JavaScript Extending Class

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I have a base class:

function Monster() {
  this.health = 100;
}

Monster.prototype.growl = function() {
  console.log(\"Grr!\");
}

That

10条回答
  •  一生所求
    2020-11-30 18:45

    Updated below for ES6

    March 2013 and ES5

    This MDN document describes extending classes well:

    https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Introduction_to_Object-Oriented_JavaScript

    In particular, here is now they handle it:

    // define the Person Class
    function Person() {}
    
    Person.prototype.walk = function(){
      alert ('I am walking!');
    };
    Person.prototype.sayHello = function(){
      alert ('hello');
    };
    
    // define the Student class
    function Student() {
      // Call the parent constructor
      Person.call(this);
    }
    
    // inherit Person
    Student.prototype = Object.create(Person.prototype);
    
    // correct the constructor pointer because it points to Person
    Student.prototype.constructor = Student;
    
    // replace the sayHello method
    Student.prototype.sayHello = function(){
      alert('hi, I am a student');
    }
    
    // add sayGoodBye method
    Student.prototype.sayGoodBye = function(){
      alert('goodBye');
    }
    
    var student1 = new Student();
    student1.sayHello();
    student1.walk();
    student1.sayGoodBye();
    
    // check inheritance
    alert(student1 instanceof Person); // true 
    alert(student1 instanceof Student); // true
    

    Note that Object.create() is unsupported in some older browsers, including IE8:

    If you are in the position of needing to support these, the linked MDN document suggests using a polyfill, or the following approximation:

    function createObject(proto) {
        function ctor() { }
        ctor.prototype = proto;
        return new ctor();
    }
    

    Using this like Student.prototype = createObject(Person.prototype) is preferable to using new Person() in that it avoids calling the parent's constructor function when inheriting the prototype, and only calls the parent constructor when the inheritor's constructor is being called.

    May 2017 and ES6

    Thankfully, the JavaScript designers have heard our pleas for help and have adopted a more suitable way of approaching this issue.

    MDN has another great example on ES6 class inheritance, but I'll show the exact same set of classes as above reproduced in ES6:

    class Person {
        sayHello() {
            alert('hello');
        }
    
        walk() {
            alert('I am walking!');
        }
    }
    
    class Student extends Person {
        sayGoodBye() {
            alert('goodBye');
        }
    
        sayHello() {
            alert('hi, I am a student');
        }
    }
    
    var student1 = new Student();
    student1.sayHello();
    student1.walk();
    student1.sayGoodBye();
    
    // check inheritance
    alert(student1 instanceof Person); // true 
    alert(student1 instanceof Student); // true
    

    Clean and understandable, just like we all want. Keep in mind, that while ES6 is pretty common, it's not supported everywhere:

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