I use limejs and I declare a function like:
function up(){
var pos = global.getPosition();
pos.x += 2;
global.setPosition(pos);
}
and call it using
lime.scheduleManager.schedule(up,global);
How do I get rid of the global variable?
I use limejs and I declare a function like:
function up(){
var pos = global.getPosition();
pos.x += 2;
global.setPosition(pos);
}
and call it using
lime.scheduleManager.schedule(up,global);
How do I get rid of the global variable?
you can always delete a property on an object like so (note that global variables are really on window
, at least in browser javascript)
delete window.global;
if you then try to access your variable, you will get a Reference error. Be careful, because if your schedule
call invokes the method later, and it depends on global, it will be gone. Might be better just to use a local variable (with var
)
delete window.x
since delete takes a property name. The reason this is important is that this will not work if you try to delete a local variable. For example (function(){var x = 5; delete x; console.log(x)})()
will output 5, not undefined, nor will it throw an error.
Oct 14, 2011 at 18:13
var x = 1
, your delete x
would return false
and not delete x
at all. @JuanMendes also incorrect. Again, defining var x
in global scope would result in a DontDelete
attribute being set to true
for x
- so all delete attempts would fail.
Oct 14, 2011 at 18:17
global
is defined as var global
you won't be able to delete at all. Not with window.global
, nothing.
Oct 14, 2011 at 18:22
x
is not reached in the scope chain, an x
property is created in the global object, which is deletable. Assigning x = 1
is not technically declaring a variable, and it should be avoided, implicit globals are disallowed on ES Strict Mode.
Oct 14, 2011 at 18:33
Since second parameter to schedule
is context object and you pass global
to it, you could write the function as
function up(){
var pos = this.getPosition();
pos += 2;
this.setPosition(pos);
}
If that is really what you're asking for.
If you only need to delete the variable, you can set it to null. Operator delete
is intended for deleting object properties, not unsetting variables.
If you're not referencing that function anywhere else, why not just:
lime.scheduleManager.schedule(function (){
var pos = global.getPosition();
pos.x += 2;
global.setPosition(pos);
}, global);
If you mean mark it so it can be garbage collected, you can just set the reference to null. If there are no other references, the object will be gc'd next time the gc kicks in.
In regular javascript it would be:
delete global.myVar
or
delete pos
Not 100% sure if this will work in limejs (never used it) but worth a try.
global
variable is already there and it's not yours. So you can't really "move" it to a different scope, only hide it by declaring a scope-local variable of the same name, which is kinda pointless.