I'm messing around with the prototype chain and noticed something I can't explain. I'm still learning all of this, so it's probably a mistake i've made. I'm trying to do some multi-inheritance, like so many others. I noticed the prototype object looks a lot like a hash/dictionary, I thought, why not use something like underscore.extend to merge multiple prototype objects together as one.
function A(){this.value="A";};
A.prototype.funcA = function (){console.log(this.value);}
function B(){this.value="B";};
B.prototype.funcB = function (){console.log(this.value);}
function C(){
// fix constructor
this.constructor = C;
// 'inherit' properties
A.call(this);
B.call(this);
};
// gobble up the prototype chains of A and B
C.prototype = new underscore.extend(A.prototype,B.prototype);
C.prototype.funcC = function (){console.log(this.value);}
var c = new C();
> c instanceof C
true
> c instanceof A
true
> c instanceof B
false
I'm really surprised to get a true at all here. Can anyone explain what's going on here?
UPDATE I removed underscore's extend method from the code, as suggested, and this works a lot better. thanks!
function extend(destination, source) {
for (var property in source) {
if (source.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
destination[property] = source[property];
}
}
return destination;
};
function A(){this.value="A";};
A.prototype.funcA = function (){console.log(this.value);}
function B(){this.value="B";};
B.prototype.funcB = function (){console.log(this.value);}
function C(){
this.constructor = C;
A.call(this);
B.call(this);
};
var destination = {};
destination = extend(destination,A.prototype);
destination = extend(destination,B.prototype);
C.prototype = destination;
C.prototype.funcC = function (){console.log(this.value);}
var c = new C();
> c
{ constructor: [Function: C], value: 'B' }
> c instanceof A
false
> c instanceof B
false
> c instanceof C
true
new underscore.extend(…)
.extend()
returns an object, not a constructor, so it shouldn't work to instantiate it withnew
- as far as I can tell…> A.prototype { funcA: [Function], funcB: [Function], funcC: [Function] }
looks the the prototype is being altered after the underscore.extend call. interesting. I'll merge them the hard way i guess :)extend()
both modifies and returns the 1st argument. So you're extending A.prototype with B.prototype, and using that very same object (A.prototype) as C.prototype, and then adding to that same object after that. So it makes sense that A.prototype contains all threefunc*
methods. But I still don't quite understand why thenew
line isn't throwing a TypeError