Eg:
function A(){}
function B(){}
B.prototype = new A();
How can I check if the class B inherits class A?
Try the following:
ChildClass.prototype instanceof ParentClass
class
? class A extends B{}
then how can I check the inheritances of class A
A.prototype
... developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
Feb 11, 2018 at 14:58
You can test direct inheritance with
B.prototype.constructor === A
To test indirect inheritance, you may use:
B.prototype instanceof A
(this second solution was first given by Nirvana Tikku)
back to 2017:
check if that work for you
ParentClass.isPrototypeOf(ChildClass)
Alternative if you want protection against shadowing:
const isPrototypeOf = Function.call.bind(Object.prototype.isPrototypeOf);
// Usage:
isPrototypeOf(ParentClass, ChildClass); // true or false
Gotchas: Note that instanceof
does not work as expected if you use multiple execution contexts/windows. See §§.
Also, per https://johnresig.com/blog/objectgetprototypeof/, this is an alternative implementation that is identical to instanceof
:
function f(_, C) { // instanceof Polyfill
while (_ != null) {
if (_ == C.prototype)
return true;
_ = _.__proto__;
}
return false;
}
Modifying it to check the class directly gives us:
function f(ChildClass, ParentClass) {
_ = ChildClass.prototype;
while (_ != null) {
if (_ == C.prototype)
return true;
_ = _.__proto__;
}
return false;
}
instanceof
itself checks if obj.proto
is f.prototype
, thus:
function A(){};
A.prototype = Array.prototype;
[]instanceof Array // true
and:
function A(){}
_ = new A();
// then change prototype:
A.prototype = [];
/*false:*/ _ instanceof A
// then change back:
A.prototype = _.__proto__
_ instanceof A //true
and:
function A(){}; function B(){};
B.prototype=Object.prototype;
/*true:*/ new A()instanceof B
If it's not equal, proto is swapped with proto of proto in the check, then proto of proto of proto, and so on. Thus:
function A(){}; _ = new A()
_.__proto__.__proto__ = Array.prototype
g instanceof Array //true
and:
function A(){}
A.prototype.__proto__ = Array.prototype
g instanceof Array //true
and:
f=()=>{};
f.prototype=Element.prototype
document.documentElement instanceof f //true
document.documentElement.__proto__.__proto__=[];
document.documentElement instanceof f //false
It differs between class (B) and class instance (b) ...
function A(){}
function B(){}
B.prototype = new A();
const b = new B();
console.log(B.prototype instanceof A);
// true
console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(b) instanceof A);
// true
Similarly
class E extends Error {}
const e = new E();
console.log(E.prototype instanceof Error);
// true
console.log(e.constructor.prototype instanceof Error);
// true
console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(e) instanceof Error);
// true
I do not think Simon meant B.prototype = new A()
in his question, because this is certainly not the way to chain prototypes in JavaScript.
Assuming B extends A, use Object.prototype.isPrototypeOf.call(A.prototype, B.prototype)
B.prototype = new A()
was indeed a valid way to chain prototypes (for those wanting classical-style inheritance) at least before class
was introduced in ES6.
Jul 3, 2021 at 0:22
None of all others didn't work for me. ChatGPT couldn't too. I've solved by the following code.
/**
* Checks whether a given object is inherited from a specified superclass.
*
* @param {Object} object - The object to check.
* @param {Function} superClass - The superclass to compare against.
* @returns {boolean} - True if the object is a subclass of the superclass, false otherwise.
*/
isInheritedFrom(object, superClass) {
console.log(`Checking if ${object.constructor.name} is a subclass of ${superClass.name}`);
let currentProto = Object.getPrototypeOf(object.constructor);
while (currentProto) {
if (currentProto.name === superClass.name) {
console.log(`Found match for a superclass of ${object.constructor.name} with ${superClass.name}`);
// object is a subclass of the superclass
return true;
}
currentProto = Object.getPrototypeOf(currentProto);
}
console.log(`No match found for ${object.constructor.name} with ${superClass.name}`);
// object is not a subclass of the superclass
return false;
}