Object.defineProperties()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The Object.defineProperties()
static method defines new or modifies existing properties directly on an object, returning the object.
Try it
const object1 = {}; Object.defineProperties(object1, { property1: { value: 42, writable: true, }, property2: {}, }); console.log(object1.property1); // Expected output: 42
Syntax
Object.defineProperties(obj, props)
Parameters
obj
The object on which to define or modify properties.
props
An object whose keys represent the names of properties to be defined or modified and whose values are objects describing those properties. Each value in
props
must be either a data descriptor or an accessor descriptor; it cannot be both (seeObject.defineProperty()
for more details).Data descriptors and accessor descriptors may optionally contain the following keys:
configurable
true
if and only if the type of this property descriptor may be changed and if the property may be deleted from the corresponding object. Defaults tofalse
.enumerable
true
if and only if this property shows up during enumeration of the properties on the corresponding object. Defaults tofalse
.
A data descriptor also has the following optional keys:
value
The value associated with the property. Can be any valid JavaScript value (number, object, function, etc.). Defaults to
undefined
.writable
true
if and only if the value associated with the property may be changed with an assignment operator. Defaults tofalse
.
An accessor descriptor also has the following optional keys:
get
A function which serves as a getter for the property, or
undefined
if there is no getter. The function's return value will be used as the value of the property. Defaults toundefined
.set
A function which serves as a setter for the property, or
undefined
if there is no setter. The function will receive as its only argument the new value being assigned to the property. Defaults toundefined
.
If a descriptor has neither of
value
,writable
,get
andset
keys, it is treated as a data descriptor. If a descriptor has bothvalue
orwritable
andget
orset
keys, an exception is thrown.
Return value
The object that was passed to the function.
Examples
Using Object.defineProperties
const obj = {}; Object.defineProperties(obj, { property1: { value: true, writable: true, }, property2: { value: "Hello", writable: false, }, // etc. etc. });
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification # sec-object.defineproperties |