Reputation: 2048
I try to define getter and setter in constructor via Object.assign
:
function Class() {
Object.assign(this, {
get prop() { console.log('call get') },
set prop(v) { console.log('call set') },
});
}
var c = new Class(); // (1) => 'call get'
console.log(c.prop); // (2) => undefined
c.prop = 'change';
console.log(c.prop); // (3) => 'change'
Questions:
(1) Why getter is called?
(2) Why getter isn't called?
(3) Why setter is ignored?
Upvotes: 16
Views: 9272
Reputation: 1073968
The answer to all three of your questions is the same: Object.assign
reads the value of the property from the source object, it doesn't copy getters/setters.
You can see that if you look at the property descriptor:
var source = {
get prop() { },
set prop(v) { }
};
console.log("descriptor on source", Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(source, "prop"));
var target = Object.assign({}, source);
console.log("descriptor on target", Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(target, "prop"));
To define that property on this
inside Class
, use defineProperty
:
function Class() {
Object.defineProperty(this, "prop", {
get() { console.log('call get') },
set(v) { console.log('call set') },
});
}
var c = new Class();
console.log(c.prop); // => 'call get', undefined
c.prop = 'change'; // => 'call set'
console.log(c.prop); // => 'call get', undefined
Upvotes: 25