1

I've noticed that when using bind on an object, you lose the ability to access the prototype.

function Foo(obj) {
    this.fields = obj;
}

function Make(obj) {
    return Foo.bind(Foo, obj); 
}

var Test = Make({
    name: 'Jeff' 
});

console.log(Test.prototype);

Here's the same example not using bind:

function Foo(obj) {
    this.fields = obj;
}

function Make(obj) {
    return Foo; 
}

var Test = Make({
    name: 'Jeff' 
});

console.log(Test.prototype);

Are there any ways around this?

2
  • What are you actually trying to accomplish? There's no way around it as the question is written, but if we knew WHY you want to use bind and access the prototype you'll probably get several answers. Mar 14, 2015 at 20:39
  • if you see ECMAScript® Language Specification: NOTE Function objects created using Function.prototype.bind do not have a prototype property or the [[Code]], [[FormalParameters]], and [[Scope]] internal properties.
    – Grundy
    Mar 14, 2015 at 20:58

1 Answer 1

0

So judging by the docs. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Function/bind

Bind ties a function to a specific object so that variables inside that object are always used. so when you're calling console.log in your example you're logging the prototype of the function Test. Not the object Test. So you get undefined.

In order to get the object you want try this:

console.log(new Test())

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