STOP Using Classes In JavaScript | Prime Reacts
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- čas přidán 7. 09. 2023
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Javascript: A language where everything's an object but classes aren't real.
lol never thought of it that way but 100% true
@smash3689 really? As a php dev i often think about it.
You just described Smalltalk
All functional first languages are same.
Classes are actually functions.
class Dog {}
typeof Dog === 'function'
the fact you'll highlight sentences but leave out the first and last character is somehow incredibly satisfying to watch, thank you the highlightagen
aybe it's just me, but I think it's aweso
THIS IS WHY I DO IT. IT FEELS SOOOOO GOOD
@@ThePrimeTimeagen accurate text selection is the final frontier in software accessibility and your blazing the path by showing full-bookending is a fools gamble!
I can’t stop noticing this now
why tho
Use classes when they make your code simpler. Don't when they don't.
I think this goes for all software dev advice. Don't always or never do something just because someone on the internet said so.
But more lines of code and complexity means quality and elegance!
@@danvilela This is the way! The more complex your code is, the more secure your job becomes and the more money you can demand from that company, because their business won't survive without someone understanding that "high quality and elegant" code :D At least until ChatGPT becomes better.
@@danvilelaexaclty. Let me just uhh…
FactoryManagerFactory.CreateFactoryManager(options)
Clean code/solid/Oop have done a lot of damage. People thing you always need a class for everything.
The article is a classic case of rationalization. The author started of with a conclusion and then went searching for arguments to support it, but failed to find any arguments that would support his conclusion or really make any sense at all.
Exactly, using invalids semantics as that. People who complain about OOP really just mean they hate overly abstracted code. Just say that and move on
@@tc2241 no. they're just saying that there are better abstractions out there. the author of the article could've referred to closures as a better alternative to objects and classes, but he's just a boomer stuck on ES5 lol
I don't know why I'm watching this. I've never touched JS.
It's like the Borg... Resistance is futile
JS is everywhere ...
one of us! one of us!
Glad you haven't, my experience with it was i have a feeling of it purposely make me dumber each line i wrote
Your son will be genetically made inside an incubator that runs Javascript so be ready for the future
You programmer tho?
Prime is literally at a point where his name is the size of an average Java className.
The name is new AbstractNameGetterMethodDelegateFactory() { }.gen()
@@nisonatic newing and invoking inline. chadlike
Also public-static-void-main-string-args-agen
I have a colleague at work trying to create classes for everything and apply design patterns everywhere even for simple logic or single line of code.
It adds a LOT of abstraction for nothing making it harder to debug.
And if you tell him it may be not necessary, he will look down on you for not respecting OOP / Design patterns as taught at school. 😅
Sometimes I wish we would see more KISS in code nowadays.
Tell him to KISS a girl
Your colleague suffers from patternitis maybe he would need to go to doctor
Does your colleague like Java? 😂
i wish i would see more KISS on my lips :(
This is a typical mistake beginners do when first learning OOP. After learning a new design pattern they feel the need to apply it to all of their codebase and completely ignoring any common sense. When it comes to design patters, less is often more.
Javascript objects are not 'just maps' , chromium actually creates c++ structs to improve performance. It's extremely complicated and the compiler does a lot of smart things in the background.
see, that'd be actually useful information, if the article actually was investigating the thing it purported to investigate.
it's just a weird crappy opinion piece.
Do you have any sources or something to read more about it?
This is not part of JS. Chrome does nit compile c++
@@AndriiMuliar You obviously don't know C++ or you'd know what he meant. He said C++ structs. Not code. Learn the difference.
@@DanniDuckstill not part of JS
The article says that JS Classes are just "Syntactic sugar" . We should use them more then.
Having more readable code with barely any impact to performance is great.
(Like with anything in life, that involves sugar, you should not over do it though.)
Edit: article is from 2020, private attributes were not widely available back then. :)
Private attributes exist in JS, see "Private class features" on MDN. (something the author of the article could've easily looked up before stating something wrong)
Also that "Classes are the same as in ES5" because if you transpile it to ES5 with Babel... was quite dumb :D
TL;DR: Just use JDSL.
At the time the article was posted private fields were not widely supported in browsers. Firefox got the feature over a year later (according to caniuse). I agree that it would have been nice for them to say that it was being worked on, though.
@@Derik. Oh, I should've realised this article is from 2020, thanks for noticing. :)
Then the author was indeed right with that point.
