I have a function which is a JQuery event handler. Because it is a JQuery event handler, it uses the this
variable to refer to the object on which it is invoked (as is normal for that library).
Unfortunately, I need to manually call that method at this point. How do I make this
inside the called function behave as if it were called from JQuery?
Example code:
function performAjaxRequest() {
//Function which builds AJAX request in terms of "this"
}
function buildForm(dialogOfForm) {
var inputItem;
dialogOfForm.html('...');
dialogOfForm.dialog('option', 'buttons', {
"Ok" : performAjaxRequest
});
inputItem = dialogOfForm.children(':not(label)');
//Redirect enter to submit the form
inputItem.keypress(function (e) {
if (e.which === 13) {
p开发者_开发百科erformAjaxRequest(); //Note that 'this' isn't the dialog box
//as performAjaxRequest expects here, it's
//the input element where the user pressed
//enter!
}
}
}
You can use the function's call
method.
someFunction.call(objectToBeThis, argument1, argument2, andSoOnAndSoOn);
If dialog
is the object that you need to be set to this
then:
performAjaxRequest.apply(dialog, []);
// arguments (instead of []) might be even better
should do the trick.
Otherwise, in jQuery you can simply call the trigger
method on the element that you want to have set to this
Say, for example, that you wanted to have a click
event happen on a button and you need it to happen now. Simply call:
$("#my_button").trigger("click");
Your #my_button
's click
handler will be invoked, and this
will be set to the #my_button
element.
If you need to call a method with a different this
... say for example, with this
referring to the jQuery object itself, then you will want to use call
or apply
on your function.
Chuck and meder have already given you examples of each ... but to have everything all in one place:
// Call
my_function.call(object_to_use_for_this, argument1, argument2, ... argumentN);
// Apply
my_function.apply(object_to_use_for_this, arguments_array);
SEE: A List Apart's Get Out of Binding Situations
Are you looking for..
functionRef.apply( objectContext, arguments);
You should of course learn to master call()
and apply()
as people have stated but a little helper never hurts...
In jQuery, there is $.proxy. In pure js, you can re-create that niftyness ;) with something like:
function proxyFn( fn , scope ){
return function(){
return fn.apply(scope,arguments);
}
}
Usage Examples:
var myFunctionThatUsesThis = function(A,B){
console.log(this,arguments); // {foo:'bar'},'a','b'
};
// setTimeout or do Ajax call or whatever you suppose loses "this"
var thisTarget = {foo: 'bar'};
setTimeout( proxyFn( myFunctionThatUsesThis, thisTarget) , 1000 , 'a', 'b' );
// or...
var contextForcedCallback = proxyFn( myAjaxCallback , someObjectToBeThis );
performAjaxRequest(myURL, someArgs, contextForcedCallback );
If you dont abuse it, it's a sure-fire tool to never loose the scope of "this".
use a closure i.e assign this to that early on; then you can do what you like with it.
var that = this;
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