Function
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.
* Some parts of this feature may have varying levels of support.
The Function object provides methods for functions. In JavaScript, every function is actually a Function object.
Constructor
Function()-
Creates a new
Functionobject. Calling the constructor directly can create functions dynamically but suffers from security and similar (but far less significant) performance issues toeval(). However, unlikeeval(), theFunctionconstructor creates functions that execute in the global scope only.
Instance properties
These properties are defined on Function.prototype and shared by all Function instances.
Function.prototype.argumentsDeprecated Non-standard-
Represents the arguments passed to this function. For strict, arrow, async, and generator functions, accessing the
argumentsproperty throws aTypeError. Use theargumentsobject inside function closures instead. Function.prototype.callerDeprecated Non-standard-
Represents the function that invoked this function. For strict, arrow, async, and generator functions, accessing the
callerproperty throws aTypeError. Function.prototype.constructor-
The constructor function that created the instance object. For
Functioninstances, the initial value is theFunctionconstructor.
These properties are own properties of each Function instance.
displayNameNon-standard Optional-
The display name of the function.
length-
Specifies the number of arguments expected by the function.
name-
The name of the function.
prototype-
Used when the function is used as a constructor with the
newoperator. It will become the new object's prototype.
Instance methods
Function.prototype.apply()-
Calls a function with a given
thisvalue and optional arguments provided as an array (or an array-like object). Function.prototype.bind()-
Creates a new function that, when called, has its
thiskeyword set to a provided value, optionally with a given sequence of arguments preceding any provided when the new function is called. Function.prototype.call()-
Calls a function with a given
thisvalue and optional arguments. Function.prototype.toString()-
Returns a string representing the source code of the function. Overrides the
Object.prototype.toStringmethod. Function.prototype[Symbol.hasInstance]()-
Specifies the default procedure for determining if a constructor function recognizes an object as one of the constructor's instances. Called by the
instanceofoperator.
Examples
>Difference between Function constructor and function declaration
Functions created with the Function constructor do not create closures to their creation contexts; they always are created in the global scope. When running them, they will only be able to access their own local variables and global ones, not the ones from the scope in which the Function constructor was created. This is different from using eval() with code for a function expression.
// Create a global property with `var`
var x = 10;
function createFunction1() {
const x = 20;
return new Function("return x;"); // this `x` refers to global `x`
}
function createFunction2() {
const x = 20;
function f() {
return x; // this `x` refers to the local `x` above
}
return f;
}
const f1 = createFunction1();
console.log(f1()); // 10
const f2 = createFunction2();
console.log(f2()); // 20
While this code works in web browsers, f1() will produce a ReferenceError in Node.js, as x will not be found. This is because the top-level scope in Node is not the global scope, and x will be local to the module.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-function-objects> |
Browser compatibility
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