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Object instanceof Object
true
Object instanceof Function
true
Function instanceof Object
true
Function instanceof Function
true

so if Function is an Object and the Object is a Function how come

Function === Object and Function == Object are false?

I do understand that checking the instance of an object is not the same as comparison. So the question here is the fuzziness in the case where if two objects (which are actually types) are instances of each other, shouldn't the types be the same?

Note: Object is not an instance of a Number or an Array just an instance of Function.

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5 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

From JavaScript Prototypal Inheritance:

Quite everything, in JavaScript, inherits from Object. We could say that Object is the super class, or better, the super constructor, of every variable and that everything is an instanceof Object. The Object constructor is a Function, but a Function is an instanceof Object. This means that these assertions are always true:

(Object instanceof Function) === (Function instanceof Object)

Above example is true because Object is a constructor, and a constructor in JavaScript is always a Function. At the same time, every Function has its own prototype, and a prototype always starts its inheritance from Object.prototype. The Function constructor, is a Function itself, and the function prototype is a function(){};

(Function.prototype instanceof Object) === (function(){} instanceof Object)
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1  
+1 for saying the same thing I said but in a much more concise and easy-to-understand way. xD – Sasha Chedygov Jan 5 '10 at 0:23
Yes, great explanation! – Graza Jan 5 '10 at 10:01

Everything is an Object in JavaScript because JavaScript is an object-oriented language. Function is an instance of Object because everything is an instance of Object. Simple enough. However, objects that initialize other objects (constructors) are also Functions in JavaScript, so it would make sense for Object to also be a Function.

Think about this:

var obj = new Object();

Object in this case is used as a Function, is it not? So while, in theory, Object should be the lowest-level object in the language, JavaScript cannot function without Functions (pun!), so you need both to be at the same level. Object needs to be an instance of Function because it's a constructor and it needs to create more instances of itself.

function FooBar() {}

The FooBar class above is an instance of both Object and Function, because it's both. The same logic applies to the built-in Object and Function objects; they're instances of both.

Phew, confusing. Did that make any sense?

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Makes sense to me, but as you can probably see I had just as much trouble (unsuccessfully) trying to explain the same thing :-P – Graza Jan 5 '10 at 0:18
Haha yeah, it's not easy to explain! – Sasha Chedygov Jan 5 '10 at 0:20
It certainly makes sense given that it is Javascript, in no other language that I know of do you instantiate a function (of type Function), you only invoke it. Appreciate your effort in trying to answer the right question. – Murali Jan 5 '10 at 0:21
there are many Functional Programming languages that can have functions that generate functions LISP, LOGO, ... even BASIC! (the technique involves creating a string and embedding it in the BASIC program as a line - the embedded string would define a function) – Ekim Aug 18 '11 at 2:48

I think this is more due to the unique way in which objects are defined. You don't define a type in javascript, you define a constructor. But you also do not define the constructor as a constructor, it's simply a function.

You can then refer to the types by the name of their constructor....which is just a function.

function Tiger(){ //function, or object?
}

function Apple(){ //function, or object?
}

Both could be objects, or perhaps just functions. Only the way you use them will determine that. So it kind of makes sense that at a low level, objects are functions and functions are objects, but there is still a difference, right?

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Regarding your comment method or object, it is definitely not a method unless it is called with some scope. – Murali Jan 5 '10 at 0:26
Ah, yes, is this a terminology clash here - would "//FUNCTION, or Object?" be a better comment? – Graza Jan 5 '10 at 0:30
Fixed it for you. :) – Sasha Chedygov Jan 5 '10 at 0:39
 javascript:alert([ window.navigator.userAgent, Object ].join("\n\n") )

displays

Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.2.3) Gecko/20100423 
    Ubuntu/10.04 (lucid) Firefox/3.6.3

function Object() {
    [native code]
}

reference: Is every JavaScript Object a function?

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javascript:alert(Function) displays function Function() { [native code] } – Ekim Aug 18 '11 at 2:57

instanceof operator indicates if the first argument is of the given type. That is saying

 A instanceof B

returns true if A is an instance of the type B.

The == and === operators are comparison operators on the other hand. They compare values for equality.

For instance, you can say jack instanceof Boy is true but would you say that jack == boy? No.

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The OP's question is more about how Object and Function can be instances of each other and not be the same thing. – Sasha Chedygov Jan 5 '10 at 0:18

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