The Object.isSealed()
method checks if an object is sealed or not.
Example
// by default, objects are not sealed
let empty = {};
console.log(Object.isSealed(empty));
// Output: false
isSealed() syntax
The syntax of the isSealed()
method is:
Object.isSealed(obj)
The isSealed()
method, being a static method, is called using the Object
class name.
isSealed() Parameters
The isSealed()
method takes in:
- obj - the object which should be checked
isSealed() Return Value
The isSealed()
method returns a Boolean
indicating whether the given object is sealed or not. It returns:
true
- if obj is sealedfalse
- if obj is not sealed
Note: The sealed object is not extensible, which means we cannot add new properties and delete the existing properties in the object.
However, the sealed object may or may not be writable. If the sealed object is writable prior to using the seal()
method, then it remains writable and vice-versa.
Example 1: JavaScript Object.isSealed() With Empty Object
// objects are not sealed by default
let empty = {};
// check if empty object is sealed
console.log(Object.isSealed(empty));
// Output: false
// non-extensible empty objects are sealed
Object.preventExtensions(empty);
// check if empty object is sealed
console.log(Object.isSealed(empty));
// Output: true
Example 2: isSealed() With Non-Empty Object
// create a non-empty object
let obj = { value: "A B C" };
// non-empty objects are sealed only when
// all its properties are non-configurable
Object.preventExtensions(obj);
// check if obj is sealed
console.log(Object.isSealed(obj));
// Output: false
// make all properties non-configurable
Object.defineProperty(obj, "value", { configurable: false });
// check if obj is sealed
console.log(Object.isSealed(obj));
// Output: true
As can be seen from the example above, simply using the preventExtensions() method won't guarantee that the object will be sealed. To seal an object, we also need to ensure that all its properties are non-configurable.
Hence, we get false
as an output when using the isSealed()
method on obj, even though we've already used preventExtensions()
on it.
Therefore, we have used the defineProperty() method on obj to set the configurable
flag of its property to false
. This ensures that obj is finally sealed.
Example 3: isSealed() With the seal() Method
let obj2 = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };
// seal the obj2 object
// using the seal() method
Object.seal(obj2);
// check if obj2 is sealed
console.log(Object.isSealed(obj2));
// Output: true
Using the seal()
method always ensures that the object is sealed. Hence, we get true
as an output after using the seal()
method with the obj2.
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