I am having problem understanding the behavior of below code in JavaScript Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Data science time! April 2019 and salary with experience The Ask Question Wizard is Live!Convert character to ASCII code in JavaScriptInvoking JavaScript code in an iframe from the parent pageHow to execute a JavaScript function when I have its name as a stringHow to find event listeners on a DOM node when debugging or from the JavaScript code?Simplest code for array intersection in javascriptDoes JavaScript have a method like “range()” to generate a range within the supplied bounds?How to set a JavaScript breakpoint from code in Chrome?Can't access object property, even though it exists. Returns undefinedDoes Javascript writable descriptor prevent changes on instances?Can't define set and get methods

When a candle burns, why does the top of wick glow if bottom of flame is hottest?

What's the meaning of "fortified infraction restraint"?

How does Python know the values already stored in its memory?

Time to Settle Down!

Selecting user stories during sprint planning

Do wooden building fires get hotter than 600°C?

What is the appropriate index architecture when forced to implement IsDeleted (soft deletes)?

Why wasn't DOSKEY integrated with COMMAND.COM?

Project Euler #1 in C++

What is this clumpy 20-30cm high yellow-flowered plant?

Is it fair for a professor to grade us on the possession of past papers?

Illegal assignment from sObject to Id

Why is Nikon 1.4g better when Nikon 1.8g is sharper?

Chinese Seal on silk painting - what does it mean?

Why do we need to use the builder design pattern when we can do the same thing with setters?

How fail-safe is nr as stop bytes?

What is the difference between globalisation and imperialism?

Putting class ranking in CV, but against dept guidelines

What initially awakened the Balrog?

How does the math work when buying airline miles?

Effects on objects due to a brief relocation of massive amounts of mass

Has negative voting ever been officially implemented in elections, or seriously proposed, or even studied?

Take 2! Is this homebrew Lady of Pain warlock patron balanced?

Most bit efficient text communication method?



I am having problem understanding the behavior of below code in JavaScript



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Data science time! April 2019 and salary with experience
The Ask Question Wizard is Live!Convert character to ASCII code in JavaScriptInvoking JavaScript code in an iframe from the parent pageHow to execute a JavaScript function when I have its name as a stringHow to find event listeners on a DOM node when debugging or from the JavaScript code?Simplest code for array intersection in javascriptDoes JavaScript have a method like “range()” to generate a range within the supplied bounds?How to set a JavaScript breakpoint from code in Chrome?Can't access object property, even though it exists. Returns undefinedDoes Javascript writable descriptor prevent changes on instances?Can't define set and get methods



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty height:90px;width:728px;box-sizing:border-box;








7















I was playing with below javascript code. Understanding of Object.defineProperty() and I am facing a strange issue with it. When I try to execute below code in the browser or in the VS code the output is not as expected whereas if I try to debug the code the output is correct



When I debug the code and evaluate the profile I can see the name & age property in the object
But at the time of output, it only shows the name property






//Code Snippet 
let profile =
name: 'Barry Allen',


// I added a new property in the profile object.
Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
value: 23,
writable: true
)

console.log(profile)
console.log(profile.age)





Now expected output here should be



name: "Barry Allen", age: 23
23


but I get the output as.
Note that I am able to access the age property defined afterwards.
I am not sure why the console.log() is behaving this way.



name: "Barry Allen"
23









share|improve this question









New contributor




Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


























    7















    I was playing with below javascript code. Understanding of Object.defineProperty() and I am facing a strange issue with it. When I try to execute below code in the browser or in the VS code the output is not as expected whereas if I try to debug the code the output is correct



    When I debug the code and evaluate the profile I can see the name & age property in the object
    But at the time of output, it only shows the name property






    //Code Snippet 
    let profile =
    name: 'Barry Allen',


    // I added a new property in the profile object.
    Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
    value: 23,
    writable: true
    )

    console.log(profile)
    console.log(profile.age)





    Now expected output here should be



    name: "Barry Allen", age: 23
    23


    but I get the output as.
    Note that I am able to access the age property defined afterwards.
    I am not sure why the console.log() is behaving this way.



    name: "Barry Allen"
    23









    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.






















