# Freeze An Object, Sorta You can freeze a JavaScript object using `Object.freeze` which will help enforce some immutability practices. Don't be fooled though, you can still modify arrays and objects in the frozen object. Here is what the docs have to say: > The Object.freeze() method freezes an object: that is, prevents new > properties from being added to it; prevents existing properties from being > removed; and prevents existing properties, or their enumerability, > configurability, or writability, from being changed, it also prevents the > prototype from being changed. And here is `Object.freeze` in action: ```javascript > const things = {one: "two", hello: "world", cats: ["Von Neumann", "Sosa"]} undefined > Object.freeze(things) {one: "two", hello: "world", cats: Array(2)} > things.one = "three" "three" > things.dogs = [] [] > delete things.hello false > things {one: "two", hello: "world", cats: Array(2)} > things.cats.push("Sneaky") 3 > things {one: "two", hello: "world", cats: Array(3)} ``` See the [MDN Docs](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/freeze) for more details. h/t Jake Worth