I am new to JavaScript OOP. Can you please explain me what the difference is between the following blocks of code. I tested and both blocks work. What's the best practice and why?
First block:
function Car(name){
this.Name = name;
}
Car.prototype.Drive = function(){
document.write("My name is " + this.Name + " and I'm driving. <br />");
}
SuperCar.prototype = new Car();
SuperCar.prototype.constructor = SuperCar;
function SuperCar(name){
Car.call(this, name);
}
SuperCar.prototype.Fly = function(){
document.write("My name is " + this.Name + " and I'm flying! <br />");
}
var myCar = new Car("Car");
myCar.Drive();
var mySuperCar = new SuperCar("SuperCar");
mySuperCar.Drive();
mySuperCar.Fly();
Second block:
function Car(name){
this.Name = name;
this.Drive = function(){
document.write("My name is " + this.Name + " and I'm driving. <br />");
}
}
SuperCar.prototype = new Car();
function SuperCar(name){
Car.call(this, name);
this.Fly = function(){
document.write("My name is " + this.Name + " and I'm flying! <br />");
}
}
var myCar = new Car("Car");
myCar.Drive();
var mySuperCar = new SuperCar("SuperCar");
mySuperCar.Drive();
mySuperCar.Fly();
Why does the author add Drive and Fly methods using prototype, but doesn't declare them as this.Drive method inside Car class and this.Fly in SuperCar class?
Why does SuperCar.prototype.constructor need to be set back to SuperCar? Is constructor property overridden when prototype is set? I commented out this line and nothing changed.
Why call Car.call(this, name); in SuperCar constructor? Won't properties and methods of Car be 'inherited' when I do
var myCar = new Car("Car");
