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All the ExtJS documentation and examples I have read suggest calling superclass methods like this:

MyApp.MyPanel = Ext.extend(Ext.Panel, {
  initComponent: function() {
    // do something MyPanel specific here...
    MyApp.MyPanel.superclass.initComponent.call(this);
  }
});

I have been using this pattern for quite some time and the main problem is, that when you rename your class then you also have to change all the calls to superclass methods. That's quite inconvenient, often I will forget and then I have to track down strange errors.

But reading the source of Ext.extend() I discovered, that instead I could use the superclass() or super() methods that Ext.extend() adds to the prototype:

MyApp.MyPanel = Ext.extend(Ext.Panel, {
  initComponent: function() {
    // do something MyPanel specific here...
    this.superclass().initComponent.call(this);
  }
});

In this code renaming MyPanel to something else is simple - I just have to change the one line.

But I have doubts...

  • I haven't seen this documented anywhere and the old wisdom says, I shouldn't rely on undocumented behaviour.

  • I didn't found a single use of these superclass() and supr() methods in ExtJS source code. Why create them when you aren't going to use them?

  • Maybe these methods were used in some older version of ExtJS but are deprecated now? But it seems such a useful feature, why would you deprecate it?

So, should I use these methods or not?

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70% accept rate
Actually, could you try this.constructor.superclass.initComponent.call(this); ? – neonski Nov 12 at 21:24
Thanks, but this has the same problem that Jabe described - it works for only one level of hierarchy. – Rene Saarsoo Nov 13 at 8:44

3 Answers

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Yes indeed, supr() isn't documented. I've been looking forward to using it in ExtJS 3.0.0 (an Ext staff member replied in the forums, they had added it in that version), but it seems horribly broken.

It currently does not traverse the inheritance hierarchy, but rather go up one level, then gets stuck on this level, loops endlessly and blows up the stack (IIRC). So, if you have two or more supr() in a row, your app will break. I have not found any useful information on supr() in neither the docs nor the forums.

I don't know about the maintenance releases 3.0.x, since I did not get an support license ...

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Thanks, it indeed doesn't work for multiple levels of inheritance hierarchy. FYI: nothing has changed in this regard in 3.0.3. – Rene Saarsoo Nov 13 at 8:47
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You could use this little known Javascript feature (arguments.callee):

MyApp.MyPanel = Ext.extend(Ext.Panel, {
    constructor: function() {
        // Do your thing
        this.thing = 1;

        // Call super
        arguments.callee.superclass.constructor.apply(this, arguments);
    }
});

see MDC documentation

Edit: Actually, this isn't going to work with initComponent because it isn't the constructor. I always override the constructor, personally (despite what Ext JS examples suggest). Will continue to think about this one a bit.

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Callee is deprecated. – Jabe Nov 12 at 20:51
JavaScript 1.4: Deprecated callee as a property of Function.arguments, retained it as a property of a function's local arguments variable. Not the same thing! – neonski Nov 12 at 20:56
Ah, sorry, you are right. I had it confused with the completely deprecated 'caller'. Removing callee would be quite a mess. – Jabe Nov 12 at 21:12
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Guy what u write is very bad, this kind of use will break what u want do in case deep inheritance. first method is ok.

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