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Adding events to elements inside loop - JScript/Closures

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-18 18:06 出处:网络
I\'m building a list of buttons and I want each one to trigger the addForm() function with the current members[member].id.

I'm building a list of buttons and I want each one to trigger the addForm() function with the current members[member].id.

But it happens that only the last button will fire the event.

I know it has something to do with closures and as you can see I have adapted the function to use this pattern.

What am I doing wrong?

function displayConnections(connections) {
    /*(...)*/

    for (var member in members) {

        connectionsDiv.innerHTML += "<p>" + members[member].firstName + " " + members[member].lastName
        + " ID: " + members[member].id;

        btn = document.createElement("input");
        btn.setAttribute("type","button");
        btn.setAttribute("value","Send Message");
        btn.setAttribute("id",members[member].id);

        btn.onclick = function (id) {
            return function () {
                addForm(id);
            };
        }(members[member].id);

   开发者_StackOverflow中文版     connectionsDiv.appendChild(btn);

    }     
}

Thanks.


First, remember you are not writing C# or Java. The for (var ... in ...) structure does not iterate a collection. You should always check hasOwnProperty to see if the property name belongs to the object itself:

if (!members.hasOwnProperty(member)) continue;

Then check to make sure that the property value is an object and not a function etc.

Second, your variable btn is lacking a var declaration. You are creating a global variable called btn, not a variable local to your function.

Next, you have a typo mistake in your original code. Your original code actually is interpreted this way (thanks to JavaScript's auto-semicolon-insertion feature!):

btn.onclick = function (id) {
    return function () {
        addForm(id);     <-- this id is now the click event's event object, not what you want
    };
};
(members[member].id);   <-- this line will have no side effect

In order to run your program in your original style, you need to bracket the function definition:

btn.onclick = (function (id) {
    return function () {
        addForm(id);
    };
})(members[member].id);


Well, instead of those workaround you can also use:

element.setAtrribute('onClick', 'javascript:functionName(' + parameter + ');');

which worked for me and should work for you as well.


In this block of code:

btn.onclick = function (id) {
    return function () {
        addForm(id);
    };
}(members[member].id);

You have the syntax wrong - it should be:

btn.onclick = (function(id) {
    return function () {
        addForm(id);
    }
})(members[member].id);

What this does is automatically invoke a new anonymous closure, which has a locally bound copy of members[member].id in its id parameter, which itself then returns a closure which is what's actually bound to btn.onclick.

The automatic invokation only happens if you put the outer parenthesis around the closure declaration.


for (var i = 0; i < 10; i++) {

    // Won't work
    //$('div').eq(i)[0].onclick = function() { alert(i) }; // 10


    $('div').eq(i)[0].onclick = (function(id) {
        return function() {
            alert(id)
        };
    })(i);
}

jsFiddle.

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