Can we omit parentheses when creating an object using the "new" operator?

Quoting David Flanagan1:

As a special case, for the new operator only, JavaScript simplifies the grammar by allowing the parenthesis to be omitted if there are no arguments in the function call. Here are some examples using the new operator:

o = new Object;  // Optional parenthesis omitted here
d = new Date();  

...

Personally, I always use the parenthesis, even when the constructor takes no arguments.

In addition, JSLint may hurt your feelings if you omit the parenthesis. It reports Missing '()' invoking a constructor, and there doesn't seem to be an option for the tool to tolerate parenthesis omission.


1 David Flanagan: JavaScript the Definitive Guide: 4th Edition (page 75)


There are differences between the two:

  • new Date().toString() works perfectly and returns the current date
  • new Date.toString() throws "TypeError: Date.toString is not a constructor"

It happens because new Date() and new Date have different precedence. According to MDN the part of JavaScript operator precedence table we are interested in looks like:

Precedence Operator type Associativity Operators
18 Member Access
Computed Member Access
new (with argument list)
left-to-right
left-to-right
n/a
… . …
… [ … ]
new … ( … )
17 Function Call
new (without argument list)
left-to-right
right-to-left
… ( … )
new …

From this table follows that:

  1. new Foo() has higher precedence than new Foo

    new Foo() has the same precedence as . operator

    new Foo has one level lower precedence than the . operator

    new Date().toString() works perfectly because it evaluates as (new Date()).toString()

    new Date.toString() throws "TypeError: Date.toString is not a constructor" because . has higher precedence than new Date (and higher then "Function Call") and the expression evaluates as (new (Date.toString))()

    The same logic can be applied to … [ … ] operator.

  2. new Foo has right-to-left associativity and for new Foo() "associativity" isn't applicable. I think in practice it doesn't make any difference. For additional information see this SO question


Is one preferred over the other?

Knowing all that, it can be assumed that new Foo() is preferred.