I am noticing some behaviour in the code below that I can't explain. I'm hoping that someone can enlighten me about why this is happening.
The code example below is available on JSFiddle as well if that's easier to read. https://jsfiddle.net/0b5rh4cg/
Code:
function Book() {
};
function Book (title, author) {
this.title = title;
this.author = author;
};
Book.prototype = {
title: "",
ISBN: "isbn",
length: 100,
genre: "genre",
covering: "covering",
author: "author",
currentPage: 0,
toString: function toString() {
console.log("toString Function");
console.log('Title: ' + this.title + '\n' +
'ISBN: ' + this.ISBN + '\n' +
'length: ' + this.length + '\n' +
'genre: ' + this.genre + '\n' +
'covering: ' + this.covering + '\n' +
'author: ' + this.author + '\n' +
'currentPage: ' + this.currentPage + '\n');
}
};
var book1 = new Book();
book1.toString();
var book2 = new Book("First edition", "Random");
book2.toString();
Output of book1.toString() toString Function Title: undefined ISBN: isbn length: 100 genre: genre covering: covering author: undefined currentPage: 0
Output of book2.toString() toString Function Title: First edition ISBN: isbn length: 100 genre: genre covering: covering author: Random currentPage: 0
My confusion surrounds the author and title fields. In the null constructor, these fields default to "undefined" instead of the ones set out in the prototype for the Book class.
Thanks to anyone who helps with this.
Cheers, Cam.
book
overwrites the first.