2

Say I have the following:

var Car = function() {
}
Car.prototype.config = {
    color: 'red'
}
Car.prototype.color = 'red';

var car1 = new Car();
var car2 = new Car();
car1.config.color = 'green';
car1.color = 'green';
console.log(car2.config.color) //green but expected red
console.log(car2.color) //red as expected

Anyone knows why prototype object properties act as 'static' properties?

1 Answer 1

3

Regarding car2.config.color :

That's expected because all the instance of Car share the same prototype, and thus the same properties of that prototype. So when you change one, you change the other ones.

In fact that's the point : it lets you for example have one unique function (prototype is most often used for functions) for all instances, which is cheaper.

If you want to have distinct config, don't attach it to the prototype but to the instance.

Regarding car2.color :

You expected it, so maybe I don't need to explain it, but here's what happens :

  • when you don't set car.color, reading that property looks for the prototype chain until a property with that name is found, so it returns 'red'.
  • when you set car.color, reading it, by the same process, returns this property you've set
1
  • 1
    Great and simple explanation.
    – sybear
    Nov 5, 2013 at 19:48

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