If I can use obj.constructor.prototype to access the prototype of an object
You can't in general. Consider how this approach works:
var proto = MyConstructor.prototype;
// has an (nonenumberable) property "constructor"
proto.hasOwnProperty("constructor"); // `true`
// that points [back] to
proto.constructor; // `function MyConstructor() {…}`
As you see, that's a circular property structure. When you do
var o = new MyConstructor();
// and access
o.constructor; // `function MyConstructor() {…}`
// then it yields the value that is inherited from `proto`
// as `o` doesn't have that property itself:
o.hasOwnProperty("constructor"); // `false`
But that only works for object like o
that inherit the constructor
property from their prototype object and where that has a useful value with something pointing to the prototype object. Think of
var o = {};
o.constructor = {prototype: o};
Oops. Accessing o.constructor.prototype
yields o
itself here, and it could have been any other nonsensical value. The structure actually is the same as above with MyConstructor.prototype
- and if you access proto.constructor.prototype.constructor.prototype[.constructor.prototype…]
you won't get anything else than just proto
.
then why can't I use obj.constructor.prototype.constructor.prototype
to traverse the prototype chain and have to use Object.getPrototypeOf
?
Because you're trapped in the circular structure as MyConstructor.prototype
) has that constructor
property itself and not inherited from Object.prototype
. For really getting the next object the true prototype chain, you have to use Object.getPrototypeOf
.
var o = new MyConstructor();
console.log(o.constructor.prototype) // MyConstructor
It should have been MyConstructor.prototype
actually. Chrome console sometimes gets confused at displaying useful titles for unnamed objects though, and is not always correct.
If you get its prototype, it should yield Object.prototype
, and when you get the prototype of the MyConstructor
function itself it should be Function.prototype
. Notice that you can do the latter by MyConstructor.constructor.prototype
again…