How to call a method in class from its replaced implementation?
Hai,
I am trying to understand few concepts in JavaScript. Consider the following code:
function Person(name, age)
{
this.name = name || "no name";
this.age = age || "age not specified";
this.printStr = function()
{
console.log("< " + this.name + ", " + this.age + " >");
};
}
p = new Person("pranav", 26);
p.printStr = function()
{
console.log("this works. also ...." + this.name);
};
p.printStr();
I want to call the implementation of 'printStr' in Person class from within the implementation of 'printStr' function in 'p'.
such that the output should be:
< pranav, 26 >
开发者_Go百科this works. also ....pranav
Any ideas? :)
The way your code is set up now, you can't do it. When you call Person
as a constructor, the object that ends up being p
gets set to this
. So when you define printStr
in the constructor, p
gets an attribute called printStr
. You then over-write it when you assign the second function.
Two options: A non-answer is to do what pablochan did - have the internal one be called oldPrintStr
. Another option is to use the prototype inheritance:
function Person(name, age)
{
this.name = name || "no name";
this.age = age || "age not specified";
}
Person.prototype.printStr = function() {
console.log("< " + this.name + ", " + this.age + " >");
};
Then you can do this:
p = new Person("pranav", 26);
p.printStr = function()
{
Person.prototype.printStr.apply(this);
console.log("this works. also ...." + this.name);
};
p.printStr();
As far as I know there is no real subclassing in JS so to do this you should probably save the old function and then replace it.
p = new Person("pranav", 26);
p.oldPrintStr = p.printStr;
p.printStr = function()
{
p.oldPrintStr();
console.log("this works. also ...." + this.name);
};
p.printStr();
unless you save Person's printStr you can always create a temp Person object solely to extract printStr and call it:
p.printStr = function()
{
print("this works. also ...." + this.name);
(new Person()).printStr.apply(this);
};
but I guess you'll be better off if you make Person's original printStr accessible via prototype:
Person.prototype.printStr = function()
{
print("< " + this.name + ", " + this.age + " >");
};
then you have no need for temp object or saving old function and can do:
Person.prototype.printStr.apply(this);
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