Every JavaScript object has a prototype. The prototype is also an object.
All JavaScript objects inherit their properties and methods from their prototype.
All JavaScript objects inherit the properties and methods from their prototype.
Objects created using an object literal, or with new Object(), inherit from a prototype called Object.prototype.
Objects created with new Date() inherit the Date.prototype.
The Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype chain.
All JavaScript objects (Date, Array, RegExp, Function, ....) inherit from the Object.prototype.
The standard way to create an object prototype is to use an object constructor function:
With a constructor function, you can use the new keyword to create new objects from the same prototype:
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The constructor function is the prototype for your person objects. |
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Sometimes you want to add new properties (or methods) to an existing object.
Sometimes you want to add new properties (or methods) to all existing objects of a given type.
Sometimes you want to add new properties (or methods) to an object prototype.
Adding a new property to an existing object is easy:
The property will be added to myFather. Not to myMother. Not to any other person objects.
Adding a new method to an existing object is also easy:
The method will be added to myFather. Not to myMother.
You cannot add a new property to a prototype the same way as you add a new property to an existing object, because the prototype is not an existing object.
To add a new property to a constructor, you must add it to the constructor function:
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Prototype properties can have prototype values (default values). |
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Your constructor function can also define methods:
The JavaScript prototype property allows you to add new properties to an existing prototype:
The JavaScript prototype property also allows you to add new methods to an existing prototype:
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Only modify your own prototypes. Never modify the prototypes of standard JavaScript objects. |
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