super
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since March 2016.
The super
keyword is used to access properties on an object literal or class's [[Prototype]], or invoke a superclass's constructor.
The super.prop
and super[expr]
expressions are valid in any method definition in both classes and object literals. The super(...args)
expression is valid in class constructors.
Try it
Syntax
super()
super(arg1)
super(arg1, arg2)
super(arg1, arg2, /* …, */ argN)
super.propertyOnParent
super[expression]
Description
The super
keyword can be used in two ways: as a "function call" (super(...args)
), or as a "property lookup" (super.prop
and super[expr]
).
Note: super
is a keyword and these are special syntactic constructs. super
is not a variable that points to the prototype object. Attempting to read super
itself is a SyntaxError
.
const child = {
myParent() {
console.log(super); // SyntaxError: 'super' keyword unexpected here
},
};
In the constructor body of a derived class (with extends
), the super
keyword may appear as a "function call" (super(...args)
), which must be called before the this
keyword is used, and before the constructor returns. It calls the parent class's constructor and binds the parent class's public fields, after which the derived class's constructor can further access and modify this
.
The "property lookup" form can be used to access methods and properties of an object literal's or class's [[Prototype]]. Within a class's body, the reference of super
can be either the superclass's constructor itself, or the constructor's prototype
, depending on whether the execution context is instance creation or class initialization. See the Examples section for more details.
Note that the reference of super
is determined by the class or object literal super
was declared in, not the object the method is called on. Therefore, unbinding or re-binding a method doesn't change the reference of super
in it (although they do change the reference of this
). You can see super
as a variable in the class or object literal scope, which the methods create a closure over. (But also beware that it's not actually a variable, as explained above.)
When setting properties through super
, the property is set on this
instead.
Examples
Using super in classes
This code snippet is taken from the classes sample (live demo). Here super()
is called to avoid duplicating the constructor parts' that are common between Rectangle
and Square
.
class Rectangle {
constructor(height, width) {
this.name = "Rectangle";
this.height = height;
this.width = width;
}
sayName() {
console.log(`Hi, I am a ${this.name}.`);
}
get area() {
return this.height * this.width;
}
set area(value) {
this._area = value;
}
}
class Square extends Rectangle {
constructor(length) {
// Here, it calls the parent class's constructor with lengths
// provided for the Rectangle's width and height
super(length, length);
// Note: In derived classes, super() must be called before you
// can use 'this'. Moving this to the top causes a ReferenceError.
this.name = "Square";
}
}
Super-calling static methods
You are also able to call super on static methods.
class Rectangle {
static logNbSides() {
return "I have 4 sides";
}
}
class Square extends Rectangle {
static logDescription() {
return `${super.logNbSides()} which are all equal`;
}
}
Square.logDescription(); // 'I have 4 sides which are all equal'
Accessing super in class field declaration
super
can also be accessed during class field initialization. The reference of super
depends on whether the current field is an instance field or a static field.
class Base {
static baseStaticField = 90;
baseMethod() {
return 10;
}
}
class Extended extends Base {
extendedField = super.baseMethod(); // 10
static extendedStaticField = super.baseStaticField; // 90
}
Note that instance fields are set on the instance instead of the constructor's prototype
, so you can't use super
to access the instance field of a superclass.
class Base {
baseField = 10;
}
class Extended extends Base {
extendedField = super.baseField; // undefined
}
Here, extendedField
is undefined
instead of 10, because baseField
is defined as an own property of the Base
instance, instead of Base.prototype
. super
, in this context, only looks up properties on Base.prototype
, because that's the [[Prototype]] of Extended.prototype
.
Deleting super properties will throw an error
You cannot use the delete
operator and super.prop
or super[expr]
to delete a parent class' property — it will throw a ReferenceError
.
class Base {
foo() {}
}
class Derived extends Base {
delete() {
delete super.foo; // this is bad
}
}
new Derived().delete(); // ReferenceError: invalid delete involving 'super'.
