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Call jQuery defined function via string

I'd like to call functions I've defined within the document ready function of jQuery, but am having a bit of trouble. I have the following code:

jQuery(document).ready( function($) {

    function test1() {
        alert('test1');
    }

    function test2() {
        alert('test2');
    }

    var test_call = '2';

    var fn = 'test' + test_call;

    // use fn to call test2

});

I don't want to use eval, and window[fn] doesn't seem to be working. The two test functions don't appear to be indices in the window variable. I appreciate the help and knowledge.

like image 906
Evan Avatar asked Sep 15 '11 00:09

Evan


2 Answers

All I can think of that doesn't use eval() or some form of eval (passing a string to setTimeout() is a form of eval()), is to register the relevant function names on an object and then look up the function name on that object:

jQuery(document).ready( function($) {

    function test1() {
        alert('test1');
    }

    function test2() {
        alert('test2');
    }

    // register functions on an object
    var funcList = {};
    funcList["test1"] = test1;
    funcList["test2"] = test2;


    var test_call = '2';

    var fn = 'test' + test_call;

    if (fn in funcList) {
        funcList[fn]();
    }

});

or the registration could be done in the definition of the functions. If they were global functions, they would be implicitly registered on the window object, but these are not global as they are scoped inside the document.ready handler function:

jQuery(document).ready( function($) {

    var funcList = {};

    funcList.test1 = function test1() {
        alert('test1');
    }

    funcList.test2 = function test2() {
        alert('test2');
    }

    var test_call = '2';
    var fn = 'test' + test_call;

    if (fn in funcList) {
        funcList[fn]();
    }

});

Or, you could move the functions to the global scope so they are automatically registered with the window object like this:

function test1() {
    alert('test1');
}

function test2() {
    alert('test2');
}

jQuery(document).ready( function($) {

    var test_call = '2';
    var fn = 'test' + test_call;

    if (fn in window) {
        window[fn]();
    }

});
like image 171
jfriend00 Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 00:09

jfriend00


The best way, if not Eval, would be to use setTimeout with zero milliseconds, as you can specify the function as a string.

setTimeout('myfunction()',0,);
like image 25
andy Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 02:09

andy