Meanwhile, private variables can always be used in JS via closures.
I try to avoid classes first in JS when functions will do. However, they have their use. Even if its just syntactic sugar.
Me too, I try to use it more like structured data
try to avoid classes -first in JS- when functions will do
A month ago, I attended a Node.js Course where I was taught a "thisless" approach in JS and I must say I love it
@oodevr I believe it is nested function definitions whose top-level function returns a bucket object containing the top level function locals and the nested functions. It's cute but a cluster**** in terms of performance. People have dogmatic prejudice against classes.
@@damienlmooreit at least used to be that it was faster than classes, that's why typescript itself is written that way. It currently seems to be slower a lot of the time, but if you unwrap the actual allocations and lookup logic involved, that's not actually necessarily true, they're just missing some fast paths that classes have.
The trade off for not having the semantic clarity of the class syntax is that without using "this", you can much more easily grab a function and call it without using .bind() or .call(), you can have much more natural multiple or private constructors, and without instanceof you can swap it out for tests far more easily.
But I've used both, and you can mix them pretty easily, especially with Typescript interfaces. I mostly just wish Typescript didn't default the this parameter to any.
Maybe is a good approach, i don't know. But it sound like another technique that solves nothing and starts a new religion like clean code and agile.
@@xodr5 I... can't figure out what you're actually asking? I didn't say that using "this" was slower than scope lookup, I said it at least used to be. As in they've put a lot of work into v8 to make classes less abysmally slow, and now they're mostly just really fast. I also said that there's not really any real reason for scopes to be slower, which I meant to imply that they currently can be slower, but that that could be fixed.
There's not really much in it either way unless you're doing things you shouldn't be doing either way, like allocating a million vectors as objects.
@@xodr5 just checking: you're aware that JavaScript performance changes, as the implementation has work done on it, right? The v8 blog has lots of examples where using some new feature was something like 50 times (not percent!) slower than some earlier equivalent until they made a fix. Don't pay too much attention to performance numbers without specifically measuring, and don't pay much attention to micro-benchmarks (it's stupidly hard to benchmark JavaScript accurately), and don't keep assumptions about performance around for too long either, as things are fixed.
For example, are you aware that let and const still have something like 10-20% performance impact in real workloads over var, for example? You'd think it wouldn't make any difference, but it absolutely can (sometimes!), and it might not in the future, as I think it's being looked at right now.
The reason I prefer avoiding classes is that it's simpler to think about JavaScript without using "this", not performance. I don't know why you're picking on that point.
FP multiple dispatch functions may act like class methods (if they are dispatched on first argument alone), but they do not work like OOP methods. The reason is, if you know argument types, you know a method and can resolve it at compile time (even in dynamic language like Julia!). this means that dispatching can be implicitly made static most of the time, and when it is dynamic, it still should match one function with one argument collection.
dispatch functions also do not feel like class methods, they feel like dynamic pattern matching statements, if that makes sense. so your program looks like one giant function, cut into match statement arms.
4:55 when you're making tea and the water is hot enough
I love the argument "Because react devs told you not to use classes"
This guy seems severely confused what the difference is between a React class component and a JS class. If you don't understand why the react devs moved away from class components, don't write an article mentioning this as an argument against classes. This is so dumb.
yep agree, the moment i saw "Private isnt available" literally null everything he said
Exactly this😂
Isn't OOP a concept and not something language specific? C has no concept of clases/objects, but you still can implement OOP with structs, functions and pointers etc
Simpler notation is usually superior. JavaScript is notorious for having so many different ways for doing the same thing:
- It's easier to only use === than both === and ==
- it's easier to use arrow functions than arrow functions, function declarations, and function expressions.
- it's easier to use type instead of type and interface
- it's easier to use `` than ``, '', and ””
- it's easier to always use curly brackets in block statements, than to sometime omit them and something include them.
- it's easier to name variables with camelCase than camelCase, snake_case, and UPPERCASE_SNAKE_CASE.
If there are multiple ways to to the same thing, do away with those things that are not absolutely necessary. In most cases, neither classes nor prototypical inheritance are required. However, closures are.
One reason prototypal OO is more powerful, as far as I understand, is because you can do stuff like building/binding a missing "method" at runtime. In theory there is no limit of complexity in the inheritance scheme you can mimic. It's not necessarily better, it harder to optimise, but it's more powerful.
