Suppose you are creating the data type and expose its behavior.
Can you give some examples of when would you use:
a function & new:
// define new data type var CustomDataType= function(){ this.a='whatever'; this.doX= function(){/*some code*/}; } // create a new instance of our custom data type var obj= new customDataType();
an object literal & Object.create:
// define new data type var customDataType = { a: 'whatever', doX: function(){/*some code*/} } // create a new instance of our custom data type var obj= Object.create(customDataType);
a function that builds your object:
function customDataTypeFactory(options){ return { a: 'whatever', doX: function(){/*some code*/} } }; // create a new instance of our custom data type var obj= customDataTypeFactory(options);
I feel this could be labeled duplicate for: new
vs Object.create
but my main interest is not in discussing which one is better but rather to know if there are specific use cases where one should be preferred over the others.
I have read many posts on related questions and the book from Crockford: Javascript: the good parts. So far I have concluded that it is a matter of preference, tough the advice from Crockford resonates a lot with me to me: "try to avoid the features that are dangerous and unnecessary"... I'm talking about new
.
new
, andinstanceof
will work to identify that object. The third one doesn't require the use ofnew
, butinstanceof
won't be as useful. The second one again inherits the properties, so building several objects that way will all share the data, and all the objects will observe updates to the inherited object.this.doX=
should bedoX :
in the last two snippets