I'm trying to make a recursive method but it is losing its binding to this
. Here is the simplest way to recreate my issue:
var Foo = function() {
return {
foo : 'foo',
bar : function() {
console.log(this.foo);
setTimeout(this.bar, 500);
}
};
}
var foo = new Foo();
foo.bar();
That will only run twice. The first time it will log foo
to the console, and the second it will log undefined
. Then of course, it won't run anymore because bar
is no longer a property of this
since I assume it was reset to the global object.
I tried var that = this
in my bar
method and referencing that.foo
and that.bar
but it doesn't change anything. I also tried var that = this
above my return
statement and the issue persists.
Expected result:
foo
foo
foo
foo
... and so on
Here is an example http://jsfiddle.net/k2hTJ/ which results in this:
foo
undefined
this
is overriden in the scope of the function.that = this
,self = this
conundrum that seems to haunt javascript developers on a daily basis.bar
properties are separate objects that do exactly the same thing. That's not ideal. If you don't want to augment the proptotype, a closure will do just as well of course