Updated Answer:
From your comment below, replying to my statment that this.log()
should work:
Well, so that's the thing. When I'm in Child's test function, this
is an empty object, so I'm assuming somewhere down the line I'm not getting the proper scope.
You haven't shown how you're calling test
, but I suspect that's where the problem is. Provided you call it via a Child
instance:
var c = new Child();
c.test();
...then within the call, this
will be the child instance, which will inherit (indirectly) the Parent.prototype
object with its log
property.
But how you call it is important. This wouldn't work, for instance:
var c = new Child();
var f = c.test;
f();
If you do that, within the call to the function, this
will be the global object (or undefined
if you're in strict mode), not a Child
instance. This is because in JavaScript, this
is set primarily by how a function is called, and calling it like that doesn't set this
to what you want.
This matters for callbacks, because passing in c.test
as a callback:
someFunctionThatUsesACallback(c.test);
...means the code calling back won't set this
for you.
If you need to do that, Function#bind
will help:
var f = c.test.bind(c); // Returns a version of c.test that, when called,
// will have `this` set to `c`
f(); // Works, `this` is the `Child` instance
And similarly:
someFunctionThatUsesACallback(c.test.bind(c));
More (on my blog):
Original Answer:
If you set up the prototype hierarchy correctly, and Child.prototype
doesn't have log
on it (and you don't put a log
property on instances), then you should be able to use this.log();
just fine. If you can't, then the hierarchy hasn't been set up correctly.
I don't know what util.inherits
does, but setting up the relationship between Child
and Parent
correctly isn't complicated:
function Parent() {
}
Parent.prototype.log = function() {
console.log("log called");
};
function Child () {
Parent.call(this);
}
Child.prototype = Object.create(Parent.prototype);
Child.prototype.constructor = Child; // This line is largely optional, but a good idea
// Usage
var c = new Child();
c.log(); // "log called"
But if you override log
in your Child.prototype
or assign a log
property to instances, and you want to use Parent
's version of log
, then of course you can't just use this.log()
because the property doesn't refer to Parent.prototype.log
anymore.
When you need to call the parent version of something (I call them "supercalls," and I don't think that's original), you have to do more work:
I usually set up hierarchies like this by passing the parent constructor into a function I use to build the child, e.g.:
var Child = (function(Super) {
var pp = Super.prototype;
function Child() {
}
Child.prototype = Object.create(pp);
Child.prototype.doSomething = function() {
// Call `log` with appropriate `this`
pp.log.call(this);
};
return Child;
})(Parent);
By always using that pattern, I avoid having to write Parent
inside the Child
code (I use the Super
arg instead), so if I need to rebase Child
, I just change what I pass into the function.
Because that's fairly ugly (for instance, it's unclear at the top of Child
that it derives from Parent
, since Parent
is at the bottom) and involves boilerplate code I don't feel the need to write again every time, I wrote a simple helper script for it I call Lineage
, which makes it look like this:
var Child = Lineage.define(Parent, function(p, pp) {
p.doSomething = function() {
// Call `log` with appropriate `this`
pp.log.call(this);
};
});
Note that Lineage
passes in both the Child
and Parent
prototypes as arguments, making it concise to use them (and since you get to pick those argumetn names, you can use whatever terminology works for you — I use p
for the prototype of the "class" being created [Child
in the above], and pp
for the parent's prototype, etc.).
this
has the wrong value during the call tolog
?this.log()
just fails and crashes the server, but I put it in to show what I was trying and wanted.