Since when we declare a function we get its prototype's constructor property point to the function itself, is it a bad practice to overwrite function's prototype like so:
function LolCat() {
}
// at this point LolCat.prototype.constructor === LolCat
LolCat.prototype = {
hello: function () {
alert('meow!');
}
// other method declarations go here as well
};
// But now LolCat.prototype.constructor no longer points to LolCat function itself
var cat = new LolCat();
cat.hello(); // alerts 'meow!', as expected
cat instanceof LolCat // returns true, as expected
This is not how I do it, I still prefer the following approach
LolCat.prototype.hello = function () { ... }
but I often see other people doing this.
So are there any implications or drawbacks by removing the constructor reference from the prototype by overwriting the function's prototype object for the sake of convenience as in the first example?