42

I am not asking if this is okay:

Object.prototype.method = function(){};

This is deemed evil by pretty much everyone, considering it messes up for(var i in obj).

The Real Question

Ignoring

  • Incompetent browsers(browsers that don't support Object.defineProperty)
  • Potential for property collision or overriding

Assuming you have some incredibly useful method, is this considered wrong/unethical?

Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, 'methodOnSteriods',{
  value: function(){ /* */ },
  writable: true,
  configurable: true,
  enumerable: false
});

If you believe the above is unethical, why would they even implement the feature in the first place?

2
  • Would this defineProperty setting propagate up the prototype chain or only apply to the actual Object.prototype object? In other words, if you happen to set somevar = {mthodOnSteroids:'mistakeVal'}, will you have lost the define'd settings like 'enumerable: false' for somevar? Jul 29, 2011 at 18:07
  • 1
    @XHR yup, you do lose your method. For example var cards = {forEach:'son'}; cards.forEach(function(){});//world exploids And yes you do loose enumerable:false for examlpe: for(var i in cards)console.log(i); outputs 'forEach'
    – Lime
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:09

5 Answers 5

27

UPDATE from 2021

Despite this being the accepted answer, 10 years of experience has taught me this isn't the best idea. Pretty much anything you can do to avoid polluting the global scope is a very very good thing.

Original answer below, for posterity, and because stack overflow will not let me delete an accepted answer.


Original answer from 2011

I think it's fine if it works in your target environment.

Also I think prototype extension paranoia is overblown. As long as you use hasOwnProperty() like a good developer that it's all fine. Worst case, you overload that property elsewhere and lose the method. But that's your own fault if you do that.

5
  • 2
    I believe Object.prototype specifically can have weird edge-case side effects. But I'm not sure whether that's restricted to legacy browsers. Extending any other prototype is safe.
    – Raynos
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:02
  • Has it been considered to implement PlainObject. Basically var obj = {};Object.defineProperty(PlainObject,'method',{enumerable:false});obj.methd();
    – Lime
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:07
  • 1
  • Wow 10 years is a long time. I'm a bit embarrassed by this answer. I should probably delete it.
    – Alex Wayne
    Sep 3, 2021 at 23:45
  • 1
    10 years ago, I would probably have upvoted it :-) Things change, and ES6+ has shown us how extending prototypes the wrong way can block language evolution.
    – Bergi
    Sep 3, 2021 at 23:48
11

I'd say this is almost as evil as before. The biggest problem, still the same as before, is that Object.prototype is global. While your method might currently be solving world peace, it might have overwriten someone else's method (that was guaranteeing galactic peace) or may be overwritten in the future by some library you have no control over (therefore plunging the world into chaos again)


New versions of Javascript have lots of features related to properties, such as definig a property to be enumerable/not enumerable, having getters and setters... Object.defineProperty existis to give control over this.

From Mozilla Docs:

This method allows precise addition to or modification of a property on an object. Normal property addition through assignment creates properties which show up during property enumeration (for...in loop), whose values may be changed, and which may be deleted. This method allows these extra details to be changed from their defaults.


This new function is basically required to support the new features and you are supposed to use it on your own stuff. Being able to modify Object.prototype is just a side effect of it also being a "normal" object and is just as evil as before.

6
  • Could you reread the question, because I fail to see how this helps? Modifying Object.prototype in both forms is evil, or just one?
    – Lime
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:02
  • Doesn't answer the question at all.
    – Raynos
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:03
  • @missingno What if the method name consists of 220 random numbers/charecters ? :D Property collision is then highly unlikely :P
    – Lime
    Jul 29, 2011 at 18:28
  • Most of the time a plain old function will do the trick, while being safer and namespaced. If you really need to use it as a method (with this) you can use function.apply or function.call.
    – hugomg
    Jul 29, 2011 at 19:07
  • 1
    Chaining can make code look awesome but it is perfectly possible to live without it.
    – hugomg
    Jul 29, 2011 at 22:51
4

Well in "JavaScript: the good parts", there is a similar function, i think that is very usefull to improve javascript base objects (like String, Date, etc..), but just for that.

// Add a method conditionally. from "JavaScript: the good parts"

Function.prototype.method = function (name, func) {
    if (!this.prototype[name]) {
        this.prototype[name] = func;
    }
}
3

.hasOwnProperty() will exclude iteration through inherited properties, which I personally find is often more annoying than helpful. It largely defeats the usefulness of Object.create()—which is ironic since the same guy who convinced everyone to do .hasOwnProperty() also promoted Object.create().

Object.prototype should not be extended, for the reasons listed here. If you really do want to extend it, then make the extensions non-iterable.

I realize this flies in the face of all of the published best-practices, but we really should stop “mandating” .hasOwnProperty() on object key iterations and embrace the usefulness of direct object-to-object inheritance.

0

The short answer is Yes, you should do it.

Before doing it, there are several precautions need to take:
1. using hasOwnProperty when iterating object, but this isn't really a precautions, when iterating object, I am already using hasOwnProperty anyway.
2. check if the name in Object.prototype.name has existed, this is very safe to avoid name collision.
3. take advantage of Object.defineProperty(), just add extra safeguard layer.

As you can see, it's not very complicated.

Now comes the advantages once you have taken care of the risks/disadvantages:
1. method chaining, this just makes code more readable, terse, and making coding more enjoyable. In turn makes you happier, and your life easier.
2. solves the browser compatibility issue, you are doing polyfill anyway.

P.S.:
Don't do it when working with a large team for sure.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.