Object.defineProperty()
The static method Object.defineProperty()
defines a new property directly on an object, or modifies an existing property on an object, and returns the object.
Syntax
Object.defineProperty(obj, prop, descriptor)
Parameters
obj
-
The object on which to define the property.
prop
-
The name or
Symbol
of the property to be defined or modified. descriptor
-
The descriptor for the property being defined or modified.
Return value
The object that was passed to the function.
Description
This method allows a precise addition to or modification of a property on an object. Normal property addition through assignment creates properties which show up during property enumeration (for...in
loop or Object.keys
method), whose values may be changed, and which may be deleted. This method allows these extra details to be changed from their defaults. By default, values added using Object.defineProperty()
are immutable and not enumerable.
Property descriptors present in objects come in two main flavors: data descriptors and accessor descriptors. A data descriptor is a property that has a value, which may or may not be writable. An accessor descriptor is a property described by a getter-setter pair of functions. A descriptor must be one of these two flavors; it cannot be both.
Both data and accessor descriptors are objects. They share the following optional keys (please note: the defaults mentioned here are in the case of defining properties using Object.defineProperty()
):
configurable
-
true
if the type of this property descriptor may be changed and if the property may be deleted from the corresponding object.false
enumerable
-
true
if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.false
A data descriptor also has the following optional keys:
value
-
The value associated with the property. Can be any valid JavaScript value (number, object, function, etc). Defaults to
undefined
. writable
-
true
if the value associated with the property may be changed with an assignment operator.false
An accessor descriptor also has the following optional keys:
get
-
A function which serves as a getter for the property, or
undefined
if there is no getter. When the property is accessed, this function is called without arguments and withthis
set to the object through which the property is accessed (this may not be the object on which the property is defined due to inheritance). The return value will be used as the value of the property. Defaults toundefined
. set
-
A function which serves as a setter for the property, or
undefined
if there is no setter. When the property is assigned, this function is called with one argument (the value being assigned to the property) and withthis
set to the object through which the property is assigned. Defaults toundefined
.
If a descriptor has neither of value
, writable
, get
and set
keys, it is treated as a data descriptor. If a descriptor has both [value
or writable
] and [get
or set
] keys, an exception is thrown.
Bear in mind that these attributes are not necessarily the descriptor's own properties. Inherited properties will be considered as well. In order to ensure these defaults are preserved, you might freeze the Object
upfront, specify all options explicitly, or point to null
with Object.create(null)
.
// using __proto__ var obj = {}; var descriptor = Object.create(null); // no inherited properties descriptor.value = 'static'; // not enumerable, not configurable, not writable as defaults Object.defineProperty(obj, 'key', descriptor); // being explicit Object.defineProperty(obj, 'key', { enumerable: false, configurable: false, writable: false, value: 'static' }); // recycling same object function withValue(value) { var d = withValue.d || ( withValue.d = { enumerable: false, writable: false, configurable: false, value: value } ); // avoiding duplicate operation for assigning value if (d.value !== value) d.value = value; return d; } // ... and ... Object.defineProperty(obj, 'key', withValue('static')); // if freeze is available, prevents adding or // removing the object prototype properties // (value, get, set, enumerable, writable, configurable) (Object.freeze || Object)(Object.prototype);
Examples
Creating a property
When the property specified doesn't exist in the object, Object.defineProperty()
creates a new property as described. Fields may be omitted from the descriptor, and default values for those fields are inputted.
var o = {}; // Creates a new object // Example of an object property added // with defineProperty with a data property descriptor Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 37, writable: true, enumerable: true, configurable: true }); // 'a' property exists in the o object and its value is 37 // Example of an object property added // with defineProperty with an accessor property descriptor var bValue = 38; Object.defineProperty(o, 'b', { // Using shorthand method names (ES2015 feature). // This is equivalent to: // get: function() { return bValue; }, // set: function(newValue) { bValue = newValue; }, get() { return bValue; }, set(newValue) { bValue = newValue; }, enumerable: true, configurable: true }); o.b; // 38 // 'b' property exists in the o object and its value is 38 // The value of o.b is now always identical to bValue, // unless o.b is redefined // You cannot try to mix both: Object.defineProperty(o, 'conflict', { value: 0x9f91102, get() { return 0xdeadbeef; } }); // throws a TypeError: value appears // only in data descriptors, // get appears only in accessor descriptors
Modifying a property
When the property already exists, Object.defineProperty()
attempts to modify the property according to the values in the descriptor and the object's current configuration. If the old descriptor had its configurable
attribute set to false
the property is said to be “non-configurable”. It is not possible to change any attribute of a non-configurable accessor property. For data properties which are configurable, it is possible to modify the value if the property is writable, and it is possible to change the writable
attribute from true
to false
. It is not possible to switch between data and accessor property types when the property is non-configurable.
A TypeError
is thrown when attempts are made to change non-configurable property attributes (except value
and writable
, if permitted) unless the current and new values are the same.
Writable attribute
When the writable
property attribute is set to false
, the property is said to be “non-writable”. It cannot be reassigned.
var o = {}; // Creates a new object Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 37, writable: false }); console.log(o.a); // logs 37 o.a = 25; // No error thrown // (it would throw in strict mode, // even if the value had been the same) console.log(o.a); // logs 37. The assignment didn't work. // strict mode (function() { 'use strict'; var o = {}; Object.defineProperty(o, 'b', { value: 2, writable: false }); o.b = 3; // throws TypeError: "b" is read-only return o.b; // returns 2 without the line above }());
As seen in the example, trying to write into the non-writable property doesn't change it but doesn't throw an error either.
