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Mastering JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming

You're reading from   Mastering JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming Advanced patterns, faster techniques, higher quality code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785889103
Length 292 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Refresher of Objects FREE CHAPTER 2. Diving into OOP Principles 3. Working with Encapsulation and Information Hiding 4. Inheriting and Creating Mixins 5. Defining Contracts with Duck Typing 6. Advanced Object Creation 7. Presenting Data to the User 8. Data Binding 9. Asynchronous Programming and Promises 10. Organizing Code 11. SOLID Principles 12. Modern Application Architectures

Convention-based approach


JavaScript objects do not care about privacy. All the properties and methods are publicly accessible if no caution is taken. So, if we want to avoid access to some properties or methods concerning internal implementation details, we have to set up a strategy.

A first simple approach consists in adopting convention-based naming for internal members of an object. For example, internal members can have a name starting with a prefix, such as the underscore (_) character. Let's explain with an example:

function TheatreSeats() { 
  this._seats = []; 
} 
 
TheatreSeats.prototype.placePerson = function(person) { 
  this._seats.push(person); 
}; 

This code defines a constructor for objects that represent seats in a theatre where a person can be placed. The intended use is as follows:

var theatreSeats = new TheatreSeats(); 
 
theatreSeats.placePerson({name: "John", surname: "Smith"}); 

The _seats property is the actual container...

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