4

Below are my javascript code

function extend(Child, Parent) {

    var F = function(){};
    F.prototype = Parent.prototype;
    Child.prototype = new F();
    Child.prototype.constructor = Child;
}
function BController (){
} 
function AController (){
    BController.call(this);
} 

AController.prototype.dosomething=function(){
} 

if I call

 var g=new AController();
 g.dosomething ();

everything is fine. But if I call (I hope AContronller inherits BController)

 extend(AController,BController);
 var g=new AController();
 g.dosomething ();

it always reports

g.dosomething is not a function

Method 2: if I change Acontroller as

function AController ( ){
   this.dosomethingNew=function(){

   }
} 

and call

 extend(AController,BController);
 var g=new AController();
 g.dosomethingNew ();

it will be fine.

Your comment welcome

1 Answer 1

2

You've put the call to extend in the wrong place. At the time extend is called, you're overwriting the entire prototype of AController, and losing dosomething in the process.

Instead, you want to call extend before you add all of the things specific to AController.

So it should look like this:

function BController ( ){  
} // <--- no semicolon after function declarations

function AController (){
   BController.call(this);
} // <---- remove here too

extend(AController, BController);  //  <---- HERE
//Now AController's prototype is a new object whose prototype 
//is BController's prototype, thereby inheriting everything from 
//BController.  Now you may add specific stuff to AController 

AController.prototype.dosomething = function(){

};

Here's a functioning demo

11
  • I like to put the things concern a class to one place, just likes method 2 (I have updated the question), but it will occupy more memory than the way prototype, is it right?
    – arachide
    Aug 10, 2013 at 18:11
  • @arachide Try this, it will not waste any memory jsfiddle.net/SPXwZ and has everything about a class in one place :P
    – Esailija
    Aug 10, 2013 at 18:12
  • I changed Acontroller to
    – arachide
    Aug 10, 2013 at 18:36
  • var AController = (function() { var p = AController.prototype; function AController() { } p.dosomething = function() { }; return AController; })();
    – arachide
    Aug 10, 2013 at 18:37
  • 1
    @arachide you have seriously misunderstood. Using closures does not mean you waste memory. The reason defining functions in a constructor wastes memory is because you define functions in a constructor, not because of any closure. You can even define non-closures in a constructor and the memory waste will be the same. Sigh. Defining functions in a constructor is the problem, not closures. Functions have observable identity and are for example in V8 extremely fat objects, that's why it takes a lot of memory to hold tons of wasted fat identities around that point to same code.
    – Esailija
    Aug 10, 2013 at 19:05

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