Object.seal() - JavaScript 编辑
The Object.seal()
method seals an object, preventing new properties from being added to it and marking all existing properties as non-configurable. Values of present properties can still be changed as long as they are writable.
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The source for this interactive example is stored in a GitHub repository. If you'd like to contribute to the interactive examples project, please clone https://github.com/mdn/interactive-examples and send us a pull request.Syntax
Object.seal(obj)
Parameters
obj
- The object which should be sealed.
Return value
The object being sealed.
Description
By default, objects are extensible (new properties can be added to them). Sealing an object prevents new properties from being added and marks all existing properties as non-configurable. This has the effect of making the set of properties on the object fixed. Making all properties non-configurable also prevents them from being converted from data properties to accessor properties and vice versa, but it does not prevent the values of data properties from being changed. Attempting to delete or add properties to a sealed object, or to convert a data property to accessor or vice versa, will fail, either silently or by throwing a TypeError
(most commonly, although not exclusively, when in strict mode code).
The prototype chain remains untouched. However, the __proto__
property is sealed as well.
Comparison to Object.freeze()
Existing properties in objects frozen with Object.freeze()
are made immutable. Objects sealed with Object.seal()
can have their existing properties changed.
Examples
Using Object.seal
var obj = {
prop: function() {},
foo: 'bar'
};
// New properties may be added, existing properties
// may be changed or removed.
obj.foo = 'baz';
obj.lumpy = 'woof';
delete obj.prop;
var o = Object.seal(obj);
o === obj; // true
Object.isSealed(obj); // === true
// Changing property values on a sealed object
// still works.
obj.foo = 'quux';
// But you can't convert data properties to accessors,
// or vice versa.
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'foo', {
get: function() { return 'g'; }
}); // throws a TypeError
// Now any changes, other than to property values,
// will fail.
obj.quaxxor = 'the friendly duck';
// silently doesn't add the property
delete obj.foo;
// silently doesn't delete the property
// ...and in strict mode such attempts
// will throw TypeErrors.
function fail() {
'use strict';
delete obj.foo; // throws a TypeError
obj.sparky = 'arf'; // throws a TypeError
}
fail();
// Attempted additions through
// Object.defineProperty will also throw.
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'ohai', {
value: 17
}); // throws a TypeError
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'foo', {
value: 'eit'
}); // changes existing property value
Non-object coercion
In ES5, if the argument to this method is not an object (a primitive), then it will cause a TypeError
. In ES2015, a non-object argument will be treated as if it was a sealed ordinary object by returning it.
Object.seal(1);
// TypeError: 1 is not an object (ES5 code)
Object.seal(1);
// 1 (ES2015 code)
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript (ECMA-262) The definition of 'Object.seal' in that specification. |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
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