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I'm doing some experiences with OOP in JavaScript. My goal is to have a parent object which holds methods common to several other objects, which inherit from that parent object. Thing is, I want the parent objects' methods to be able to read the childrens' fields.

I use the following function for inheritance:

Function.prototype.inherits=function(obj){this.prototype=new obj();}

These are some example objects:

function Genetic(c){
    this.code=c;
}
//My 'parent object':
function Animal(){
    this.getCode=function(){
        return(genetic.code);
    }
}
g=new Genetic('test');
function Dog(){
    genetic=g;
}
Dog.inherits(Animal);
g=new Genetic('foo');
function Cat(){
    genetic=g;
}
Cat.inherits(Animal);

d=new Dog();
c=new Cat();

Now, I expect d.getCode() to return 'test', and c.getCode() to return 'foo'. Problem is, both return 'foo'. The variable genetic is in the Animal scope, and not in the Dog/Cat scope. Meaning that whenever I create a new object that inherits from Animal, the genetic variable will be overridden. Proof:

function Bla(){}
Bla.inherits(Animal);
bla=new Bla()
bla.getCode() //Returns 'foo'

I can set the genetic variable to being a private variable of Dog and Cat with var:

function Dog(){
    var genetic=g;
}

Problem is, since genetic is now private to Dog, it can't be accessed by the Animal object, rendering the whole inheritance pointless.

Do you see any way to solve that?

EDIT: Also, I want gentic to be private, so that it can't be modified in Dog/Cat instances.

1 Answer 1

3

The variable 'genetic' is in the Animal scope, and not in the Dog/Cat scope.

No, genetic is global. There exists only one genetic variable in your whole application. Make it a property of the object.

Furthermore, a better way of inheritance is the following:

function inherits(Child, Parent) {
    var Tmp = function(){};
    TMP.prototype = Parent.prototype;
    Child.prototype = new Tmp();
    Child.prototype.constructor = Child;
}

Then you can have the parent constructor accept arguments and don't have to repeat code:

//My 'parent object':
function Animal(g){
    this.genetic = g;
}

Animal.prototype.getCode = function() {
    return this.genetic.code;
}

function Dog(){
    Animal.apply(this, arguments);
}
inherits(Dog, Animal);

function Cat(){
    Animal.apply(this, arguments);
}
inherits(Cat, Animal);

var d = new Dog(new Genetic('test'));
var c = new Cat(new Genetic('foo'));

I would advice to document your code properly and rather follow a clear prototype/inheritance chain than trying to do something the language is not designed for.

However, with the inherits function given above, you could do:

function Animal(g){
    var genetic = g

    this.getCode = function(){
        return genetic.code ;
    }
}

with the rest of the code staying the same. Then you have your "private" variable at the cost of every instance having its own getCode function.

Edit: This would not let you access genetic in any function assigned to Dog or Cat, unless you also keep a reference to the value in their constructors.

3
  • You're right, but I want the variable to be private, so it can't be modified after creation! With the code you wrote, I could just do: d.genetic.code='whadup bro';
    – Alex
    Sep 8, 2011 at 18:17
  • Ok, thanks, so what I tried to do is not possible... Could you please explain the difference of the inherit function you gave me?
    – Alex
    Sep 8, 2011 at 18:35
  • @Alex: Your function assigns an Animal instance as prototype to Cat and Dog. This works, but only if Animal does not expect any arguments. My function assigns Animal's prototype instead (via a temporary constructor to "decouple" the prototypes). You have to call the parent constructor in the children's constructor, but the relationship is cleaner. This is a common pattern used by various libraries. Sep 8, 2011 at 18:39

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