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Home/ Questions/Q 9013001
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 16, 20262026-06-16T03:08:36+00:00 2026-06-16T03:08:36+00:00

I’ve seen a Javascript project where a prototype property is defined like this: myFunc.prototype.a

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I’ve seen a Javascript project where a prototype property is defined like this:

myFunc.prototype.a = new myObject()

I’m wondering what happens when I call new myFunc() to the a property:

Does it return the result of new myObject() or everytime I call myFunc.a it calls new myObject()?

And on different myFunc instances the a property is the same one as it happens for normal prototype properties or every instance’s a is different myObject() instance?

See this http://backbonejs.org/docs/todos.html: every TodoList instance will share the same localStorage, so the same Backbone.LocalStorage() instance?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-16T03:08:37+00:00Added an answer on June 16, 2026 at 3:08 am

    Hopefully, this will help you out:

    var Person = function (name, age) {
        this.getName = function () { return name; };
        this.getAge  = function () { return age; };
    };
    
    
    var Employee = function (employee_id) {
        this.printBadge = function () {
            console.log("#" + employee_id + " | " + this.record.getName());
        };
    };
    
    Employee.prototype.record = new Person("Bob", 32);
    
    var jim  = new Employee(1),
        doug = new Employee(2);
    
    jim.printBadge(); //  #1 | Bob
    doug.printBadge(); // #2 | Bob
    

    The “prefer composition to inheritance” mantra goes quadruple for JavaScript.
    You can quite happily override a particular object on a person:

    jim.record = { getName : function () { return "Jim"; } };
    jim.printBadge();  // #1 | Jim
    doug.printBadge(); // #2 | Bob
    

    Just be careful when modifying properties of the prototype object (the object which instances refer to).

    var jeff = new Employee(3);
    jeff.record.getName = function () { return "OMG! Yuse guys is scr00d!" };
    
    jim.printBadge();  // #1 | Jim
    doug.printBadge(); // #2 | OMG! Yuse guys is scr00d!
    jeff.printBadge(); // #3 | OMG! Yuse guys is scr00d!
    

    Reason being that you changed a property of the shared, prototype object (static, in other languages), rather than replacing the WHOLE prototype object (referencing a new object, instead of the static object) like in Jim’s case.

    But the X.prototype.y = new Z(); can be seen like this, simply:

    var bob = new Person("Bob", 32);
    Employee.prototype.record = bob;
    
    var jim  = new Employee(1),
        doug = new Employee(2),
        jeff = new Employee(3);
    
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