I have been mauling over this for while now, and wonder if anyone could point me in the right direction.
I have the following object definition:
var foo=function(){};
foo.prototype={
foo1:function(){},
baz:{
baz1:function(){}
},
bar:function(){
function privateFunc1(){}
开发者_JAVA百科 function privateFunc2(){}
return {
bar1:function(){
//do something using privateFunc1
//return the result
}
};
}
};
var foobar = new foo();
Now, to access the baz1
sub-method of the baz
method, I can do foobar.baz.baz1()
bar1
sub-method of the bar
method, I have to do foobar.bar().bar1()
(Notice the extra parens after bar
)
Is there a way of defining the foo
object so that I can call bar1
using foobar.bar.bar1()
(Notice, no extra parens), But still keep the use of private functions privateFunc1
and privateFunc2
within the bar
method.
Also, please note that I cannot make bar
a self-executing function because it depends on mutable properties of the foo
object, which may change after the function has self-executed.
Hope the question was clear enough... thanks in advance.
This might be going in the direction you want. http://jsfiddle.net/Una9k/1/
var Foo = function() {
this.mutableProperty = "mutable";
this.bar = new Foo.prototype.Bar(this);
};
Foo.prototype = {
constructor: Foo,
Bar:function(context){
var ctx = context;
function privateFunc(){
alert(ctx.mutableProperty);
}
return {
bar1: function () {
privateFunc();
}
};
}
};
var foobar = new Foo();
foobar.bar.bar1(); // alerts 'mutable'
foobar.mutableProperty = "changed";
foobar.bar.bar1(); // alerts 'changed'
Perhaps this might work...
function createFooBar() {
//return foobar
var foobar = {
foo1: function() {},
baz: {
baz1: function(){}
},
bar: function(){
function privateFunc1(){}
function privateFunc2(){}
return {
bar1:function(){
//do something using privateFunc1
//return the result
}
}
}
};
foobar.bar.bar1 = foobar.bar();
return foobar;
};
var foobar = createFoobar();
Using the above you could also house your functions on the createFooBar function. So after the above...
createFooBar.foo1 = function(){} //and so on...
then in the createFooBar function you might refer to foo1 like so...
//code in the beginning...
var foobar = {
foo1: createFooBar.foo1,
//and so on...
Additionally, you could ALSO just create a create function on your current foo function...
foo.create = function() {
var fooBar = new Foo();
fooBar.bar.bar1 = fooBar.bar();
return fooBar;
}
var fooBar = foo.create();
If it is possible to call foobar.bar() immediately:
function createFooBar() {
//return foobar
var foobar = {
foo1: function() {},
baz: {
baz1: function(){}
},
bar: function(){
function privateFunc1(){}
function privateFunc2(){}
return {
bar1:function(){
//do something using privateFunc1
//return the result
}
}
}()
};
return foobar;
};
// now you have foobar.bar.bar1()
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