      7












      7








      7








      I was playing with below javascript code. Understanding of Object.defineProperty() and I am facing a strange issue with it. When I try to execute below code in the browser or in the VS code the output is not as expected whereas if I try to debug the code the output is correct



      When I debug the code and evaluate the profile I can see the name & age property in the object
      But at the time of output, it only shows the name property






      //Code Snippet 
      let profile =
      name: 'Barry Allen',


      // I added a new property in the profile object.
      Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
      value: 23,
      writable: true
      )

      console.log(profile)
      console.log(profile.age)





      Now expected output here should be



      name: "Barry Allen", age: 23
      23


      but I get the output as.
      Note that I am able to access the age property defined afterwards.
      I am not sure why the console.log() is behaving this way.



      name: "Barry Allen"
      23









      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I was playing with below javascript code. Understanding of Object.defineProperty() and I am facing a strange issue with it. When I try to execute below code in the browser or in the VS code the output is not as expected whereas if I try to debug the code the output is correct



      When I debug the code and evaluate the profile I can see the name & age property in the object
      But at the time of output, it only shows the name property






      //Code Snippet 
      let profile =
      name: 'Barry Allen',


      // I added a new property in the profile object.
      Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
      value: 23,
      writable: true
      )

      console.log(profile)
      console.log(profile.age)





      Now expected output here should be



      name: "Barry Allen", age: 23
      23


      but I get the output as.
      Note that I am able to access the age property defined afterwards.
      I am not sure why the console.log() is behaving this way.



      name: "Barry Allen"
      23





      //Code Snippet 
      let profile =
      name: 'Barry Allen',


      // I added a new property in the profile object.
      Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
      value: 23,
      writable: true
      )

      console.log(profile)
      console.log(profile.age)





      //Code Snippet 
      let profile =
      name: 'Barry Allen',


      // I added a new property in the profile object.
      Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
      value: 23,
      writable: true
      )

      console.log(profile)
      console.log(profile.age)






      javascript






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 41 mins ago









      Eddie

      20.3k51642




      20.3k51642






      New contributor




      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      asked 42 mins ago









      Ravi WRavi W

      384




      384




      New contributor




      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      Ravi W is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          You should set enumerable to true. In Object.defineProperty its false by default. According to MDN.




          enumerable

          true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.
          Defaults to false.




          Non-enumerable means that property will not be shown in Object.keys() or for..in loop neither in console






          let profile = 
          name: 'Barry Allen',


          // I added a new property in the profile object.

          Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
          value: 23,
          writable: true,
          enumerable: true
          )
          console.log(profile)
          console.log(profile.age)





          Example: All the properties and methods on prototype object of built-in classes are non-enumerable. Thats is the reason you can call them from instance but they don't appear while iterating.



          To get all properties(including non-enumerable)Object​.get​OwnProperty​Names()
          .






          share|improve this answer

























          • I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

            – randomSoul
            29 mins ago











          • @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

            – Maheer Ali
            24 mins ago












          • See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

            – randomSoul
            19 mins ago












          • @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

            – Maheer Ali
            8 secs ago


















          6














          By default, properties you define with defineProperty are not enumerable - this means that they will not show up when you iterate over their Object.keys (which is what the snippet console does). (Similarly, the length property of an array does not get displayed, because it's non-enumerable.)



          See MDN:




          enumerable



          true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.



          Defaults to false.




          Make it enumerable instead:






          //Code Snippet 
          let profile =
          name: 'Barry Allen',


          // I added a new property in the profile object.
          Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
          value: 23,
          writable: true,
          enumerable: true
          )

          console.log(profile)
          console.log(profile.age)





          The reason you can see the property in the logged image is that Chrome's console will show you non-enumerable properties as well - but the non-enumerable properties will be slightly greyed-out:



          enter image description here



          See how age is grey-ish, while name is not - this indicates that name is enumerable, and age is not.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

            – Maheer Ali
            7 mins ago












          • Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

            – CertainPerformance
            1 min ago


















          2














          Whenever you use".defineProperty" method of object. You should better define all the properties of the descriptor. Because if you don't define other property descriptor then it assumes default values for all of them which is false. So your console.log checks for all the enumerable : true properties and logs them.



