This example creates an object, freezes it, and then creates a new object from the frozen object. If the second object tries to change the test property, it can't. It remains frozen with the first object's value of 10.
//Create an object and freeze it
var first = {
test: 10
};
Object.freeze(first);
//Create a second object from the first one and
//try and change the new test property (you can't)
var second = Object.create(first);
second.test = 20;
console.log(second.test); //10
Here are my questions:
Is second.test
a new property on a new object, or is it just a reference to the property in the frozen first object?
Is it possible to use the frozen first.test
as a default value, but let second.test
overwrite it if it needs to?
My reason for asking is because I want to make an immutable a base object as a template with default values, and then use it to make new objects that I can customize. What's the best approach for this?
Thanks!
second
is in fact a new object, with first
being the prototype of second
. The reason why
second.test = 20;
does not work is because upon assignment, it will look for the settings on the prototype (i.e. configurable
, enumerable
, writable
, [[Extensible]]
) and not assign to the instance if any of these are false1. To assign directly to the instance, you'll have to use Object.defineProperty
on second
:
var first = {
test: 10
};
Object.freeze(first);
var second = Object.create(first);
Object.defineProperty(second, 'test', { value: 20, enumerable: true, configurable: true, writable: true });
console.log(second.test); // 20