I have a widget defined like so:
$.widget("ui.mywidget", {
_init: function() {
this.element.bind("keyup", function(event) {
alert(this.options);
alert(this.options.timeout);
});
}
});
And trying to call it like so:
$("input.mywidget").mywidget({timeout: 5});
I also re开发者_JS百科defined the bind
method using the this.element.keyup(function(event) { ... })
style: no difference.
But, in the keyup
bind, this.options
(and referencing it just as options
) both yield undefined. I thought the UI widget framework allowed this type of abstraction; am I doing something wrong?
When inside bind()
, this
changes to refer to the object that the event is raised on. Try:
$.widget("ui.mywidget", {
_init: function(options) {
var opts = this.options;
this.element.bind("keyup", function(event) {
alert(opts);
alert(opts.timeout);
});
}
});
What @Dave said is right. You can also set "this" to a variable rather than using options as an argument to the init function. Here is how I see it implemented often:
$.widget("ui.mywidget", {
options: {
timeout: 100
},
_init: function() {
var self = this;
self.element.bind("keyup", function(event) {
alert(self.options);
alert(self.options.timeout);
});
}
});
Why stop there? Check out $.proxy and write better code
$.widget("ui.mywidget", {
_create: function() {
//Under this syntax, _omgAlertsRule must be a method of 'this'
this.element.bind("keyup", $.proxy( this, '_omgAlertsRule' ) );
},
_omgAlertsRule: function( event ){
alert(this.options);
alert(this.options.timeout);
}
});
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