I'm working my way through Douglas Crockford's JavaScript: The Good Parts and I ran into something in Chapter 4, Functions, which I'm not quite grasping.
Near the beginning of the chapter:
Function Objects
Functions in JavaScript are objects. Objects are collections of name/value pairs having a hidden link to a prototype object. Objects produced from object literals are linked to Object.prototype. Function objects are linked to Function.prototype (which is itself linked to Object.prototype).
Now this seemed pretty straightforward until I tried this:
console.log({}.prototype); // => undefined, ???
console.log({key: 'val'}.prototype); // => undefined
console.log(Object.prototype); // => [object Object]
console.log(function(){}.prototype); // => [object Object]
console.log(Function.prototype); // => function Empty() {}
console.log(function(){}.prototype === Function.prototype); // => false
console.log(function(){}.prototype === Object.prototype); // => false
Can somebody interpret this in light of the excerpt? Based on what I read, object literals should have prototypes and they should be linked in some way to Object.prototype. Additionally, shouldn't there be some link between function(){}.prototype and Function.prototype? And what is the link between Function.prototype and Object.prototype?