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In another question, a user pointed out that the new keyword was dangerous to use and proposed a solution to object creation that did not use 'new'... I didn't believe that was true, mostly because I've used Prototype, Scriptaculous and other excellent JavaScript libraries, and everyone of them used the new keyword...

In spite of that, yesterday I was watching Douglas Crockford's talk at YUI theater and he said the exactly same thing, that he didn't use the new keyword anymore in his code.

Is it 'bad' to use the new keyword? what are the advantages and disadvantages of using it?

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8 Answers

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Crockford has done a lot to popularize good JavaScript techniques. His opinionated stance on key elements of the language have sparked many useful discussions. That said, there are far too many people that take each proclamation of "bad" or "harmful" as gospel, refusing to look beyond one man's opinion. It can be a bit frustrating at times.

Use of the functionality provided by the new keyword has several advantages over building each object from scratch:

  1. Prototype inheritance. While often looked at with a mix of suspicion and derision by those accustom to class-based OO languages, JavaScript's native inheritance technique is a simple and surprisingly effective means of code re-use. And the new keyword is the canonical (and only available cross-platform) means of using it.
  2. Performance. This is a side-effect of #1: if i want to add 10 methods to every object i create, i could just write a creation function that manually assigns each method to each new object... Or, i could assign them to the creation function's prototype and use new to stamp out new objects. Not only is this faster (no code needed for each and every method on the prototype), it avoids ballooning each object with separate properties for each method. On slower machines (or especially, slower JS interpreters) when many objects being created this can mean a significant savings in time and memory.

And yes, new has one one crucial disadvantage, ably described by other answers: if you forget to use it, your code will break without warning. Fortunately, that disadvantage is easily mitigated - simply add a bit of code to the function itself:

function foo()
{
   // if user accidentally omits the new keyword, this will 
   // silently correct the problem...
   if ( !(this instanceof foo) )
      return new foo();

   // constructor logic follows...
}

Now you can have the advantages of new without having to worry about problems caused by accidentally misuse. You could even add an assertion to the check if the thought of broken code silently working bothers you. Or, as some commented, use the check to introduce a runtime exception:

if ( !(this instanceof arguments.callee) ) 
   throw Error("Constructor called as a function");

(Note that this snippet is able to avoid hard-coding the constructor function name, as unlike the previous example it has no need to actually instantiate the object - therefore, it can be copied into each target function without modification.)

John Resig goes into detail on this technique in his Simple "Class" Instantiation post, as well as including a means of building this behavior into your "classes" by default. Definitely worth a read... as is his upcoming book, Secrets of the JavaScript Ninja, which finds hidden gold in this and many other "harmful" features of the JavaScript language (the chapter on with is especially enlightening for those of us who initially dismissed this much-maligned feature as a gimmick).

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if (!(this instanceof arguments.callee)) throw Error("Constructor called as a function");// More generic, don't require knowledge of the constructors name, make the user fix the code. – some Dec 20 '08 at 17:47
@some: Yes! If you're able to test and correct client code, then that would be an excellent choice. – Shog9 Dec 20 '08 at 18:00
@Shog9, thanks - excellent comment (learned something new)! – orip Dec 20 '08 at 19:38
Shog could you edit the answer and give some detail about the advantages of 'new' you mention (speed and full use of prototypes)? I believe this is the most correct answer and I'd mark it as accepted answer if only that things were explained a bit more. Thanks :) – Pablo Fernandez Dec 21 '08 at 23:02
@Pablo - done. That said, i'm not sure you should accept an answer here; of course, that's up to you, but it seems like a bit of a subjective discussion. – Shog9 Dec 22 '08 at 4:29
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I have just read some parts of his Crockfords book "Javascript: The Good Parts". I get the feeling that he considers everything that ever has bitten him as harmful:

About switch fall through:

I never allow switch cases to fall through to the next case. I once found a bug in my code caused by an unintended fall through immediately after having made a vigorous speech about why fall through was sometimes useful. (page 97, ISBN 978-0-596-51774-8)

About ++ and --

The ++ (increment) and -- (decrement) operators have been known to contribute to bad code by encouraging exessive trickiness. They are second only to faulty architecture in enabling viruses and other security menaces. (page 122)

About new:

If you forget to include the new prefix when calling a constructor function, then this will not be bound to the new object. Sadly, this will be bound to the global object, so instead of augmenting your new object, you will be clobbering global variables. That is really bad. There is no compile warning, and there is no runtime warning. (page 49)

There are more, but I hope you get the picture.

My answer to your question: No, it's not harmful. but if you forget to use it when you should you could have some problems. If you are developing in a good environment you notice that.

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I completely agree. The solution: Always document how users have to instantiate your objects. Use an example and users will likely cut/paste. There are constructs/features in every language that can be misused resulting in unusual/unexpected behavior. It doesn't make them harmful. – nicerobot Dec 20 '08 at 15:52
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There is a convention to always start constructors with an upper case letter, and all other functions with a lower case letter. – some Dec 20 '08 at 15:59
I just realized that Crockford don't consider WHILE harmful... I don't know how many time I have created an infinitive loop because I have forgot to increment a variable... – some Dec 20 '08 at 16:01
Given two equivalent ways of doing something, you'd choose the more dangerous method, just because you can? – Greg Dean Dec 20 '08 at 16:07
@Greg Dean: That was not was I said. I don't think new is harmful nor continue, ++, --, ==, != and labels on for, while and switch. – some Dec 20 '08 at 16:14
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Javascript being dynamic language there a zillion ways to mess up where another language would stop you.

