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Why is JSHINT complaining that this is a strict violation?

I think this may be a duplicate of Strict Violation using this keyword and revealing module pattern

I have this code:

function gotoPage(s){
    if(s<=this.d&&s>0){this.g=s; this.page((s-1)*this.p.size);}
}

function pageChange(event, sorter) {
    var dd = event.currentTarget;
    gotoPage.call(sorter, dd[dd.selectedIndex].value);
}

And JSHINT (JSLINT) is complaining. It says "Strict violation." for the highlighted line:

enter image description here

Is my use of Function.call() and then referencing the instance, somehow inappropriate?

Is this considered to be bad style?

like image 674
Cheeso Avatar asked Oct 07 '11 14:10

Cheeso


3 Answers

JSHint says "Possible strict violation" because you are using this inside something that, as far as it can tell, is not a method.

In non-strict mode, calling gotoPage(5) would bind this to the global object (window in the browser). In strict mode, this would be undefined, and you would get in trouble.

Presumably, you mean to call this function with a bound this context, e.g. gotoPage.bind(myObj)(5) or gotoPage.call(myObj, 5). If so, you can ignore JSHint, as you will not generate any errors. But, it is telling you that your code is unclear to anyone reading it, because using this inside of something that is not obviously a method is quite confusing. It would be better to simply pass the object as a parameter:

function gotoPage(sorter, s) {
    if (s <= sorter.d && s > 0) {
        sorter.g = s;

        sorter.page((s - 1) * sorter.p.size);
    }
}

function pageChange(event, sorter) {
    var dd = event.currentTarget;
    gotoPage(sorter, dd[dd.selectedIndex].value);
}
like image 60
Domenic Avatar answered Nov 20 '22 01:11

Domenic


I've had this message for a function that did not start with a capital letter.

"use strict";

// ---> strict violation
function something() {
    this.test = "";
}


// ---> just fine (note the capital S in Something)
function Something() {
    this.test = "";
}
like image 28
amenthes Avatar answered Nov 20 '22 00:11

amenthes


If you declare the function as a variable instead of using the standard function declaration, jshint will not flag this as a strict violation. So you may do the following -

var gotoPage = function (s){
    if(s<=this.d&&s>0){this.g=s; this.page((s-1)*this.p.size);}
};


var pageChange = function (event, sorter) {
    var dd = event.currentTarget;
    gotoPage.call(sorter, dd[dd.selectedIndex].value);
};
like image 9
asulaiman Avatar answered Nov 20 '22 01:11

asulaiman