JavaScript Object Constructors

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JavaScript Object Constructors

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JavaScript Object Constructors



Example

function Person(first, last, age, eye) {
  this.firstName = first;
  this.lastName = last;
  this.age = age;
  this.eyeColor = eye;
}

Try
it yourself »

Notes
It is considered good practice to name constructor functions with an upper-case first letter.
About this
In a constructor function this does not have a value.
It is a substitute for the new object. The value of this will become the new object when
a new object is created.
See Also:
The JavaScript this Tutorial


Object Types (Blueprints) (Classes)
The examples from the previous chapters are limited. They only create single objects.
Sometimes we need a "blueprint" for creating many objects of the same "type".
The way to create an "object type", is to use an object constructor function.
In the example above, function Person() is an object constructor function.
Objects of the same type are created by calling the constructor function with the new keyword:


const myFather = new Person("John", "Doe", 50, "blue");
const myMother = new Person("Sally", "Rally", 48, "green");

Try
it yourself »








What is this?
In JavaScript, the this keyword refers to an object.
Which object depends on how this is being invoked (used or called).
The this keyword refers to different objects depending on how it is used:

In an object method, this refers to the object.
Alone, this refers to the global object.
In a function, this refers to the global object.
In a function, in strict mode, this is undefined.
In an event, this refers to the element that received the event.
Methods like call(), apply(),
and bind() can refer this to any object.


Note
this is not a variable. It is a keyword. You cannot change the value of this.


See Also:
The JavaScript this Tutorial


Adding a Property to an Object
Adding a new property to an existing object is easy:

Example

myFather.nationality = "English";

Try it Yourself »

The property will be added to myFather. Not to myMother. (Not to any other person objects).

Adding a Method to an Object
Adding a new method to an existing object is easy:

Example

myFather.name = function () {  return this.firstName + " " + this.lastName;};

Try it Yourself »

The method will be added to myFather. Not to myMother. (Not to any other person objects).

Adding a Property to a Constructor
You cannot add a new property to an object constructor the same way you
add a new property to an existing object:

Example

Person.nationality = "English";

Try it Yourself »

To add a new property to a constructor, you must add it to the
constructor function:

Example

function Person(first, last, age, eyecolor) {
 
this.firstName = first;
 
this.lastName = last;
 
this.age = age;
  this.eyeColor = eyecolor;  this.nationality = "English";
}

Try it Yourself »


This way object properties can have default values.


Adding a Method to a Constructor
Your constructor function can also define methods:

Example

function Person(first, last, age, eyecolor) {
 
this.firstName = first;
 
this.lastName = last;
 
this.age = age;
 
this.eyeColor = eyecolor;  this.name = function() {
    return this.firstName + " " + this.lastName;
  };
}

Try it Yourself »

You cannot add a new method to an object constructor the same way you add a
new method to an existing object.
Adding methods to an object constructor must be done inside the
constructor function:

Example

function Person(firstName, lastName, age, eyeColor) {
  this.firstName = firstName; 
 
this.lastName = lastName;
 
this.age = age;
  this.eyeColor = eyeColor;
  this.changeName = function (name) {
   
this.lastName = name;
  };
}
The changeName() function assigns the value of name to the person's
lastName property.

Now You Can Try:

myMother.changeName("Doe");
Try it Yourself »

JavaScript knows which person you are
talking about by "substituting" this with myMother.

Built-in JavaScript Constructors
JavaScript has built-in constructors for native objects:


new String()    // A new String object
new Number()    // A new Number object
new Boolean()   // A new Boolean object
new Object()    // A new Object object
new Array()     // A new Array object
new RegExp()    // A new RegExp object
new Function()  // A new Function object
new Date()      // A new Date object

Try it Yourself »


The Math() object is not in the list. Math is a global object. The new keyword cannot be used on
Math.


Did You Know?
As you can see above, JavaScript has object versions of the primitive
data types String, Number, and Boolean. But there is no reason to create complex objects. Primitive values
are much faster:
Use string literals "" instead of new String().
Use number literals 50 instead of new Number().
Use boolean literals true / false instead of new Boolean().
Use object literals {} instead of new Object().
Use array literals [] instead of new Array().
Use pattern literals /()/ instead of new RegExp().
Use function expressions () {} instead of new Function().

Example

let x1 = "";             // new primitive string
let x2 = 0;              // new primitive number
let x3 = false;          // new primitive boolean

const x4 = {};           // new Object object
const x5 = [];           // new Array object
const x6 = /()/          // new RegExp object
const x7 = function(){}; // new function
Try it Yourself »


String Objects
Normally, strings are created as primitives: firstName = "John"
But strings can also be created as objects using the new keyword:
firstName = new String("John")
Learn why strings should not be created as object in the chapter
JS Strings.

Number Objects
Normally, numbers are created as primitives: x = 30
But numbers can also be created as objects using the new keyword:
x = new
Number(30)
Learn why numbers should not be created as object in the chapter
JS Numbers.

Boolean Objects
Normally, booleans are created as primitives: x =
false
But booleans can also be created as objects using the new keyword:
x = new Boolean(false)
Learn why booleans should not be created as object in the chapter
JS Booleans.













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Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_object_constructors.asp
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