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I have a small snippet of code that assigns a prototype property and an object property using the same name. Accessing this testNumber after creating the object will always show the object property, which I understand as it will first look for the property on the object and then in the objects prototype, and then the protoype's prototype etc.

But my question is, is there any way to directly access the property of the prototype in this case? [Just a note, I don't know when I would actually need to do this in practice, but it's simply something I'd like to find out for my own sanity].

function MyObject1(formalParameter){

    this.testNumber = formalParameter;
}

​MyObject1.prototype.testNumber​ = 55;

var mine = new MyObject1(10);
alert(mine.testNumber);

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You could access the prototype through the instance's constructor property:

alert(mine.constructor.prototype.testNumber);

Won't work if you've done weird things with the prototype without preserving its constructor property, or if you have an instance property called constructor for some reason.

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  • Thanks, that's exactly what I was looking for. But can you explain what you mean by "If you've done weird things"? Weird things such as what?
    – Nealbo
    May 31, 2012 at 11:18
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    When you create a constructor, its prototype object is initialized with a constructor property pointing back to the constructor function. If you simply add methods to the prototype you'll be fine, but if you replace the entire prototype (e.g. Func.prototype = { ... }), you will need to restore that constructor property yourself (Func.prototype.constructor = Func after you've redefined the prototype).
    – lanzz
    May 31, 2012 at 11:19
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    The constructor property is writeable, so you can change it's value, say to reference some other object. Also, the constructor might be assigned a different prototype, so that obj[[Prototype]] is not the current constructor.prototype.
    – RobG
    May 31, 2012 at 11:21

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