Reflect.construct()
The Reflect.construct()
static method is like the new
operator, but as a function. It is equivalent to calling new target(...args)
. It additionally allows to specify a different new.target
value.
Try it
Syntax
Reflect.construct(target, argumentsList)
Reflect.construct(target, argumentsList, newTarget)
Parameters
target
-
The target function to call.
argumentsList
-
An array-like object specifying the arguments with which
target
should be called. newTarget
Optional-
The value of
new.target
operator, which usually specifies the prototype of the returned object. IfnewTarget
is not present, its value defaults totarget
.
Return value
A new instance of target
(or newTarget
, if present), initialized by target
as a constructor with the given argumentsList
.
Exceptions
TypeError
-
Thrown if
target
ornewTarget
is not a constructor, or ifargumentsList
is not an object.
Description
Reflect.construct()
provides the reflective semantic of a constructor call. That is, Reflect.construct(target, argumentsList, newTarget)
is semantically equivalent to:
new target(...argumentsList);
Note that when using the new
operator, target
and newTarget
are always the same constructor — but Reflect.construct()
allows you to pass a different new.target
value. Conceptually, newTarget
is the function on which new
was called, and newTarget.prototype
will become the constructed object's prototype, while target
is the constructor that is actually executed to initialize the object. For example, new.target
may also be different from the currently executed constructor in class inheritance.
class A {
constructor() {
console.log(new.target.name);
}
}
class B extends A {}
new B(); // "B"
Reflect.construct()
allows you to invoke a constructor with a variable number of arguments. (This is also possible with the spread syntax in a normal constructor call.)
const obj = new Foo(...args);
const obj = Reflect.construct(Foo, args);
Reflect.construct()
invokes the [[Construct]]
object internal method of target
.
Examples
Using Reflect.construct()
const d = Reflect.construct(Date, [1776, 6, 4]);
d instanceof Date; // true
d.getFullYear(); // 1776
Reflect.construct() vs. Object.create()
Prior to the introduction of Reflect
, objects could be constructed using an arbitrary combination of constructors and prototypes using Object.create()
.
function OneClass() {
this.name = "one";
}
function OtherClass() {
this.name = "other";
}
const args = [];
const obj1 = Reflect.construct(OneClass, args, OtherClass);
const obj2 = Object.create(OtherClass.prototype);
OneClass.apply(obj2, args);
console.log(obj1.name); // 'one'
console.log(obj2.name); // 'one'
console.log(obj1 instanceof OneClass); // false
console.log(obj2 instanceof OneClass); // false
console.log(obj1 instanceof OtherClass); // true
console.log(obj2 instanceof OtherClass); // true
However, while the end result is the same, there is one important difference in the process. When using Object.create()
and Function.prototype.apply()
, the new.target
operator will point to undefined
within the function used as the constructor, since the new
keyword is not being used to create the object. (In fact, it uses the apply
semantic, not construct
, although normal functions happen to operate nearly the same.)
When invoking Reflect.construct()
, on the other hand, the new.target
operator will point to the newTarget
parameter if supplied, or target
if not.
function OneClass() {
console.log("OneClass");
console.log(new.target);
}
function OtherClass() {
console.log("OtherClass");
console.log(new.target);
}
const obj1 = Reflect.construct(OneClass, args);
// Logs:
// OneClass
// function OneClass { ... }
const obj2 = Reflect.construct(OneClass, args, OtherClass);
// Logs:
// OneClass
// function OtherClass { ... }
const obj3 = Object.create(OtherClass.prototype);
OneClass.apply(obj3, args);
// Output:
// OneClass
// undefined
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-reflect.construct |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser