Is there a reliable way of getting the instance of a JavaScript object?
For example, relying on the fake \'obj.getInstance()
\' function.
var
To get a pointer to the instantiating function (which is not a "class", but is the type), use obj.constructor
where obj
is any object.
In JavaScript there are no classes. As such, there are no class instances in JavaScript. There are only objects. Objects inherit from other objects (their so called prototypes). What you are doing in your code is literally defining an object T, which's attribute Q is another object, which's attribute W is another object, which's attribute C is a function.
When you are "creating a new instance of T.Q.W.C", you are actually only calling the function T.Q.W.C as a constructor. A function called as a constructor will return a new object on which the constructor function was called (that is with this
beeing the new object, like constructorFunction.apply(newObject, arguments);
). That returned object will have a hidden property constructor
which will point to the function that was invoked as a constrcutor to create the object. Additionally there is a language feature which allows you to test if a given function was used as the constructor function for an object using the instanceof
operator.
So you could do the following:
console.log(x instanceof T.Q.W.C);
OR
console.log(x.constructor === T.Q.W.C);