Enumerable attribute
The enumerable
property attribute defines whether the property is picked by Object.assign()
or spread operator. For non-Symbol
properties it also defines whether it shows up in a for...in
loop and Object.keys()
or not.
var o = {}; Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 1, enumerable: true }); Object.defineProperty(o, 'b', { value: 2, enumerable: false }); Object.defineProperty(o, 'c', { value: 3 }); // enumerable defaults to false o.d = 4; // enumerable defaults to true // when creating a property by setting it Object.defineProperty(o, Symbol.for('e'), { value: 5, enumerable: true }); Object.defineProperty(o, Symbol.for('f'), { value: 6, enumerable: false }); for (var i in o) { console.log(i); } // logs 'a' and 'd' (in undefined order) Object.keys(o); // ['a', 'd'] o.propertyIsEnumerable('a'); // true o.propertyIsEnumerable('b'); // false o.propertyIsEnumerable('c'); // false o.propertyIsEnumerable('d'); // true o.propertyIsEnumerable(Symbol.for('e')); // true o.propertyIsEnumerable(Symbol.for('f')); // false var p = { ...o } p.a // 1 p.b // undefined p.c // undefined p.d // 4 p[Symbol.for('e')] // 5 p[Symbol.for('f')] // undefined
Configurable attribute
The configurable
attribute controls at the same time whether the property can be deleted from the object and whether its attributes (other than value
and writable
) can be changed.
var o = {}; Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { get() { return 1; }, configurable: false }); Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { configurable: true }); // throws a TypeError Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { enumerable: true }); // throws a TypeError Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { set() {} }); // throws a TypeError (set was undefined previously) Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { get() { return 1; } }); // throws a TypeError // (even though the new get does exactly the same thing) Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 12 }); // throws a TypeError // ('value' can be changed when 'configurable' is false but not in this case due to 'get' accessor) console.log(o.a); // logs 1 delete o.a; // Nothing happens console.log(o.a); // logs 1
If the configurable
attribute of o.a
had been true
, none of the errors would be thrown and the property would be deleted at the end.
Adding properties and default values
It is important to consider the way default values of attributes are applied. There is often a difference between using dot notation to assign a value and using Object.defineProperty()
, as shown in the example below.
var o = {}; o.a = 1; // is equivalent to: Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 1, writable: true, configurable: true, enumerable: true }); // On the other hand, Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 1 }); // is equivalent to: Object.defineProperty(o, 'a', { value: 1, writable: false, configurable: false, enumerable: false });
Custom Setters and Getters
The example below shows how to implement a self-archiving object. When temperature
property is set, the archive
array gets a log entry.
function Archiver() { var temperature = null; var archive = []; Object.defineProperty(this, 'temperature', { get() { console.log('get!'); return temperature; }, set(value) { temperature = value; archive.push({ val: temperature }); } }); this.getArchive = function() { return archive; }; } var arc = new Archiver(); arc.temperature; // 'get!' arc.temperature = 11; arc.temperature = 13; arc.getArchive(); // [{ val: 11 }, { val: 13 }]
In this example, a getter always returns the same value.
var pattern = { get() { return 'I always return this string, ' + 'whatever you have assigned'; }, set() { this.myname = 'this is my name string'; } }; function TestDefineSetAndGet() { Object.defineProperty(this, 'myproperty', pattern); } var instance = new TestDefineSetAndGet(); instance.myproperty = 'test'; console.log(instance.myproperty); // I always return this string, whatever you have assigned console.log(instance.myname); // this is my name string
Inheritance of properties
If an accessor property is inherited, its get
and set
methods will be called when the property is accessed and modified on descendant objects. If these methods use a variable to store the value, this value will be shared by all objects.
function myclass() { } var value; Object.defineProperty(myclass.prototype, "x", { get() { return value; }, set(x) { value = x; } }); var a = new myclass(); var b = new myclass(); a.x = 1; console.log(b.x); // 1
This can be fixed by storing the value in another property. In get
and set
methods, this
points to the object which is used to access or modify the property.
function myclass() { } Object.defineProperty(myclass.prototype, "x", { get() { return this.stored_x; }, set(x) { this.stored_x = x; } }); var a = new myclass(); var b = new myclass(); a.x = 1; console.log(b.x); // undefined
Unlike accessor properties, value properties are always set on the object itself, not on a prototype. However, if a non-writable value property is inherited, it still prevents from modifying the property on the object.
function myclass() { } myclass.prototype.x = 1; Object.defineProperty(myclass.prototype, "y", { writable: false, value: 1 }); var a = new myclass(); a.x = 2; console.log(a.x); // 2 console.log(myclass.prototype.x); // 1 a.y = 2; // Ignored, throws in strict mode console.log(a.y); // 1 console.log(myclass.prototype.y); // 1
Specifications
Browser compatibility
Desktop | Mobile | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | WebView Android | Chrome Android | Firefox for Android | Opera Android | Safari on IOS | Samsung Internet | |
defineProperty |
5 |
12 |
4 |
9
8
In Internet Explorer 8, this was only supported on DOM objects and with some non-standard behaviors. This was later fixed in Internet Explorer 9.
|
11.6 |
5.1
Also supported in Safari 5, but not on DOM objects.
|
1 |
18 |
4 |
12 |
6
Also supported in Safari for iOS 4.2, but not on DOM objects.
|
1.0 |
See also
- Enumerability and ownership of properties
Object.defineProperties()
Object.propertyIsEnumerable()
Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor()
get
set
Object.create()
Reflect.defineProperty()
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https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/defineProperty