That being said, I like neither style of OO in JS. For very simple stuff, classes feel like an unnecessary abstraction. For more complex patterns, JS doesn't hide well the prototypes under the hood. And Prototypal syntax in JS is really ugly. And then there is the lack of operator overload, the lack of a type system and the lack of static dispatch, so OO in JS is really just glorified namespace, possibly with some ugly inheritance and poor interfacing. It has no synergy with other feature whatsoever that most other OO language have, baring iteration.
Lua IMO is prototypal OO done right. The approach is extremely minimalist, the syntax is very simple, and you code exactly what you need from OO, nothing more. The downside is you have to code it yourself, but come on, having to code in lua is more of an upside.
JS has always been a powerful lang in all the wrong ways. Prototypical OO doesn't add anything useful to the table and its patterns can be replicated using far better abstractions. Every now and then there's a prototype-related vulnerability in V8 that wouldn't exist had JS been any saner to implement and develop with. JS should've had multiple dispatch like Julia imo. At least that seems to be much truer to the aggressive late-binding early OOP advocated.
Hehe, prototypal OO allows you to implement extension methods, like in C#. It is a little over the hand, and the syntax sucks, but after you put up the scaffold it goes pretty smooth
Modern browsers are able to compile a lot of JS to native behind the scenes on the fly, but that is only really effective if you use classes, otherwise you'd need to hit the same object that did not change over and over again before the JIT bothers.
JavaScript's OOP style was taken from Self, a language by Sun that took its syntax from Smalltalk, but switched to a new (at the time) prototype based OOP. There was a simple transpiler from Smalltalk to Self, so existing code could be used. NewtonScript for the Apple Newton was based on Self even more so than JavaScript was. JavaScript is more OOP (by the definition of "closer to Smalltalk") than C++ is. Classes actually are different, by the way. Try making an AudioWorklet using prototypes to see what I mean.
Yep, class-oriented OOP isn't the only game in town.
Programmers never stop to amaze me. When a normal person in their work environment doesn't see something useful they won't go online and write an article "Stop using something". But I have seen countless articles or videos of programmers saying "don't use classes, don't use else statements, don't have methods longer than 5 lines of code, don't use a for loop etc etc..." and will give you a few examples that fit their narrative. I can think of dozens of examples where they are useful and also as many where they shouldn't be used.
I saw a “It’s time to say goodbye to Bootstrap” a couple of months ago. I actually read it and as you can guess it was garbage. Just a bunch of “we have tailwind!” And “css is modern” like bootstrap is not constantly taking advantage of new css features
At the end of the day, the message is “just be normal” lol. If you dont like bootstrap, sure, talk about it. But dont pretend like you have arrived to a revolutionary “truth” lol
Don't use else is correct though.
Na this absolutely exists in every industry. You just haven't seen the other industries' blogs yet.
That's why the Whitespace language is bound to take off. Nobody can complain "don't use this feature!" when they can't see it.
@@brad1785 lol
While I don't always reach for classes, this "article" just contains a bunch of assumptions with no real explanation behind their reasoning; no digging into JS engine code, like V8 or JavaScriptCore, to see if what they claim holds true at all. To me it's a bunch of baloney until you can actually prove what you're claiming is true.
The only well known fact is that classes are syntatic sugar over prototypes in JS, though. I also highly encourage anyone to read V8 team's article on hidden classes, which are an optimization mechanism for prototypical objects (created through `new` keyword).
For me using “new” and “this” is enough to never use classes. Never!
Thank you for another classy video!
One major thing overlooked here in this article: with a class definition, IDE’s and LSP’s have a much easier time figuring out how to help you program
It was actually (very) briefly mentioned.
If only that were more true for JavaScript. VS Code and Visual Studio do a decent job but when you start passing class instances as arguments they get totally stupid. Luckily there is a silly but mostly harmless work-around: Add a line of code to your class constructor that checks if the constructor's first parameter is an instance of the class itself and simply return it if so. Then whenever you have a function that wants to accept an argument of that class, reconstruct it at the beginning (e.g. arg1 = new className(arg1)). That's enough to make VS Code and Visual Studio remember the class properties again and give you the correct code completion.
