new
is not a function call, F()
is. You could do something like this, replacing F
with your own delegate.
function F() {
this.init = function () { alert(0) }
}
var oldF = F;
F = function() {
oldF.apply(this, arguments);
this.init = function() { alert(1); };
};
new F().init();
If you want a utility function to do this kind of thing:
function wrap(constructor, config) {
return function() {
constructor.apply(this, arguments);
for (var key in config) {
this[key] = config[key];
}
}
}
F = wrap(F, {init: function() { alert(1); }});
or use one of many frameworks/libraries (ExtJS, jQuery, Prototype) that provides this stuff.
Following discussion
This can start you off on what you're trying to do, but I don't guarantee it works in all situations or implementations (only tested on V8). You could pass the context in which F exists as an additional parameter, or make sure you apply/bind/call extend
with it.
function extend(constructor, config) {
this[constructor.name] = function() {
constructor.apply(this, arguments);
for (var key in config) {
this[key] = config[key];
}
}
}
extend(F, {init: function() { alert(1); }});