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I am building an event manager for a little game that I am creating and have stumbled on a little problem (I don't know if it is a design pattern problem or if there is a solution to it)!

Take below for example;

o.Events = (function() {

"use strict";

function mousedown() {

    // Set mousedown boolean

            // # How can I change o.Events.mousedown

    // For each layer
    this.layers.forEach(function(layer) {
        // Layer is listening
        if (layer.listening && layer.mouse.x && layer.mouse.y) {

            console.log("mousedown");
        }
    });
};

function init(game) {

    // Mousedown boolean
    this.mousedown = false;

    game.element.addEventListener("mousedown", mousedown.bind(game), false);
};

function Events(game) {

    // Initialize events
    init.call(this, game);
};

return Events;

})();

How can I change the Events.mousedown flag even though I am binding game so that inside the function this is actually game?

Thanks

4
  • Just reference it fully scoped. o.Events.mousedown = ...
    – Madbreaks
    Apr 30, 2013 at 21:28
  • it would help to see just a little bit of client code. That is, code that uses this Events object you've created.
    – Jonah
    Apr 30, 2013 at 21:28
  • use "that=this" in constructor or mousedown(e) ... e.target for the event'
    – dandavis
    Apr 30, 2013 at 22:45
  • use that=this; outside and replace that with this inside...
    – dandavis
    Apr 30, 2013 at 22:48

1 Answer 1

1

You will need to use a closure if you can't bind it. And I wouldn't bind the mousedown function to game either, as it's not a method on it. Simplicity rules:

o.Events = function Events(game) {
    "use strict";

    this.mousedown = false;
    var that = this;
    game.element.addEventListener("mousedown", function mousedown(e) {

        /* use
        e - the mouse event
        this - the DOM element ( === e.currentTarget)
        that - the Events instance
        game - the Game instance (or whatever was passed)
        */
        that.mousedown = true;

        // For each layer
        game.layers.forEach(function(layer) {
            // Layer is listening
            if (layer.listening && layer.mouse.x && layer.mouse.y)
                console.log("mousedown");
        });
    }, false);
};
1
  • Thanks this makes much more sense
    – GriffLab
    May 1, 2013 at 12:29

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