          //Code Snippet 
          let profile =
          name: 'Barry Allen',


          // I added a new property in the profile object.
          Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
          value: 23,
          writable: true,
          enumerable : true,
          configurable : true
          )

          console.log(profile)
          console.log(profile.age)





          share|improve this answer























            Your Answer






            StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function ()
            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function ()
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function ()
            StackExchange.snippets.init();
            );
            );
            , "code-snippets");

            StackExchange.ready(function()
            var channelOptions =
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "1"
            ;
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
            createEditor();
            );

            else
            createEditor();

            );

            function createEditor()
            StackExchange.prepareEditor(
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
            convertImagesToLinks: true,
            noModals: true,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: 10,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            imageUploader:
            brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
            contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
            allowUrls: true
            ,
            onDemand: true,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            );



            );






            Ravi W is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f55757089%2fi-am-having-problem-understanding-the-behavior-of-below-code-in-javascript%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown

























            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            7














            You should set enumerable to true. In Object.defineProperty its false by default. According to MDN.




            enumerable

            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.
            Defaults to false.




            Non-enumerable means that property will not be shown in Object.keys() or for..in loop neither in console






            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            Example: All the properties and methods on prototype object of built-in classes are non-enumerable. Thats is the reason you can call them from instance but they don't appear while iterating.



            To get all properties(including non-enumerable)Object​.get​OwnProperty​Names()
            .






            share|improve this answer

























            • I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

              – randomSoul
              29 mins ago











            • @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

              – Maheer Ali
              24 mins ago












            • See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

              – randomSoul
              19 mins ago












            • @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

              – Maheer Ali
              8 secs ago















            7














            You should set enumerable to true. In Object.defineProperty its false by default. According to MDN.




            enumerable

            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.
            Defaults to false.




            Non-enumerable means that property will not be shown in Object.keys() or for..in loop neither in console






            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            Example: All the properties and methods on prototype object of built-in classes are non-enumerable. Thats is the reason you can call them from instance but they don't appear while iterating.



            To get all properties(including non-enumerable)Object​.get​OwnProperty​Names()
            .






            share|improve this answer

























            • I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

              – randomSoul
              29 mins ago











            • @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

              – Maheer Ali
              24 mins ago












            • See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

              – randomSoul
              19 mins ago












            • @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

              – Maheer Ali
              8 secs ago













            7












            7








            7







            You should set enumerable to true. In Object.defineProperty its false by default. According to MDN.




            enumerable

            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.
            Defaults to false.




            Non-enumerable means that property will not be shown in Object.keys() or for..in loop neither in console






            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            Example: All the properties and methods on prototype object of built-in classes are non-enumerable. Thats is the reason you can call them from instance but they don't appear while iterating.



            To get all properties(including non-enumerable)Object​.get​OwnProperty​Names()
            .






            share|improve this answer















            You should set enumerable to true. In Object.defineProperty its false by default. According to MDN.




            enumerable

            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.
            Defaults to false.




            Non-enumerable means that property will not be shown in Object.keys() or for..in loop neither in console






            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            Example: All the properties and methods on prototype object of built-in classes are non-enumerable. Thats is the reason you can call them from instance but they don't appear while iterating.



            To get all properties(including non-enumerable)Object​.get​OwnProperty​Names()
            .






            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            let profile = 
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.

            Object.defineProperty(profile , 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )
            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 18 mins ago

























            answered 40 mins ago









            Maheer AliMaheer Ali

            11.5k826




            11.5k826












            • I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

              – randomSoul
              29 mins ago











            • @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

              – Maheer Ali
              24 mins ago












            • See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

              – randomSoul
              19 mins ago












            • @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

              – Maheer Ali
              8 secs ago

















            • I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

              – randomSoul
              29 mins ago











            • @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

              – Maheer Ali
              24 mins ago












            • See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

              – randomSoul
              19 mins ago












            • @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

              – Maheer Ali
              8 secs ago
















            I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

            – randomSoul
            29 mins ago





            I didn't knew about this, but when I checked by running the local code in browser, it shows up perfectly (in spite of explicitly specifying enumerable to false).

            – randomSoul
            29 mins ago













            @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

            – Maheer Ali
            24 mins ago






            @randomSoul I can't get what you mean.

            – Maheer Ali
            24 mins ago














            See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

            – randomSoul
            19 mins ago






            See - pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png . I did not set enumerable to true for age, but still it is shown.

