape.prototype, {  //inherit methods from Shape
    role: function(){
        move(coordinates);
    };
});

Then, when instantiating the objects, you'd do:

var shape = new Shape({
    color: "blue",
    ...,
    coordinates: {x:10, y:20}
});

var sphere = new Sphere({
    color: "blue",
    ...,
    ...,
    radius: 10
});

So, in this case, the instance variables are simply those fields present in whatever you pass into the constructor, and the copyInstanceVars function takes care of this copy process. (the hasOwnProperty check in there ensures we're only grabbing instance variables).

This example also illustrates how to inherit methods by using that same copyInstanceVars function. But this time we apply it to the prototype of the constructor (because we "declared" the methods as instance variables on the prototype)

1
  • Thanks, I find the code example makes what is a standard and simple operation in other languages look a little hacky. However I suspect this is the way it is with javascript inheritance (which was the reason behind writing what seemed like a duplicate question). The link you sent is very interesting, it specifies my problem clearer than I could and provides confirmation that my problem isn't completely down to a lack of understanding. I am still working through what's there and perhaps I will try out this base library or alternatively push all the variables into the prototype chain Mar 13, 2012 at 14:32
1

I generally find that parasitic inheritance is the easiest option in JavaScript:

function Sphere(color, position, coordinates, radius){
    var shape = new Shape(color, position, coordinates);
    shape.radius = radius;
    shape.role = function(){
        move(coordinates);
    };
    return shape;
};

The big downside is that you don't get to use the prototype chain - attaching methods to Sphere.prototype won't make them available on new Sphere instances.

3
  • This is what I began with but besides the lake of availability through prototyping the other problem was; code quickly became quite verbose when there were a lot of attributes. Mar 13, 2012 at 14:19
  • In that case, it's often a good idea to move to an options object instead of individual arguments: new Shape(options), new Sphere(options), etc. Then you just call the super constructor with the options object, and you don't have to keep track of constructor signatures. Mar 13, 2012 at 16:58
  • I like the simplicity, obviously ignoring the security implications and assuming there won't be a deep inheritance tree I could just make this.shape and expose the prototype functions this way. Mar 13, 2012 at 17:15

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