@@stevenleonmusicor just use typescript
just use typescript
i find this types of videos so educational, thanks daddy prime. ❤
i'm not sure if this is crazy but i've got the idea that in oop, members you can pass as parameters and/or are public should only be derived from interfaces where you can't add any more public members at all, and then as local variables you could have prototype inheritance and extend objects in any way you'd like, but if you pass them to external methods you wouldn't be able to use any of the extensions because the signature of the method specifies an interface and the extensions would not be part of its api. and of course union and intersection types to specify more than one interface at a time, and using existing classes as concrete implementations of interfaces when you inherit them as a way to avoid having to write the same code over again. but never extending a concrete class by itself and never adding globally accessible public members. i don't know if this is just bullshit but i think it'd be nice
I believe people asked for classes in js, just as people argue about using js for frontend and backend. Familiar structures from other languages make seem more relational. Like having a user class in JavaScript which communicates to a class in php called users.. with similar functions .. plus you would have a database table for users .. fields matching functions etc..
I use classes and just objects with functions.. so who knows.
"Don't use classes, use something that's less optimized to do the same thing, or just make something objectively more difficult to maintain. Also, classes are less optimized because trust me bro."
Classes actually are much better optimized, especially with the JIT, so that guy is talking out of his ass
Exactly. I’m starting to believe programmer bloggers are just narcissists with an axe to grind
Another banger video.
If you want to encapsulate state and methods in JS you can simply put them all in an object. So here he's indirectly referring to using Object.create to wire this type of thing up to a prototype in JS if you want the methods/properties only once in memory - on the base object. Object.create is the newer syntax for using __prototype__, etc.
This would have been an idiomatic way to add to and access the prototype in JS, but it's not used very much since everyone learns Class syntax from other languages and it's more familiar.
It gives performance/memory boost but it's only practical if there are more than 10k instances, you aren't changing the data structure much if at all, and it's a shallow object.
I think the performance is identical whether you use Object.create or Class in JS, they both use the prototype under the hood. It's a common point of contention to say that JS already had everything it needed and didn't need classes, because that comes with certain boilerplate and associated patterns that aren't really idiomatic JS, I think that's what he's trying to say here. - The J-Rodge
Love how someone in his chat brought up LSP. Made me feel good, cause i was thinking the same thing
JS was inspired by self which is described as, "an object-oriented programming language based on the concept of prototypes." 🙃
That was a shitastic article. I love how the author provided plenty of examples showing how prototypal delegation is better than ES6 class syntax!
what does shitastic even mean, is that a good or a bad thing?
@@FlanPoirotprobably "so shit it's funny and thus fun to read"
i might be wrong but I use Js classes only when the previous code uses them and when i need to create an object that does multiple things with the same input, to just declare one and use it mutiple times
5:16, yes, recreate it with closures. Factories that return the methods you want that operate on private enclosed values is always a better experience than classes in JavaScript in my opinion.
They used to call it the "module pattern" and it is somewhat similar to commonjs modules
Ah yes, the IIFE closure returning a public interface :-) I used this pattern extensively past and honestly liked it too, but the minute we had support for native classes I dropped it. I just don’t see the downsides of classes - at least not the way I use them.
@@JensRoland I pretty much exclusively write code for a browser and rarely find the need for anything oop-like, so maybe that's why I don't really use them.
Then again I might be stuck in the past a bit too much. Last month I used setTimeout to break a long running fuzzy search algorithm up and prevent it from blocking and make it cancellable. When I was looking at my code after I was done I realized I should have just used a web worker.
@@JensRoland the native classes have no downsides, especially now that you have fully private members. The IIFE closure instead is a bitch and eats a lot of memory
Closures are much slower than classes. JIT compilers optimize classes very well.
Is your shell transparent or is that a wallpaper for your shell?
I read this somewhere - In programming, it's all about trade-offs; every gain comes with a loss :)
I'm so happy I found this channel
Is there vim for manipulating DOM? Like for note taking in html. Yank and paste styles.
The performance callout is strange.
If you benchmark class instance methods vs object with bound methods, and functions that accept the object, the class one is actually often faster and lower memory.
13:18 that's why we should have pipe operator in any language (in js I do it through custom function) . btv there is proposal for js about adding pipe operator
Pipe would be so awesome to have. It's one of those things from elixir I always miss in js. that and proper pattern matching. switch is cumbersome.
them: don't use classes in JavaScript
me: don't use JavaScript
@theprimetime classes can be slow if you use inheritance. Suppose animal base then extend animal to cat and dog. Dog can deopt cat in this case, because they both point to the same animal properties after v8 explodes everything. Its a tradeoff for lowery memory to do it that way. worth? imo prob not but whatever
8:10 It's functional programming. JS bind is "function currying."