            – randomSoul
            19 mins ago














            @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

            – Maheer Ali
            8 secs ago





            @randomSoul See the comments of the answer of certain performance.

            – Maheer Ali
            8 secs ago













            6














            By default, properties you define with defineProperty are not enumerable - this means that they will not show up when you iterate over their Object.keys (which is what the snippet console does). (Similarly, the length property of an array does not get displayed, because it's non-enumerable.)



            See MDN:




            enumerable



            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.



            Defaults to false.




            Make it enumerable instead:






            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            The reason you can see the property in the logged image is that Chrome's console will show you non-enumerable properties as well - but the non-enumerable properties will be slightly greyed-out:



            enter image description here



            See how age is grey-ish, while name is not - this indicates that name is enumerable, and age is not.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

              – Maheer Ali
              7 mins ago












            • Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

              – CertainPerformance
              1 min ago















            6














            By default, properties you define with defineProperty are not enumerable - this means that they will not show up when you iterate over their Object.keys (which is what the snippet console does). (Similarly, the length property of an array does not get displayed, because it's non-enumerable.)



            See MDN:




            enumerable



            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.



            Defaults to false.




            Make it enumerable instead:






            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            The reason you can see the property in the logged image is that Chrome's console will show you non-enumerable properties as well - but the non-enumerable properties will be slightly greyed-out:



            enter image description here



            See how age is grey-ish, while name is not - this indicates that name is enumerable, and age is not.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

              – Maheer Ali
              7 mins ago












            • Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

              – CertainPerformance
              1 min ago













            6












            6








            6







            By default, properties you define with defineProperty are not enumerable - this means that they will not show up when you iterate over their Object.keys (which is what the snippet console does). (Similarly, the length property of an array does not get displayed, because it's non-enumerable.)



            See MDN:




            enumerable



            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.



            Defaults to false.




            Make it enumerable instead:






            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            The reason you can see the property in the logged image is that Chrome's console will show you non-enumerable properties as well - but the non-enumerable properties will be slightly greyed-out:



            enter image description here



            See how age is grey-ish, while name is not - this indicates that name is enumerable, and age is not.






            share|improve this answer















            By default, properties you define with defineProperty are not enumerable - this means that they will not show up when you iterate over their Object.keys (which is what the snippet console does). (Similarly, the length property of an array does not get displayed, because it's non-enumerable.)



            See MDN:




            enumerable



            true if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object.



            Defaults to false.




            Make it enumerable instead:






            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            The reason you can see the property in the logged image is that Chrome's console will show you non-enumerable properties as well - but the non-enumerable properties will be slightly greyed-out:



            enter image description here



            See how age is grey-ish, while name is not - this indicates that name is enumerable, and age is not.






            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable: true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 1 min ago

























            answered 39 mins ago









            CertainPerformanceCertainPerformance

            101k166291




            101k166291












            • Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

              – Maheer Ali
              7 mins ago












            • Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

              – CertainPerformance
              1 min ago

















            • Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

              – Maheer Ali
              7 mins ago












            • Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

              – CertainPerformance
              1 min ago
















            Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

            – Maheer Ali
            7 mins ago






            Someone give this pasteboard.co/IaOxMqB.png Its showing age property in chrome console. Can you please explain that? Does chrome console works differently?

            – Maheer Ali
            7 mins ago














            Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

            – CertainPerformance
            1 min ago





            Yes, that's a Chrome console behavior - it'll show you all properties, including non-enumerable ones, see edit. The non-enumerable properties (like age and __proto__) will be slightly greyed out.

            – CertainPerformance
            1 min ago











            2














            Whenever you use".defineProperty" method of object. You should better define all the properties of the descriptor. Because if you don't define other property descriptor then it assumes default values for all of them which is false. So your console.log checks for all the enumerable : true properties and logs them.



            //Code Snippet 
            let profile =
            name: 'Barry Allen',


            // I added a new property in the profile object.
            Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
            value: 23,
            writable: true,
            enumerable : true,
            configurable : true
            )

            console.log(profile)
            console.log(profile.age)





            share|improve this answer



























              2














              Whenever you use".defineProperty" method of object. You should better define all the properties of the descriptor. Because if you don't define other property descriptor then it assumes default values for all of them which is false. So your console.log checks for all the enumerable : true properties and logs them.



