I need to add some function that returns a value to a dom element. I tried to use jquery's bind method, but it seems that events always return a jquery collection.
My goal is creating a flashcard application. So I created flashcard objects that contain methods and variables including the dom element representing the flashcard on the page. As long as I only work on the dom element (moving around etc.) everything is fine but at some point I need to get a reference to the actual card object to access the additional functionality. Here is the constructor I came up with:
function make_flashcard {
var dom_element;
function some_function() {}
/*...other variables and functions */
var card = {
dom_element: dom_element,
some_function: some_function,
/*...other variables and functions */
};
return card;
}
later I'd like to be able to invoke 开发者_Python百科some_function from outside, maybe like this:
card = dom_element.get_card();
card.some_function();
I tried the following three approaches of defining get_card inside make_flashcard, all of which failed:
dom_element.get_card = function () {
return card;
};
dom_element.prototype.get_card = function () {
return card;
};
or
dom_element.bind("get_card", function () {
return card;
});
and then calling
card = dom_element.trigger("get_card");
If you have any tips to get this running I'd be very happy. Or do you think the whole thing should be approached differently?
Thanks in advance, Dominik
`
What if you extended the jQuery collection prototype instead?
$.fn.flashcard = function () {
var self = this;
if (!this.data("flashcard")) {
this.data("flashcard", {
element: self,
some_function: some_function,
/*...other variables and functions */
});
}
return this.data("flashcard");
};
Then you could use it like:
var card = $("div.myClass").flashcard();
card.some_function();
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