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Home/ Questions/Q 3941324
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T00:31:39+00:00 2026-05-20T00:31:39+00:00

Let’s say I have an object of functions/values. I’m interested in overloading based on

  • 0

Let’s say I have an object of functions/values. I’m interested in overloading based on calling behavior.

For example, this block of code below demonstrates what I wish to do.

var main_thing = {
    initalized: false,
    something: "Hallo, welt!",
    something_else: [123,456,789],
    load: {
        sub1    : function() {
            //Some stuff
        },
        sub2    : function() {
            //Some stuff
        },
        all     : function() {
            this.sub1();
            this.sub2();
        }
    }
    init: function () {
        this.initalized=true;
        this.something="Hello, world!";
        this.something_else = [0,0,0];
        this.load(); //I want this to call this.load.all() instead.
    }
}

The issue to me is that main_thing.load is assigned to an object, and to call main_thing.load.all() would call the function inside of the object (the () operator). What can I do to set up my code so I could use main_thing.load as an access the object, and main_thing.load() to execute some code? Or at least, similar behavior.

Basically, this would be similar to a default constructor in other languages where you don’t need to call main_thing.constructor().

If this isn’t possible, please explain with a bit of detail.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T00:31:40+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 12:31 am

    Like Tom Tu said, functions are objects, and can have properties…

    var main_thing = {
    
        // load will be set to the result of this anonymous function
        // which is a function with 2 extra properties set for the other functions        
        load: function() {
            // create what will be the load() function and store in "all"
            var all = function () {
    
                   // When the function is actually executed these will have been assigned
                   all.load1();
                   all.load2();
                };
    
            // set 2 properties for sub load functions
            all.load1 = function() {};
            all.load2 = function() {};
    
            // return our function
            return all;
        }()
    }
    
    main_thing.load();
    // or 
    main_thing.load.load1();
    main_thing.load.load2();
    
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