              //Code Snippet 
              let profile =
              name: 'Barry Allen',


              // I added a new property in the profile object.
              Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
              value: 23,
              writable: true,
              enumerable : true,
              configurable : true
              )

              console.log(profile)
              console.log(profile.age)





              share|improve this answer

























                2












                2








                2







                Whenever you use".defineProperty" method of object. You should better define all the properties of the descriptor. Because if you don't define other property descriptor then it assumes default values for all of them which is false. So your console.log checks for all the enumerable : true properties and logs them.



                //Code Snippet 
                let profile =
                name: 'Barry Allen',


                // I added a new property in the profile object.
                Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
                value: 23,
                writable: true,
                enumerable : true,
                configurable : true
                )

                console.log(profile)
                console.log(profile.age)





                share|improve this answer













                Whenever you use".defineProperty" method of object. You should better define all the properties of the descriptor. Because if you don't define other property descriptor then it assumes default values for all of them which is false. So your console.log checks for all the enumerable : true properties and logs them.



                //Code Snippet 
                let profile =
                name: 'Barry Allen',


                // I added a new property in the profile object.
                Object.defineProperty(profile, 'age',
                value: 23,
                writable: true,
                enumerable : true,
                configurable : true
                )

                console.log(profile)
                console.log(profile.age)






                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 37 mins ago









                RK_15RK_15

                5749




                5749




















                    Ravi W is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                    draft saved

                    draft discarded


















                    Ravi W is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                    Ravi W is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











                    Ravi W is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














                    Thanks for contributing an answer to Stack Overflow!


                    • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                    But avoid


                    • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                    • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                    To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                    draft saved


                    draft discarded














                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function ()
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f55757089%2fi-am-having-problem-understanding-the-behavior-of-below-code-in-javascript%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                    );

                    Post as a guest















                    Required, but never shown





















































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown

































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown







                    Popular posts from this blog

                    名間水力發電廠 目录 沿革 設施 鄰近設施 註釋 外部連結 导航菜单23°50′10″N 120°42′41″E / 23.83611°N 120.71139°E / 23.83611; 120.7113923°50′10″N 120°42′41″E / 23.83611°N 120.71139°E / 23.83611; 120.71139計畫概要原始内容臺灣第一座BOT 模式開發的水力發電廠-名間水力電廠名間水力發電廠 水利署首件BOT案原始内容《小檔案》名間電廠 首座BOT水力發電廠原始内容名間電廠BOT - 經濟部水利署中區水資源局

                    Is my guitar’s action too high? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Strings too stiff on a recently purchased acoustic guitar | Cort AD880CEIs the action of my guitar really high?Μy little finger is too weak to play guitarWith guitar, how long should I give my fingers to strengthen / callous?When playing a fret the guitar sounds mutedPlaying (Barre) chords up the guitar neckI think my guitar strings are wound too tight and I can't play barre chordsF barre chord on an SG guitarHow to find to the right strings of a barre chord by feel?High action on higher fret on my steel acoustic guitar

                    香港授勳及嘉獎制度 目录 勳章及獎狀類別 嘉獎等級 授勳及嘉獎提名 統計數字 多次獲頒勳章或獎狀的人士 爭議 褫奪機制 参考文献 外部連結 参见 导航菜单統計數字一九九七年七月二日(星期三)香港特別行政區的授勳制度六七暴動領袖獲大紫荊勳章 董建華被斥為肯定殺人放火董建華授勳楊光 議員窮追猛打蘋論:顛倒是非黑白的大紫荊董讚楊光有貢獻避談暴動董拒答授勳楊光原因撤除勳銜撤除勳銜撤除勳銜特首掌「搣柴」生殺權行為失當罪 隨時「搣柴」失長糧政府刊憲 許仕仁郭炳江遭「搣柴」去年中終極上訴失敗 許仕仁郭炳江撤勳章太平紳士猛料阿Sir講古—— 「搣柴」有故一九九八年授勳名單一九九九年授勳名單二○○三年授勳名單二○○八年授勳名單二○○七年授勳名單政府總部禮賓處 - 授勳及嘉獎香港特別行政區勳章綬帶一覽(PDF)(非官方)