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Object-Oriented JavaScript - Second Edition

You're reading from   Object-Oriented JavaScript - Second Edition If you've limited or no experience with JavaScript, this book will put you on the road to being an expert. A wonderfully compiled introduction to objects in JavaScript, it teaches through examples and practical play.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849693127
Length 382 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Object-oriented JavaScript 2. Primitive Data Types, Arrays, Loops, and Conditions FREE CHAPTER 3. Functions 4. Objects 5. Prototype 6. Inheritance 7. The Browser Environment 8. Coding and Design Patterns A. Reserved Words B. Built-in Functions
C. Built-in Objects D. Regular Expressions
Index

Multiple inheritance


Multiple inheritance is where a child inherits from more than one parent. Some OO languages support multiple inheritance out of the box, and some don't. You can argue both ways: that multiple inheritance is convenient, or that it's unnecessary, complicates application design, and it's better to use an inheritance chain instead. Leaving the discussion of multiple inheritance's pros and cons for the long, cold winter nights, let's see how you can do it in practice in JavaScript.

The implementation can be as simple as taking the idea of inheritance by copying properties, and expanding it so that it takes an unlimited number of input objects to inherit from.

Let's create a multi() function that accepts any number of input objects. You can wrap the loop that copies properties in another loop that goes through all the objects passed as arguments to the function.

function multi() {
var n = {}, stuff, j = 0, len = arguments.length;
for (j = 0; j <len; j++) {
stuff = arguments...
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