class
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since March 2017.
- class to a given name.
You can also define classes using the
class
expression.
Try it
class Polygon {
constructor(height, width) {
this.area = height * width;
}
}
console.log(new Polygon(4, 3).area);
/ Expected output: 12
Syntax
class name {
/ class body
}
class name extends otherName {
/ class body
}
Description
The class body of a class declaration is executed in let
:
class
declarations are scoped to blocks as well as functions.class
declarations can only be accessed after the place of declaration is reached (see function declarations).class
declarations do not create properties on function declarations).class
declarations cannot be redeclared by any other declaration in the same scope.
Outside the class body, class
declarations can be re-assigned like let
, but you should avoid doing so. Within the class body, the binding is constant like const
.
class Foo {
static {
Foo = 1; / TypeError: Assignment to constant variable.
}
}
class Foo2 {
bar = (Foo2 = 1); / TypeError: Assignment to constant variable.
}
class Foo3 {}
Foo3 = 1;
console.log(Foo3); / 1
Examples
A class declaration
In the following example, we first define a class named Rectangle
, then extend it to create a class named FilledRectangle
.
Note that super()
, used in the constructor
, can only be used in constructors, and must be called before the this
keyword can be used.
class Rectangle {
constructor(height, width) {
this.name = "Rectangle";
this.height = height;
this.width = width;
}
}
class FilledRectangle extends Rectangle {
constructor(height, width, color) {
super(height, width);
this.name = "Filled rectangle";
this.color = color;
}
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification # sec-class-definitions |