The constructor method is a special method of a class for creating and initializing an object instance of that class. constructor() { /* … */ }
constructor(argument0) { /* … */ }
constructor(argument0, argument1) { /* … */ }
constructor(argument0, argument1, /* … ,*/ argumentN) { /* … */ }
A
constructor enables you to provide any custom initialization that must be done before any other methods can be called on an instantiated object. class Person {
constructor(name) {
this.name = name;
}
introduce() {
console.log(`Hello, my name is ${this.name}`);
}
}
const otto = new Person('Otto');
otto.introduce();
If you don't provide your own constructor, then a default constructor will be supplied for you. If your class is a base class, the default constructor is empty: If your class is a derived class, the default constructor calls the parent constructor, passing along any arguments that were provided:Try it
Syntax
Description
constructor(...args) { super(...args); }
That enables code like this to work:
class ValidationError extends Error { printCustomerMessage() { return `Validation failed :-( (details: ${this.message})`; } } try { throw new ValidationError("Not a valid phone number"); } catch (error) { if (error instanceof ValidationError) { console.log(error.name); // This is Error instead of ValidationError! console.log(error.printCustomerMessage()); } else { console.log('Unknown error', error); throw error; } }
The ValidationError class doesn't need an explicit constructor, because it doesn't need to do any custom initialization. The default constructor then takes care of initializing the parent Error from the argument it is given.
However, if you provide your own constructor, and your class derives from some parent class, then you must explicitly call the parent class constructor using super. For example:
class ValidationError extends Error { constructor(message) { super(message); // call parent class constructor this.name = 'ValidationError'; this.code = '42'; } printCustomerMessage() { return `Validation failed :-( (details: ${this.message}, code: ${this.code})`; } } try { throw new ValidationError("Not a valid phone number"); } catch (error) { if (error instanceof ValidationError) { console.log(error.name); // Now this is ValidationError! console.log(error.printCustomerMessage()); } else { console.log('Unknown error', error); throw error; } }
There can be only one special method with the name constructor in a class. Having more than one occurrence of a constructor method in a class will throw a SyntaxError error. Having a getter or setter called constructor is also a SyntaxError.
The constructor follows normal method syntax, so parameter default values, rest parameters, etc. can all be used.
class Person { constructor(name = 'Anonymous') { this.name = name; } introduce() { console.log(`Hello, my name is ${this.name}`); } } const person = new Person(); person.introduce(); // Hello, my name is Anonymous
The constructor must be a literal name. Computed properties cannot become constructors.
class Foo { // This is a computed property. It will not be picked up as a constructor. ['constructor']() { console.log('called'); this.a = 1; } } const foo = new Foo(); // No log console.log(foo); // Foo {} foo.constructor(); // Logs "called" console.log(foo); // Foo { a: 1 }
Examples
Using the constructor method
This code snippet is taken from the classes sample (live demo).
class Square extends Polygon { constructor(length) { // Here, it calls the parent class' constructor with lengths // provided for the Polygon's width and height super(length, length); // NOTE: In derived classes, `super()` must be called before you // can use `this`. Leaving this out will cause a ReferenceError. this.name = 'Square'; } get area() { return this.height * this.width; } set area(value) { this.height = value ** 0.5; this.width = value ** 0.5; } }
Another example
Here the prototype of Square class is changed—but the constructor of its base class Polygon is still called when a new instance of a square is created.
class Polygon { constructor() { this.name = "Polygon"; } } class Square extends Polygon { constructor() { super(); } } class Rectangle {} Object.setPrototypeOf(Square.prototype, Rectangle.prototype); console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(Square.prototype) === Polygon.prototype); //false console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(Square.prototype) === Rectangle.prototype); //true const newInstance = new Square(); console.log(newInstance.name); //Polygon
Specifications
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-static-semantics-constructormethod |
Browser compatibility
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