You get that error because onload
is an accessor property defined in HTMLElement.prototype
.
You are supposed to call the accessor only on HTML elements, but you are calling the setter on HTMLImageElement.prototype
, which is not an HTML element.
If you want to define that function, use defineProperty
instead.
Object.defineProperty(HTMLImageElement.prototype, 'onload', {
configurable: true,
enumerable: true,
value: function () {
console.log(this, "loaded");
}
});
var img = new Image();
img.onload();
Warning: Messing with builtin prototypes is bad practice.
However, that only defines a function. The function won't be magically called when the image is loaded, even if the function is named onload
.
That's because even listeners are internal things. It's not that, when an image is loaded, the browser calls the onload
method. Instead, when you set the onload
method, that function is internally stored as an event listener, and when the image is loaded the browser runs the load
event listeners.
Instead, the proper way would be using Web Components to create a custom element:
var proto = Object.create(HTMLElement.prototype);
proto.createdCallback = function() {
var img = document.createElement('img');
img.src = this.getAttribute('src');
img.addEventListener('load', function() {
console.log('loaded');
});
this.appendChild(img);
};
document.registerElement('my-img', {prototype: proto});
<my-img src="/favicon.ico"></my-img>
There is not much browser support yet, though.
onload
exists forHTMLImageElement.prototype
or not. You should never add custom functionality by modifying the prototype of native objects, and should avoid to do so for objects that you don't own (e.g. of foreign libraries), except if they give you a defined why how you should do it.