I still haven't quite wrapped my head around object definitions and the this
scope in javascript. I think the (c#ish) pseudocode below sums it up quite nicely.
How can I define a piece of javascript code that creates an object that has all of the following properties:
- private members that are only visible inside the methods of the object
- public members that are also visible outside the object
- a (parametrized) constructor that is executed when the object is instantiated and initializes members
- register callback inside the object that points to a method of the object itself
- when the callback is executed inside the method (
PrivateMethod
) it is possible to access all members of the object instance, preferably using thethis
pointer
.
class MyObjectDefinition
{
public int publicField = 0;
private int privateField;
public MyObjectDefinition(int parameter)
{
this.privateField = parameter;
SomethingThatWantsA.CallBack(this.PrivateMethod);
}
public void PublicMethod()
{
this.privateField--;
this.publicField--;
}
private void PrivateMethod()
{
this.privateField++;
this.publicField++;
}
}
var instance = new MyObjectDefinition();
this
inPrivateMethod
when it used as callback" than check out bind that solves exactly this problem.bind
to redirectthis
to a specific instance. But what about the visibility and the constructor?.prototype
notation to declare public members?.prototype
is generally better and importation to use if you plan to use many instances of that type or "deriving" classes..prototype
version.