Prime, composition works just as well for event emitters, no need to use inheritance for that
Yup...event dispatch libraries that leverage composition - like MiniSignals - are a God send.
OMG thanks for being a person that knows how to distinguish good programming practices like encapsulation from OOP specific implementations!
And yet, encapsulation is the sole reason OOP sucks. At a fine-grained level it just doesn't work
As a relatively new frontend dev I have struggled to understand why they are even useful.
Ive seen them used for mega menus, buttons and I just don't get it.
Someone enlighten me?
Because you’re working on frontend
Classes are more or less just a familiar syntax for objects with their own “this scope”. Normal struct literal objects in js don’t have their own “this” so it’s difficult to reference “your self”. The way to get a “this scope” in JS is the new keyword, calling a function with new before it creates a “this scope” and applies it to the function being called and if the function doesn’t return a value it returns “this” implicitly or you can explicitly return “this”. Classes work the same way but with a more familiar syntax. You can use classes and constructor functions more or less 1 to 1 but that might change as JS matures further. According to the spec they aren’t currently required to be treated differently by the interpreter.
Where are they useful? Classes (scoped objects) have most value you when you have a lot of things that need to keep up with their own state and have methods based on that state. Struct literals can have functions but they can’t easily reference themselves as they don’t have their own scope. They really shine in things like games where you need to co-locate data and self referential functionality.
They are really good for custom elements
Imagine you need to describe a medkit in each funtion
TakeFromMedkit
AddToMedkit
...
You could just write a service that accepts the class MedKit
MedKitManipulationService with functions accepting the param MedKit
Makes it 10 times easier to track what you need to do whern you make changes
Here's my take, since frontend component usually just need to pass or receive "static" attributes. It doesn't really need full encapsulation that class Provide.
Example of Class where it is really powerful is in gamedev, since it translate very well, both the structure and the implementation. Enemy, Player on each own has its own move /attack function
Do you really need to encapsulate function in frontend? 99% you dont
10:30 - as much as I try to think about perf/memory(thanks to you
maybe this isn't such a nuanced take but I only use classes when I'm exporting something for use in another script. Or at least if the use case is encapsulated enough, that the state holding function has.
Nah. this is what I consider the most correct use case for classes. It lets you decouple a dependency in a modular manner. Say you have 3 data sets depending on some arbitrary choice. (file type, encryption set, Auth provider, and what have you)
Your code can then choose the correct resolver for that particular request going trough your resolver pipeline.. A class gives you easy complete encapsulation and abstraction in those cases where you need it most.
Inheritance is just wrong 99.999% of the time unless you have like 50 alternative resolves with only small differences or something. like having a db common set of functions shared by schema types. (GraphQL says hi)
@@MrAnticeI don't think I completely followed what you were trying to convey, could you elaborate on the specific case you have in mind and what the worst off alternative would be?
The best case I know that isn't graphql related is having multiple auth providers. (google, facebook ++)
Each of these give you a auth token, that all have different encryption keys and schemes. they all come with their own sdk's from the provider as well in many cases.
Your user has a request, and as part of that request they are giving you a bearer token, alongside a header that tells you witch provider it comes from.
A typical very bad, but far too common solution is to interact directly with the sdk's, by invoking if cases whenever you need to interact with the provider. in effect, your code has to branch whenever you need to interact with auth related data like access rights etc. something that is a common occurence in business logic.
Another common one is to completely resolve all users data in the auth middleware at a substantial hit to performance.
I've actually seen implementations that use both of these, and it's pure hell. it breaks really easily during updates of any kind.
Using encapsulation and abstraction with classes paired with dependency injection solves the same case with far cleaner code, and you get away with only having to choose dependency in your auth middleware once. The rest of your code is then able to be completely auth provider agnostic. you can even pass a mock auth module for unit testing business logic if you want. (A very good idea btw, especially when there is access controll involved)
I use classes but I don't usually make them. For most of my applications functional programming is the way to go. maybe if I use canvas to make a silly game I probably use it more. classes are just Blueprints.
thanks. I will continue use classes 😊
Can someone help me. There was a ThePrimeTime video where he started to rant a little bit and talk about how people don't know terminal tools well enough and they should just learn all their tools inside and out and they can accomplish tasks 10x faster than someone who tries to write it into their app. And then he said something about a terminal tool and he said JC, or JQ? Or something that began with J. Can anyone point me to the primeagen video where he has this rant?
