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Home/ Questions/Q 8701577
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T02:26:04+00:00 2026-06-13T02:26:04+00:00

I’m trying to understand some code Mozilla put out on constructor chaining. I’ve added

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I’m trying to understand some code Mozilla put out on constructor chaining. I’ve added comments to the parts I think I understand, but I’m still not clear on everything that’s going on here. Can someone explain line by line what is going on in this code?

// Using apply() to chain constructors.
Function.prototype.construct = function (aArgs) {

    // What is this line of code doing?
    var fConstructor = this, fNewConstr = function () { fConstructor.apply(this, aArgs); };

    // Assign the function prototype to the new function constructor's prototype.
    fNewConstr.prototype = fConstructor.prototype;

    // Return the new function constructor.
    return new fNewConstr();
};

// Example usage.
function MyConstructor () {

    // Iterate through the arguments passed into the constructor and add them as properties.
    for (var nProp = 0; nProp < arguments.length; nProp++) {
        this["property" + nProp] = arguments[nProp];
    }
}

var myArray = [4, "Hello world!", false];
var myInstance = MyConstructor.construct(myArray);

// alerts "Hello world!"
alert(myInstance.property1); 

// alerts "true"
alert(myInstance instanceof MyConstructor); 

// alerts "MyConstructor"
alert(myInstance.constructor); 

The original code can be found here.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T02:26:05+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 2:26 am

    Basically, this is an alternate way to call a constructor function, which gives you the opportunity to wrap the constructor call in another function. I’ll focus on the line you are confused about. fConstructor is set to this, which references our original constructor function, in this example that is MyConstructor. fNewConstr is the constructor which will override the original constructor. Within that fNewConstr you could implement additional code not found in the MyConstructor. Within fNewConstr, we call fConstructor using the Function apply method, passing this as the context, and the aArgs array passed to the construct method. Then we set the prototype of the fNewConstr to the fConstructor prototype to complete the inheritance chain. Finally, we return a new instance of fNewConstr. Prefixing the new keyword to a function call creates a new object, sets its prototype to the prototype of the function, and invokes the function in the context of the new item. Because we apply the fConstructor method with the fNewConstr‘s context, the result is essentially the same as calling new MyConstructor(). Make sense? Or do I need to go into more detail.

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