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Home/ Questions/Q 8826707
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T07:12:23+00:00 2026-06-14T07:12:23+00:00

Possible Duplicate: Why are my JS object properties being overwritten by other instances Why

  • 0

Possible Duplicate:
Why are my JS object properties being overwritten by other instances

Why isn’t the attribute “t” changed after setT was called? I would expect “4” as output, but it prints “default”.

function Car(i) {
  var id = i;
  var t = "default";

  this.getT = function() { return t; }
  this.setT = function(p) {
    t = p;  // attribute t isn't changed ..
  }
}

function ECar(id) {  
  Car.call(this, id);  // super constructor call

  this.setT = function(p) {  // override
    ECar.prototype.setT.call(this, p); // super call
  }
}

ECar.prototype = new Car();

ecar = new ECar(3);
ecar.setT(4);
alert(ecar.getT()); // prints default, not 4
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T07:12:24+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 7:12 am

    ECar.prototype = new Car();

    At this line ECar‘s prototype get a context, in which all ECar‘s instance will be shared.

    ECar.prototype.setT.call(this, p);

    This line will call at that context, not what has been created while calling super at Car.call(this, id);.

    You can fix your code with

    function ECar(id) {  
      Car.call(this, id);  // super constructor call
      var carSetT = this.setT;
      this.setT = function(p) {
        carSetT.call(this, p);
      }
    }
    

    but it would be better (and more readable) to use real prototypes, such as

    function Car() {}
    
    Car.prototype.getT = function () { /* ... */ };
    Car.prototype.setT = function () { /* ... */ };
    
    function ECar() {}
    
    ECar.prototype = new Car();
    ECar.prototype.setT = function () { /* ... */ };
    

    Edit: note (as @Bergi suggested)

    You should only use Child.prototype = new Parent() as inheritance if you must support legacy browsers & then you should only use empty constructors.

    The most (other-language) compatible way in JavaScript for inheritance is

    Child.prototype = Object.create(Parent.prototype)
    

    (MDN says it is supprted from IE 9)

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