The Object.setPrototypeOf() static method sets the prototype (i.e., the internal [[Prototype]] property) of a specified object to another object or null .
Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, currently a very slow operation in every browser and JavaScript engine. In addition, the effects of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(. ) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. You can read more in JavaScript engine fundamentals: optimizing prototypes.
Because this feature is a part of the language, it is still the burden on engine developers to implement that feature performantly (ideally). Until engine developers address this issue, if you are concerned about performance, you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create() .
.setPrototypeOf(obj, prototype)
The object which is to have its prototype set.
The object's new prototype (an object or null ).
The specified object.
Thrown in one of the following cases:
Object.setPrototypeOf() is generally considered the proper way to set the prototype of an object. You should always use it in favor of the deprecated Object.prototype.__proto__ accessor.
If the obj parameter is not an object (e.g. number, string, etc.), this method does nothing — without coercing it to an object or attempting to set its prototype — and directly returns obj as a primitive value. If prototype is the same value as the prototype of obj , then obj is directly returned, without causing a TypeError even when obj has immutable prototype.
For security concerns, there are certain built-in objects that are designed to have an immutable prototype. This prevents prototype pollution attacks, especially proxy-related ones. The core language only specifies Object.prototype as an immutable prototype exotic object, whose prototype is always null . In browsers, window and location are two other very common examples.
.isExtensible(Object.prototype); // true; you can add more properties Object.setPrototypeOf(Object.prototype, >); // TypeError: Immutable prototype object '#' cannot have their prototype set Object.setPrototypeOf(Object.prototype, null); // No error; the prototype of `Object.prototype` is already `null`
Inheritance in JS using classes.
class Human > class SuperHero extends Human > const superMan = new SuperHero();
However, if we want to implement subclasses without using class , we can do the following:
function Human(name, level) this.name = name; this.level = level; > function SuperHero(name, level) Human.call(this, name, level); > Object.setPrototypeOf(SuperHero.prototype, Human.prototype); // Set the `[[Prototype]]` of `SuperHero.prototype` // to `Human.prototype` // To set the prototypal inheritance chain Human.prototype.speak = function () return `$this.name> says hello.`; >; SuperHero.prototype.fly = function () return `$this.name> is flying.`; >; const superMan = new SuperHero("Clark Kent", 1); console.log(superMan.fly()); console.log(superMan.speak());
The similarity between classical inheritance (with classes) and pseudoclassical inheritance (with constructors' prototype property) as done above is mentioned in Inheritance chains.
Since function constructors' prototype property is writable, you can reassign it to a new object created with Object.create() to achieve the same inheritance chain as well. There are caveats to watch out when using create() , such as remembering to re-add the constructor property.
In the example below, which also uses classes, SuperHero is made to inherit from Human without using extends by using setPrototypeOf() instead.
Warning: It is not advisable to use setPrototypeOf() instead of extends due to performance and readability reasons.
class Human > class SuperHero > // Set the instance properties Object.setPrototypeOf(SuperHero.prototype, Human.prototype); // Hook up the static properties Object.setPrototypeOf(SuperHero, Human); const superMan = new SuperHero();
Subclassing without extends is mentioned in ES-6 subclassing.
Specification |
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ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-object.setprototypeof |
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