I'm trying to understand the difference between the 3 following functions. I came up with a few "conclusions" after a day on MDN and other sources and I was wondering if anybody could help me validate them. Thank you :)
BLOCK #1 (prototype-based constructor function example)
function Person (name){
this.name = name;
this.greeting = function(){
alert(this.name);
};
}
var person = new Person('Bob');
BLOCK #2 (another prototype-based constructor function example)
function Person(name) {
this.name = name;
}
Person.prototype.greeting = function() {
alert(this.name);
}
let person = new Person("Bob");
BLOCK #3 (prototype-based ES6 class example)
class Person {
constructor(name) {
this.name = name;
}
greeting() {
alert(this.name);
}
}
let person = new Person("Bob");
Questions:
The three functions add the name and greeting members to the Person object prototype. Is this statement correct?
Code in Block #3 uses the new ES6 class keyword and works "behind the scenes" in a different way compared to the code in Block #1 and Block #2. (PS. I'm writing "behind the scenes" because I don't have yet a clear view of what happens under the hood when I call the function, but for the time being I assume I am too new to deep dive).
Code in Block #1 and Block #2 reach the same and work "behind the scenes" in the same way. The difference in the code between the two is that in Block #1 we keep both the
name
variable and the functiongreeting
in the same block of code, while in Block #2 we keep the functiongreeting
separate from the variablename
(adding thegreeting
function to the Person prototype, usingPerson.prototype.greeting
)Using
Person.prototype.greeting = function () {...}
in Block #2, we achieve the same result as puttingthis.greeting = function (...)
belowthis.name
in Block #1
Thank you!
Person.prototype.greeting = function () {...}
, we achieve the same result as puttingthis.greeting = function (...)
belowthis.name
" - no