What is the 'new' keyword in JavaScript?
The new
keyword in JavaScript can be quite confusing when it is first encountered, as people tend to think that JavaScript is not an object-oriented programming language.
It does 5 things:
this
variable point to the newly created object. this
is mentioned. null
object reference. In this case, that object reference is returned instead. Note: constructor function refers the function after the new
keyword, as in
new ConstructorFunction(arg1, arg2)
Once this is done, if an undefined property of the new object is requested, the script will check the object's [[prototype]] object for the property instead. This is how you can get something similar to traditional class inheritance in JavaScript.
The most difficult part about this is point number 2. Every object (including functions) has this internal property called [[prototype]]. It can only be set at object creation time, either with new, with Object.create, or based on the literal (functions default to Function.prototype, numbers to Number.prototype, etc.). It can only be read with Object.getPrototypeOf(someObject). There is no other way to set or read this value.
Functions, in addition to the hidden [[prototype]] property, also have a property called prototype, and it is this that you can access, and modify, to provide inherited properties and methods for the objects you make.
Here is an example:
ObjMaker = function() {this.a = 'first';};
// ObjMaker is just a function, there's nothing special about it that makes
// it a constructor.
ObjMaker.prototype.b = 'second';
// like all functions, ObjMaker has an accessible prototype property that
// we can alter. I just added a property called 'b' to it. Like
// all objects, ObjMaker also has an inaccessible [[prototype]] property
// that we can't do anything with
obj1 = new ObjMaker();
// 3 things just happened.
// A new, empty object was created called obj1. At first obj1 was the same
// as {}. The [[prototype]] property of obj1 was then set to the current
// object value of the ObjMaker.prototype (if ObjMaker.prototype is later
// assigned a new object value, obj1's [[prototype]] will not change, but you
// can alter the properties of ObjMaker.prototype to add to both the
// prototype and [[prototype]]). The ObjMaker function was executed, with
// obj1 in place of this... so obj1.a was set to 'first'.
obj1.a;
// returns 'first'
obj1.b;
// obj1 doesn't have a property called 'b', so JavaScript checks
// its [[prototype]]. Its [[prototype]] is the same as ObjMaker.prototype
// ObjMaker.prototype has a property called 'b' with value 'second'
// returns 'second'
It's like class inheritance because now, any objects you make using new ObjMaker()
will also appear to have inherited the 'b' property.
If you want something like a subclass, then you do this:
SubObjMaker = function () {};
SubObjMaker.prototype = new ObjMaker(); // note: this pattern is deprecated!
// Because we used 'new', the [[prototype]] property of SubObjMaker.prototype
// is now set to the object value of ObjMaker.prototype.
// The modern way to do this is with Object.create(), which was added in ECMAScript 5:
// SubObjMaker.prototype = Object.create(ObjMaker.prototype);
SubObjMaker.prototype.c = 'third';
obj2 = new SubObjMaker();
// [[prototype]] property of obj2 is now set to SubObjMaker.prototype
// Remember that the [[prototype]] property of SubObjMaker.prototype
// is ObjMaker.prototype. So now obj2 has a prototype chain!
// obj2 ---> SubObjMaker.prototype ---> ObjMaker.prototype
obj2.c;
// returns 'third', from SubObjMaker.prototype
obj2.b;
// returns 'second', from ObjMaker.prototype
obj2.a;
// returns 'first', from SubObjMaker.prototype, because SubObjMaker.prototype
// was created with the ObjMaker function, which assigned a for us
I read a ton of rubbish on this subject before finally finding this page, where this is explained very well with nice diagrams.
Suppose you have this function:
var Foo = function(){
this.A = 1;
this.B = 2;
};
If you call this as a standalone function like so:
Foo();
Executing this function will add two properties to the window
object ( A
and B
). It adds it to the window
because window
is the object that called the function when you execute it like that, and this
in a function is the object that called the function. In Javascript at least.
Now, call it like this with new
:
var bar = new Foo();
What happens when you add new
to a function call is that a new object is created (just var bar = new Object()
) and that the this
within the function points to the new Object
you just created, instead of to the object that called the function. So bar
is now an object with the properties A
and B
. Any function can be a constructor, it just doesn't always make sense.
In addition to Daniel Howard's answer, here is what new
does (or at least seems to do):
function New(func) {
var res = {};
if (func.prototype !== null) {
res.__proto__ = func.prototype;
}
var ret = func.apply(res, Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1));
if ((typeof ret === "object" || typeof ret === "function") && ret !== null) {
return ret;
}
return res;
}
While
var obj = New(A, 1, 2);
is equivalent to
var obj = new A(1, 2);
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