Seeing JavaScript evolve from 1.0, 1.1, and 1.2 using IE4 and Netscape Navigator 4, to quote-unquote stagnating at ES5 for years, to then finally have regular updates kickstarted by ES6, I believe now more than ever it's about using the right tool for the job. That being said, as I commented in another video, "modern JS devs" should be forced to take some time to use only ES5 for a certain period of time (preferably without jQuery) to understand and appreciate not only the limitations of what we had to deal with before the niceties of ES6 and later, but also to understand that there's more than one way to skin a cat, sometimes faster, sometimes cleaner.
We need to start using php for all purposes.
Hot take 🙂
I just laugh it off these days when it comes to subjects like "use this, don't use that". Just use the tool and method that will solve the problem you work on when you can. In many cases you are working on an existing project that has been designed a certain way and you need to "fit in" so you won't create the frankenstein. Yet we all had the "fun" to work on projects where different part of the application use variety of design patters - oh what fun it is to work on those ones- because particular dev insisted that their design is "bestest" than the other.
The only issue I see is the typescript trap that new devs fall into without knowing vanilla JS. I often see online statement like "You don't need to learn JS just learn TS" which puts new devs in an awkward position especially when they finally get their first job and pikachu face all over the office at bespoke source code ;)
Interesting topic!
Isn't this just one of those things where classes aren't the actual problem but people just not knowing how to use classes and following OOP principles sensibly is? Inheritance to me is a great example where I think people shoehorn methods into parent classes that don't belong there as behaviors of the class objects instead of creating a function that takes an object as a parameter, get some data from that object, and then acts on it. Or vice versa where people are afraid to use a class so they define functions that need like 6 parameters do do a thing instead of just writing a class method to a class that already has access to some or all of the data where the behavior would make sense.
love the concept of react brain damage. I feel it myself
Time to read Eloquent Javascript again
11:34, well, if in C 1 write a struct with data and pointers to f()s inside, I believe it'd has the same or better performance than C++'s. But there would be several disadvantages, that I think it would not be worth to be called class:
1) Everything public. This is a disaster for complex projects. It's already a crushing factor, 1 should not use.
2) Pointers could change, pointing to another f() with the same signature.
3) If a class can't hold from public its things, defeats the very propose of it: code security.
4) No inheritance, making things riskier by using composition.
5) No constructor, leaving the programmer to deal with dangerous C initializations.
6) No destructor. Despite nowadays C has a kind of "general destructor" for any kind of variable, it's up to the coder to call it right when the object is created. It's not automatic like a constructor.
The only time I use extends is to create custom events.
That of private variables in classes is false js classes their just properties starting with a # and they can't be accessed as in you can't access it from other functions.
class test {
#hiddenVar
constructor() {
this.#hiddenVar = "Hello world"
}
log() {
console.log(this.#hiddenVar) // will log "Hello world"
}
}
const a = new test()
function test2() {
console.log(a.#hiddenVar) // Uncaught SyntaxError: Private field '#hiddenVar' must be declared in an enclosing class
}
JavaScript really said "CLASSES" with the quotation gesture.
Using classes isn't bad, but most things don't benefit in any way from it, and it introduces a lot of extra complexity where it shouldn't be.
For front-end true. But is feasible in Node.JS to not use classes?
I haven't seen the video, but damn just the other day I was thinking that I haven't used classes in my two years almost exclusively developing in javascript... let's see if I'm wrong
I heard reverse story not a function is an object but objects underneath are fuctions...
Classes are bloatware where you just need to store data in it: objects are much faster than classes.
Other than that, classes are sometimes useful of course. For organizing code logic, not for organizing data.
Plus, objects are easily composable, in simplest cases it's just enough to { ...ojb1, ...obj2 },
Whereas classes are not as easily composable, instead it assumes you will use inheritance which I guess we all agree is much rarely needed.
why does he say there's no private fields
what does # do, then
god I love those front end dudes they always know everything better then anyone else
5:40 Can someone, please, point me to which article Prime's referring to?
But JS has private properties if you add an # in front of the propertie name, even it doesnt work for me for some reason.
m = new MyClass();
m.#b = 0;
At least in theory that should throw an error. xD
That guys whole rant is him not understanding that you can have oop w/o classes
I prefer to work with the most native object structures in JS.
