function Card(styleAttr, cardInfo)
{
//Attributes
this.styleAttr = styleAttr;
this.cardInfo = cardInfo;
//Functions
constructCard(this.styleAttr);
}
function constructCard(styleAttr) {
var cardCSS = {
'width':styleAttr.width,
'height':styleAttr.height,
'background-color':'black'
}
$('<div class="Card"></div>').appendTo('body').css(cardCSS);
}
Hi, this Card class get's two other object's as it's parameters. One of them is styleAttr which contains a property named 'width'. Unless I pass this object to the constructCard, I cannot access the styleAttr.width property. The above example works. But if I开发者_运维问答 do this:
function constructCard() {
var cardCSS = {
'width': this.styleAttr.width, //Undefined
'height':styleAttr.height,
'background-color':'black'
}
$('<div class="Card"></div>').appendTo('body').css(cardCSS);
}
Mostly code in other languages so I'm not sure, do I have to bind the function constructCard to the class to be able to access it's properties or am I forced to pass the object's to get the values. Or am I supposed to make them global variables?
It must be something simple I didn't catch from the Moz Doc's.
Thanks
Try:
function Card(styleAttr, cardInfo)
{
this.styleAttr = styleAttr;
this.cardInfo = cardInfo;
this.construct = function () {
var cardCSS = { 'width':this.styleAttr.width, 'height':this.styleAttr.height, 'background-color':'black' }
$('<div class="Card"></div>').appendTo('body').css(cardCSS);
}
}
And then you use it like this:
var card = new Card(styleAttr, cardInfo);
card.construct();
Nothing wrong with plain old prototype inheritance:
function Card(styleAttr, cardInfo) {
//Attributes
this.styleAttr = styleAttr;
this.cardInfo = cardInfo;
}
Card.prototype.constructCard = function () {
var cardCSS = {
'width': this.styleAttr.width,
'height': this.styleAttr.height,
'background-color':'black'
};
$('<div class="Card"></div>').appendTo('body').css(cardCSS);
}
Then:
var card_0 = new Card(..., ...)
card_0.constructCard();
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