The behavior of "this" when function bar
is called is baffling me. See the code below. Is there any way to arrange for "this" to be a plain old js object instance when bar is called from a click handler, instead of being the html element?
// a class with a method function foo() { this.bar(); // when called here, "this" is the foo instance var barf = this.bar; barf(); // when called here, "this" is the global object // when called from a click, "this" is the html element $("#thing").after($("<div>click me</div>").click(barf)); } foo.prototype.bar = function() { alert(this); }
Welcome to the world of javascript! :D
You have wandered into the realm of javascript scope and closure.
For the short answer:
this.bar()
is executed under the scope of foo, (as this refers to foo)
var barf = this.bar; barf();
is executed under the global scope.
this.bar basically means:
execute the function pointed by this.bar, under the scope of this (foo). When you copied this.bar to barf, and run barf. Javascript understood as, run the function pointed by barf, and since there is no this, it just runs in global scope.
To correct this, you can change
barf();
to something like this:
barf.apply(this);
This tells Javascript to bind the scope of this to barf before executing it.
For jquery events, you will need to use an anonymous function, or extend the bind function in prototype to support scoping.
For more info:
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