It's fairly simple:
function Ninja(name)
{//this points to Ninja object inside constructor scope
this.name = name;
this.changeName = function(newname)
{//method of Ninja, this points to context object, ie Ninja
this.name = newname;//accesses the name property of Ninja
this.anotherFunction = function(newname2)
{//defines new method for this ==> Ninja object
this.name2 = newname2;//context object is Ninja
};
};
}
var foo = new Ninja('foobar');
foo.name;//foobar
foo.changeName;//function, is defined in constructor
typeof foo.anotherFunction//undefined because it's assigned when the changeName method is called!
foo.changeName('Me');
foo.name;//Me
foo.anotherFunction('You');//works: changeName was called, and assigned anotherFunction to foo (instance of Ninja)
foo.name2;//You
What happened: simple, by invoking the changeName method, anotherFunction
was defined and assigned to this
. At that time this
referenced the Ninja
object, so the method was assigned to the instance of Ninja
from which the changeName
method was invoked. Prior to calling the changeName
method, the anotherFunction
method simply didn't exist.
Though this might seem useless or stupid, it does make sense. What you need to remember is that functions/methods are, in essence stand-alone objects. In this code, they just happen to be defined as properties/methods, but they needn't be used as such. Going back to the code above:
foo.name;//Me
bar = {};//some object
foo.changeName.apply(bar,['You']);
foo.name;//Me, nothing has changed, the changeName method was applied to the bar object
bar.name;//You, in the apply call, this pointed to bar, not foo
typeof bar.anotherFunction;//function
//You could even create the anotherFunction globally:
// JUST TO SHOW YOU CAN, THIS IS DANGEROUS
// ONLY USE THIS IF YOU KNOW WHAT THE POSSIBLE CONSEQUESES ARE!
foo.changeName.call();//in global scope
typeof antoherFunction;//function ==> this function is now globally available
The changeName
method can be applied to any object, adding a new method, changeing/adding certain properties to that particular instance.