Avoiding a fundemental language feature such as new on the basis that you might mess up is a bit like removing your shiny new shoes before walking through a minefield just in case you might get your shoes muddy.

I use a convention where function names begin with a lower case letter and 'functions' that are actually class definitions begin with a upper case letter. The result is a really quite compelling visual clue that the 'syntax' is wrong:-

var o = MyClass();  // this is clearly wrong.

On top of this good naming habits help. After all functions do things and therefore there should be a verb in its name whereas classes represent objects and are nouns and adjectives with no verb.

var o = chair() // Executing chair is daft.
var o = createChair() // makes sense.

Its interesting how SO's syntax colouring has interpretted the code above.

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Yeah, I was just thinking the same thing about the syntax coloring. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 20 '08 at 18:00
Word, Anthony. Word. – PEZ Dec 20 '08 at 18:26
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I think "new" adds clarity to the code. And clarity is worth everything. Good to know there are pitfalls, but avoiding them by avoiding clarity doesn't seem like the way for me.

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Another case for new is what I call Pooh Coding. Winnie the Pooh follows his tummy. I say go with the language you are using, not against it.

Chances are that the maintainers of the language will optimize the language for the idioms they try to encourage. If they put a new keyword into the language they probably think it makes sense to be clear when creating a new instance.

Code written following the language's intentions will increase in efficiency with each release. And code avoiding the key constructs of the language will suffer with time.

EDIT: And this goes well beyond performance. I can't count the times I've heard (or said) "why the hell did they do that?" when finding strange looking code. It often turns out that at the time when the code was written there was some "good" reason for it. Following the Tao of the language is your best insurance for not having your code ridiculed some years from now.

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+1 for the Pooh Coding link - now i need to find excuses to work this into my conversations... – Shog9 Dec 20 '08 at 19:06
LOL! I have years of experience in that particular field and I can assure you that you'll find no difficulties. They often call me Pooh over at robowiki.net. =) – PEZ Dec 20 '08 at 19:22
Don't know if you'll ever see this comment, but that Pooh Coding link is dead. – Calvin Apr 26 at 23:50
Thanks for the heads up. We migrated robowiki.net to a new wiki last week and the old content is unreachable at the moment. I'll hurry up with making those old links work. – PEZ Apr 30 at 7:38
Excellent! Thanks for the new (to me) terminology. I've explained this to people a number of times but never in only 2 words. – pluckyglen May 14 at 21:50
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The rationale behind not using the new keyword, is simple:

By not using it at all, you avoid the pitfall that comes with accidentally omitting it. The construction pattern that YUI uses, is an example of how you can avoid the new keyword altogether"

var foo = function () {
    var pub= { };
    return pub;
}
var bar = foo();

Alternatively you could so this:

function foo() { }
var bar = new foo();

But by doing so you run risk of someone forgetting to use the new keyword, and the this operator being all fubar. AFAIK there is no agvantage to doing this (other than you are used to it).

At The End Of The Day: It's about being defensive. Can you use the new statement? Yes. Does it make your code more dangerous? Yes.

If you have ever written C++, it's akin to setting pointers to NULL after you delete them.

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are those two pieces of code EXACTLY equivalent? – Pablo Fernandez Dec 20 '08 at 16:26
No. With "new foo()" some properties are set on the returned object, like constructor. – some Dec 20 '08 at 16:44
It's the same, I just omitted any initialization for brevity. – Greg Dean Dec 20 '08 at 17:00
So, just to make this clear: you shouldn’t use “new” because you might forget it? You are kidding, right? – Bombe Dec 20 '08 at 17:08
@Bombe : in other languages forgetting "new" would result in an error. In Javascript, it just keeps on trucking. You can forget, and never realise. And simply looking at erroroneous code wont be obvious at all whats going wrong. – Kent Fredric Dec 20 '08 at 17:14
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I am newbie to Javascript so maybe I am just not too experienced in providing a good view point to this. Yet I want to share my view on this "new" thing.

I have come from the C# world where using the keyword "new" is so natural that it is the factory design pattern that looks weired to me.

When I first code in Javascript, I don't realize that there is the "new" keyword and code like the one in YUI pattern and it doesn't take me long to run into disaster. I lose track of what a particular line is supposed to be doing when looking back the code I've written. More chaotic is that my mind can't really transit between object instances boundaries when I am "dry-running" the code.

Then, I found the "new" keyword which to me, it "separate" things. With the new keyword, it creates things. Without the new keyword, I know I won't confuse it with creating things unless the function I am invoking gives me strong clues of that.

For instance, with var bar=foo(); I have no clues as what bar could possibly be.... Is it a return value or is it a newly created object? But with var bar = new foo(); I know for sure bar is an object.

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+1 and welcome to SO! – some Dec 22 '08 at 17:50
Agreed, and I believe the factory pattern should follow a naming convention like makeFoo() – pluckyglen May 14 at 21:55
+1 - the presence of 'new' gives a clearer statement of intent. – belugabob Jun 17 at 7:24
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I agree with pez and some here.

It seems obvious to me that "new" is self descriptive object creation, where the YUI pattern Greg Dean describes is completely obscured.

The possibility someone could write var bar = foo; or var bar = baz(); where baz isn't an object creating method seems far more dangerous.

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