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Home/ Questions/Q 7679523
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T17:53:51+00:00 2026-05-31T17:53:51+00:00

I’ve read that using Object.prototype to attach functions to custom JavaScript objects is more

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I’ve read that using Object.prototype to attach functions to custom JavaScript objects is more efficient than the “traditional” method of this.foo = function(). The problem I’ve run into is scope. I want these public methods to be able to access private variables of the object. What I ended up doing was this:

function Foo(){
    var id = 5;
    Foo.prototype.bar = function(){
        alert(id);
    };
}
var x = new Foo();
x.bar();

I nested the prototype declaration inside the object definition. This works and seems to solve the problem. Is there any reason to NOT do this? Is there a better or more standard way to accomplish this?

UPDATE
Based on some of the responses I’ve received I guess I need to mention that I’m fully aware that there is no concept of a private variable in JavaScript. I use the term private here meaning not accessible outside the current scope because it’s easier to say and write and I assume that anyone trying to answer this question would know what was meant by me using the term private.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T17:53:52+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 5:53 pm

    While your idea works, it may not be working as you expect. I believe your overwrites the prototype each time a new Foo is instantiated. It would potentially change the bar() method for all instances of Foo each time you create a new Foo. Oops.

    Here’s an example of using fake private variables for someone to “lie” about their real age.

    Here is the standard way to do this:

    function Person(name, age) {
      this._age = age; // this is private by convention only
      this.name = name; // this is supposed to be public
    }
    
    Person.prototype.sayHiTo = function(person) {
      console.log("Hi " + person.name + ", my name is " + this.name);
    }
    
    Person.prototype.age = function() {
      return this._age - 3;
    }
    
    var j = new Person("Jay", 33);
    var k = new Person("Kari", 26);
    j.sayHiTo(k) // Hi Kari, my name is Jamund
    k.age(); // 23
    
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