The initial value of Object.prototype.constructor is the standard built-in Object constructor.
Determines whether an object has a property with the specified name.
A property name.
Determines whether an object exists in another object's prototype chain.
Another object whose prototype chain is to be checked.
Determines whether a specified property is enumerable.
A property name.
Returns a date converted to a string using the current locale.
Returns a string representation of an object.
Returns the primitive value of the specified object.
Copy the values of all of the enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. Returns the target object.
The target object to copy to.
The source object from which to copy properties.
Copy the values of all of the enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. Returns the target object.
The target object to copy to.
The first source object from which to copy properties.
The second source object from which to copy properties.
Copy the values of all of the enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. Returns the target object.
The target object to copy to.
The first source object from which to copy properties.
The second source object from which to copy properties.
The third source object from which to copy properties.
Copy the values of all of the enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. Returns the target object.
The target object to copy to.
One or more source objects from which to copy properties
Creates an object that has the specified prototype or that has null prototype.
Object to use as a prototype. May be null.
Creates an object that has the specified prototype, and that optionally contains specified properties.
Object to use as a prototype. May be null
JavaScript object that contains one or more property descriptors.
Adds one or more properties to an object, and/or modifies attributes of existing properties.
Object on which to add or modify the properties. This can be a native JavaScript object or a DOM object.
JavaScript object that contains one or more descriptor objects. Each descriptor object describes a data property or an accessor property.
Adds a property to an object, or modifies attributes of an existing property.
Object on which to add or modify the property. This can be a native JavaScript object (that is, a user-defined object or a built in object) or a DOM object.
The property name.
Descriptor for the property. It can be for a data property or an accessor property.
Returns an array of key/values of the enumerable properties of an object
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Returns an array of key/values of the enumerable properties of an object
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Prevents the modification of existing property attributes and values, and prevents the addition of new properties.
Prevents the modification of existing property attributes and values, and prevents the addition of new properties.
Prevents the modification of existing property attributes and values, and prevents the addition of new properties.
Object on which to lock the attributes.
Gets the own property descriptor of the specified object. An own property descriptor is one that is defined directly on the object and is not inherited from the object's prototype.
Object that contains the property.
Name of the property.
Returns an object containing all own property descriptors of an object
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Returns the names of the own properties of an object. The own properties of an object are those that are defined directly on that object, and are not inherited from the object's prototype. The properties of an object include both fields (objects) and functions.
Object that contains the own properties.
Returns an array of all symbol properties found directly on object o.
Object to retrieve the symbols from.
Returns the prototype of an object.
The object that references the prototype.
Returns true if the values are the same value, false otherwise.
The first value.
The second value.
Returns a value that indicates whether new properties can be added to an object.
Object to test.
Returns true if existing property attributes and values cannot be modified in an object, and new properties cannot be added to the object.
Object to test.
Returns true if existing property attributes cannot be modified in an object and new properties cannot be added to the object.
Object to test.
Returns the names of the enumerable string properties and methods of an object.
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Returns the names of the enumerable string properties and methods of an object.
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Prevents the addition of new properties to an object.
Object to make non-extensible.
Prevents the modification of attributes of existing properties, and prevents the addition of new properties.
Object on which to lock the attributes.
Sets the prototype of a specified object o to object proto or null. Returns the object o.
The object to change its prototype.
The value of the new prototype or null.
Returns an array of values of the enumerable properties of an object
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
Returns an array of values of the enumerable properties of an object
Object that contains the properties and methods. This can be an object that you created or an existing Document Object Model (DOM) object.
JS analogue of Polar's Dictionary type.
Polar dictionaries allow field access via the dot operator, which mirrors the way JS objects behave. However, if we translate Polar dictionaries into JS objects, we lose the ability to distinguish between dictionaries and instances, since all JS instances are objects. By subclassing
Object
, we can useinstanceof
to determine if a JS value should be serialized as a Polar dictionary or external instance.