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global or local variables in a jquery-plugin

How is it possible to give a jquery-plugin individual local variables, that are accessable in different plugin-functions?

My script shows an alert with the content '123', but I am expecting 'abc'. So variable 't' exists only once and not twice for each plugin. So for each plugin-instance there should be also an instance of variable 't'.

<html>
<head>
<title></title>

<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery/jquery-1.7.min.js"></script>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8.16/jquery-ui.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

<script type="text/javascript">
    (function ($) {
        var t = null;
        $.fn.doSomething = function()
        {
            alert(t);
        }
        $.fn.myHtmlControl = function(option) {
            t = option;
        }
    })(jQuery);

    $(function () {
        $('#ctrl1').myHtmlControl("abc");
        $('#ctrl2').myHtmlControl("123");            
        $('#ctrl1').doSomething();
    })        
</script>

</head>
    <body>
        <div id='ctrl1'>Ctrl1</div>
        <div id='ctrl2'>Ctrl2</div>
    </body>
</html>
like image 221
user1027167 Avatar asked Nov 29 '11 11:11

user1027167


1 Answers

All you need is here :

// jQuery Plugin Boilerplate
// A boilerplate for jumpstarting jQuery plugins development
// version 1.1, May 14th, 2011
// by Stefan Gabos

// remember to change every instance of "pluginName" to the name of your plugin!
(function($) {

    // here we go!
    $.pluginName = function(element, options) {

        // plugin's default options
        // this is private property and is  accessible only from inside the plugin
        var defaults = {

            foo: 'bar',

            // if your plugin is event-driven, you may provide callback capabilities for its events.
            // execute these functions before or after events of your plugin, so that users may customize
            // those particular events without changing the plugin's code
            onFoo: function() {}

        }

        // to avoid confusions, use "plugin" to reference the current instance of the object
        var plugin = this;

        // this will hold the merged default, and user-provided options
        // plugin's properties will be available through this object like:
        // plugin.settings.propertyName from inside the plugin or
        // element.data('pluginName').settings.propertyName from outside the plugin, where "element" is the
        // element the plugin is attached to;
        plugin.settings = {}

        var $element = $(element),  // reference to the jQuery version of DOM element the plugin is attached to
             element = element;        // reference to the actual DOM element

        // the "constructor" method that gets called when the object is created
        plugin.init = function() {

            // the plugin's final properties are the merged default and user-provided options (if any)
            plugin.settings = $.extend({}, defaults, options);

            // code goes here

        }

        // public methods
        // these methods can be called like:
        // plugin.methodName(arg1, arg2, ... argn) from inside the plugin or
        // element.data('pluginName').publicMethod(arg1, arg2, ... argn) from outside the plugin, where "element"
        // is the element the plugin is attached to;

        // a public method. for demonstration purposes only - remove it!
        plugin.foo_public_method = function() {

            // code goes here

        }

        // private methods
        // these methods can be called only from inside the plugin like:
        // methodName(arg1, arg2, ... argn)

        // a private method. for demonstration purposes only - remove it!
        var foo_private_method = function() {

            // code goes here

        }

        // fire up the plugin!
        // call the "constructor" method
        plugin.init();

    }

    // add the plugin to the jQuery.fn object
    $.fn.pluginName = function(options) {

        // iterate through the DOM elements we are attaching the plugin to
        return this.each(function() {

            // if plugin has not already been attached to the element
            if (undefined == $(this).data('pluginName')) {

                // create a new instance of the plugin
                // pass the DOM element and the user-provided options as arguments
                var plugin = new $.pluginName(this, options);

                // in the jQuery version of the element
                // store a reference to the plugin object
                // you can later access the plugin and its methods and properties like
                // element.data('pluginName').publicMethod(arg1, arg2, ... argn) or
                // element.data('pluginName').settings.propertyName
                $(this).data('pluginName', plugin);

            }

        });

    }

})(jQuery);

Source : http://stefangabos.ro/jquery/jquery-plugin-boilerplate-revisited/

like image 195
TeChn4K Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 12:10

TeChn4K