Prototype JavaScript Framework


The Prototype JavaScript Framework is a JavaScript framework created by Sam Stephenson in February 2005 as part of the foundation for Ajax support in Ruby on Rails. It is implemented as a single file of JavaScript code, usually named prototype.js. Prototype is distributed standalone, but also as part of larger projects, such as Ruby on Rails, script.aculo.us and Rico. As of November 2015, according to one survey, Prototype is used by 2.2% of all websites.

Features

Prototype provides various functions for developing JavaScript applications. The features range from programming shortcuts to major functions for dealing with XMLHttpRequest.
Prototype also provides library functions to support classes and class-based objects. In JavaScript, object creation is prototype-based instead: an object creating function can have a prototype property, and any object assigned to that property will be used as a prototype for the objects created with that function. The Prototype framework is not to be confused with this language feature.

Sample utility functions

The $() function

The dollar function, $, can be used as shorthand for the getElementById function. To refer to an element in the Document Object Model of an HTML page, the usual function identifying an element is:

document.getElementById.style.color = "#ffffff";

The $ function reduces the code to:

$.setStyle;

The $ function can also receive an element as parameter and will return, as in the previous example, a prototype extended object.

var domElement = document.getElementById; // Usual object reference returned
var prototypeEnhancedDomElement = $; // Prototype extended object reference

The $F() function

Building on the $ function: the $F function returns the value of the requested form element. For a 'text' input, the function will return the data contained in the element. For a 'select' input element, the function will return the currently selected value.

$F

The $$() function

The dollar dollar function is Prototype's CSS Selector Engine. It returns all matching elements, following the same rules as a selector in a CSS stylesheet. For example, if you want to get all <a> elements with the class "pulsate", you would use the following:

$$

This returns a collection of elements. If you are using the script.aculo.us extension of the core Prototype library, you can apply the "pulsate" effect as follows:

$$.each;

The Ajax object

In an effort to reduce the amount of code needed to run a cross-browser XMLHttpRequest function, Prototype provides the Ajax object to abstract the different browsers. It has two main methods: Ajax.Request and Ajax.Updater.
There are two forms of the Ajax object. Ajax.Request returns the raw XML output from an AJAX call, while the Ajax.Updater will inject the return inside a specified DOM object.
The Ajax.Request below finds the current values of two HTML form input elements, issues an HTTP POST request to the server with those element name/value pairs, and runs a custom function when the HTTP response is received from the server:

new Ajax.Request;

Object-oriented programming

Prototype also adds support for more traditional object-oriented programming. The Class.create method is used to create a new class. A class is then assigned a prototype which acts as a blueprint for instances of the class.

var FirstClass = Class.create;

Extending another class:

Ajax.Request = Class.create;

The framework function Object.extend takes two objects as parameters and copies the properties of the second object to the first one simulating inheritance. The combined object is also returned as a result from the function. As in the example above, the first parameter usually creates the base object, while the second is an anonymous object used solely for defining additional properties. The entire sub-class declaration happens within the parentheses of the function call.

Problems

Unlike other JavaScript libraries like jQuery, Prototype extends the DOM. There are plans to change this in the next major version of the library.
In April 2010, blogger Juriy 'kangax' Zaytsev described at length the problems that can follow from monkey patching new methods and properties into the objects defined by the W3C DOM. These ideas echo thoughts published in March 2010 by Yahoo! developer Nicholas C. Zakas They have been summarized as follows
By 2008, specific issues with using DOM-extension methods in older versions of Prototype, combined with newer versions of current browsers, were already being documented. Rather than adding new methods and properties to pre-existing 'host' DOM objects such as Element, like element.hide, the solution to these issues is to provide wrapper objects around these host objects and implement the new methods on these. jQuery is such a wrapper object in the library of that name.
It is now widely expected that the majority of these ideas and issues will be addressed in the release of Prototype 2.0, but Prototype developers will have to learn to work with an altered syntax, and much existing Prototype code will become outdated.