Reputation: 23
The Javascript code below outputs: Employee {#name: "sheila", #gender: "female", #manager: Employee, #job: Job}
How do I fix it so that it outputs: Employee {#name: "sheila", #gender: "female", #manager: "pierre", #job: "software engineer"}
Not sure if there is a hoisting problem. Which lines do I fix so that #manager is "pierre" and #job is "software engineer"?
class Person{
#name;
#gender;
constructor(name, gender) {
this.#name = name;
this.#gender = gender;
};
setName(name) {
this.#name = name;
};
getName() {
return this.#name;
};
setGender(gender) {
this.#gender = gender;
}
getGender() {
return this.#gender;
};
}
class Employee extends Person{
#manager;
#job;
constructor(name, gender, manager, job) {
super(name, gender);
this.#manager = manager;
this.#job = job;
};
setManager(manager) {
this.#manager = manager;
}
getManager() {
return this.#manager;
}
setJob(job) {
this.#job = job;
}
getJob() {
return this.#job;
}
}
class Job {
#title;
constructor(title) {
this.#title = title;
};
}
const softwareEngineer = new Job("software engineer");
const keith = new Employee("keith", "male");
const pierre = new Employee("pierre", "male");
const sheila = new Employee("sheila", "female", keith, softwareEngineer);
sheila.setManager(pierre);
console.log(sheila);
Upvotes: 1
Views: 56
Reputation: 328
The issue is that you print the type of the Object instead of the value. You need a toString function for Job and Manager to print the value instead of type, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/toString
Upvotes: 2