Using super.prop in object literals
Super can also be used in the object initializer notation. In this example, two objects define a method. In the second object, super
calls the first object's method. This works with the help of Object.setPrototypeOf()
with which we are able to set the prototype of obj2
to obj1
, so that super
is able to find method1
on obj1
.
const obj1 = {
method1() {
console.log("method 1");
},
};
const obj2 = {
method2() {
super.method1();
},
};
Object.setPrototypeOf(obj2, obj1);
obj2.method2(); // Logs "method 1"
Methods that read super.prop do not behave differently when bound to other objects
Accessing super.x
behaves like Reflect.get(Object.getPrototypeOf(objectLiteral), "x", this)
, which means the property is always sought on the object literal/class declaration's prototype, and unbinding and re-binding a method won't change the reference of super
.
class Base {
baseGetX() {
return 1;
}
}
class Extended extends Base {
getX() {
return super.baseGetX();
}
}
const e = new Extended();
console.log(e.getX()); // 1
const { getX } = e;
console.log(getX()); // 1
The same happens in object literals.
const parent1 = { prop: 1 };
const parent2 = { prop: 2 };
const child = {
myParent() {
console.log(super.prop);
},
};
Object.setPrototypeOf(child, parent1);
child.myParent(); // Logs "1"
const myParent = child.myParent;
myParent(); // Still logs "1"
const anotherChild = { __proto__: parent2, myParent };
anotherChild.myParent(); // Still logs "1"
Only resetting the entire inheritance chain will change the reference of super
.
class Base {
baseGetX() {
return 1;
}
static staticBaseGetX() {
return 3;
}
}
class AnotherBase {
baseGetX() {
return 2;
}
static staticBaseGetX() {
return 4;
}
}
class Extended extends Base {
getX() {
return super.baseGetX();
}
static staticGetX() {
return super.staticBaseGetX();
}
}
const e = new Extended();
// Reset instance inheritance
Object.setPrototypeOf(Extended.prototype, AnotherBase.prototype);
console.log(e.getX()); // Logs "2" instead of "1", because the prototype chain has changed
console.log(Extended.staticGetX()); // Still logs "3", because we haven't modified the static part yet
// Reset static inheritance
Object.setPrototypeOf(Extended, AnotherBase);
console.log(Extended.staticGetX()); // Now logs "4"
Calling methods from super
When calling super.prop
as a function, the this
value inside the prop
function is the current this
, not the object that super
points to. For example, the super.getName()
call logs "Extended"
, despite the code looking like it's equivalent to Base.getName()
.
class Base {
static getName() {
console.log(this.name);
}
}
class Extended extends Base {
static getName() {
super.getName();
}
}
Extended.getName(); // Logs "Extended"
This is especially important when interacting with static private properties.
Setting super.prop sets the property on this instead
Setting properties of super
, such as super.x = 1
, behaves like Reflect.set(Object.getPrototypeOf(objectLiteral), "x", 1, this)
. This is one of the cases where understanding super
as simply "reference of the prototype object" falls short, because it actually sets the property on this
instead.
class A {}
class B extends A {
setX() {
super.x = 1;
}
}
const b = new B();
b.setX();
console.log(b); // B { x: 1 }
console.log(Object.hasOwn(b, "x")); // true
super.x = 1
will look for the property descriptor of x
on A.prototype
(and invoke the setters defined there), but the this
value will be set to this
, which is b
in this context. You can read Reflect.set
for more details on the case when target
and receiver
differ.
This means that while methods that get super.prop
are usually not susceptible to changes in the this
context, those that set super.prop
are.
/* Reusing same declarations as above */
const b2 = new B();
b2.setX.call(null); // TypeError: Cannot assign to read only property 'x' of object 'null'
However, super.x = 1
still consults the property descriptor of the prototype object, which means you cannot rewrite non-writable properties, and setters will be invoked.
class X {
constructor() {
// Create a non-writable property
Object.defineProperty(this, "prop", {
configurable: true,
writable: false,
value: 1,
});
}
}
class Y extends X {
constructor() {
super();
}
foo() {
super.prop = 2; // Cannot overwrite the value.
}
}
const y = new Y();
y.foo(); // TypeError: "prop" is read-only
console.log(y.prop); // 1
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-super-keyword |
Browser compatibility
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