But it needs a lot of boilerplate and comments and readme's to scale and include team members.
Honestly, if you work with JavaScript, you need to understand that flexibility is more important than anything else. If you want efficient code, you're using the wrong language.
You need not to hold your opinions so strongly.
Choose what's the best tool for the situation.
For tiny project, i prefer vanilla JavaScript with es6 functionalities, almost exclusively using functions and weakly typing with jsdoc fit the intellisense. If it's web based I'll use the Dom API directly, no jQuery or bootstrap or framework.
But most projects are bigger and then I'll use typescript and therefore classes make more sense for many things, but it's not java and I won't force everything into classes. I tend to value readability and clarity in my source code.
This article seems to me as written by someone who is rather narrow minded, longing for one way to do everything and strongly opinionated.
Possibly someone difficult with whom to work.
Dude misspelled encapsulation 🤣
de-facto, I love it.
its all depend classes can save you from writing more of the same code.
I use classes when im building a game also. I think its all depends.
like it or not, prototype based OOP is still OOP
Dunno when this article is from, but private members do indeed exist in JS
I mean... they're cursed because they're objects and you can choose to assign some properties only sometimes... but sometimes they're really useful and can make things like creating a lot of asteroids with random shapes a lot easier, just... asteroids.push(new Asteroid (x,y,direction))
I realize that this is probably one of the only cases where OOB is actually useful at all 😅
Class has optimizations
I think A pattern like this is the way to do it. instead of inheritance:
```js
const dogSpecificMethods = { ... }
const robotSpecificMethods = { ... }
const roboDogProto = Object.assign({}, dogSpecificMethods, robotSpecificMethods)
const roboDog = Object.create(roboDogProto)
```
This allows you to combine the methods of multiple objects, into 1 prototype, removing the need of linking prototypes together in an awkward way, and allowing you to combine multiple things on the same level in a simple way.
C#, Java, PHP ... are class based languages
JS is an Object Oriented Language
Check James Coplien aout the topic
Old style classes and moddenr classes are not the same under the hood.
Like new classes don't have prototype chains. You make a class and it won't have any prototype.
In high level uses, it looks almost the same, but dramatically different even just directly under the surface.
And that matters only in apps that make use of a MASSIVE number of "instances", the footprint will be smaller because prototypes allow to not duplicate a property value for each instance but simply reference it.
It causes more operations needed to go up the prototype chain, but imho that's neglectable.
I am ignorant tho, about internals or how that's optimized inside engines.
You forgot to further scroll down, there was still something left.
I did not need a reminder that 1899 got canceled :(
Which one do you prefer? Real "Class", Fake "Class" or Abstract "Class"?🍭
OOP is very good, but its quite easy to get it wrong and make a mess of spagethi, but well executed i dont think any other paradigm can compete in terms of scalability.
just got a task, we got this old jar file, it was compiler with hard coded values, please "convert" the jar file to source code and change the values.
and when i got the code and i remember why i HATE the OOP days.
for each line of code for format a one line string, there was a new class with getter and setter for the 1-5 value it use in the string format.
a program that can be 60-70 lines long is made the "right" way with objects and is 3830 lines of code.
we need to make "clean" code, so we need to make so many objects for nothing, as it is CLEAN code.
I'd rather prefer seeing prototype syntax vs fat arrows inside fat arrows
When im in a writing bad, biased, childish articles competition and my opponent is a JS Brain programmer
The use of both JS and JavaScript in the same article drove me crazy
you should have bigger problems than that in life my boy
"Hi Michael, nice stream!"
thats old article 2020. that time and now so different
The only thing I don't like classes is because they are not minifiable and for most web apps this matter to make a really fast startup app.
you should learn how LZ77 works
Class Stans be like “gimme more encapuslation”
It's funny when people think classes === OOP. And then continue to program in JavaScript where practically everything is an object.
Same people who are spouting Go does not support OOP because it has structs.
Javascript classes strongly remind me of Perl classes.
"Is the arbiter"
Hmmm thats my new favourite word
Why in the actual fuck would a paradigm have an expiration date?
Whenever we define a data type, that is only possible because of the declarative programming paradigm.
Whenever we assign or mutate values, we still use imperative programming.
Whenever we use namespaces and packages, that is modular programming.
Paradigms never just "go away".
I would highly urge anyone who thinks that to look at the phylogenetic tree of programming paradigms.
The name is Theclassicgen