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Home/ Questions/Q 7023563
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T23:43:37+00:00 2026-05-27T23:43:37+00:00

I’ve seen various patterns in object creation, but upon diving into some Firefox framework

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I’ve seen various patterns in object creation, but upon diving into some Firefox framework Javascript, I’d noticed that they’re using a convention that I haven’t seen before and I’m hoping that someone here can either confirm my assumption or correct me:

When building a class, I’ve done this (and variations of) in the past:

function MyClass() {
    this.myPublicFunction = function() {
    };
    var myPrivateFunction = function() {
    };
}

Bound anonymous functions. Cool. This is what I’ve seen throughout most frameworks and such.

However, it seem that Mozilla does this:

function MyClass() {
    this.myPublicFunction = function MYCLASS_myPublicFunction() {
    };
    var myPrivateFunction = function MYCLASS_myPrivateFunction() {
    };
}

My assumption is that in using the latter convention, JS JIT compiles the functions, but wouldn’t pick up the first two as they’d be defined at run-time rather than parse time.

Is this assumption correct and if so, does this also apply to other JS engines or just Spidermonkey?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T23:43:37+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 11:43 pm

    Reasons to use NFE:

    • a function with a name gives more debugging information in your stack trace
    • NFE are self documenting. (if you put useful information in the name).

    Note that function declarations are better then NFE. (From a personal style choice)

    function MyClass() {
        this.myPublicFunction = myPublicFunction;
    
        function myPrivateFunction() {
    
        }
    
        function myPublicFunction() {
    
        }
    }
    

    Also note that the word “private” is misleading, but that’s a tangent.

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