2

I have a simple function, I am trying to access the instance variable. But it's giving me some error. How can I access instance variable in Javascript ? I tried below method, but not working

function Test(){
   var a=10;
}

var test=new Test();
test.a=20;

For some reason I don't want to go with the following way:

var Test={
  a:''
}
1
  • 1
    That is a local variable, you cannot access it directly. Use this.a=10 instead Feb 18, 2014 at 19:43

3 Answers 3

6

You declared a as a variable local to that function, so there is no way to access it outside (as you currently have it)
If you want a to be an instance variable attach it to the object

function Test(){
   this.a=10;
}

var test=new Test();
test.a=20;
3
  • Interestingly enough, this fiddle, at least in Chrome v32, seems to show that using var syntax still allows one to access the variable using from outside the object using test.a. Am I missing something here?
    – Divey
    Feb 18, 2014 at 19:50
  • @Divey That's because you are creating a new property, not modifying the existing variable. See jsfiddle.net/3C8BK/1 Feb 18, 2014 at 19:52
  • @JuanMendes Whoops! Indeed I am.
    – Divey
    Feb 18, 2014 at 20:03
2

Change it to this :

function Test(){
    this.a=10;
}

Here a good documentation on the subject : Introduction to Object-Oriented JavaScript

0

Existing answers tell you how to do it by making a a public property. If you really need a private variable, use the following code. The main reason you would use this instead of a public property is to prevent callers from setting a to invalid values.

function Test() {
   var a = 10;
   this.setA = function(val) {
        a = val; 
   };
   this.getA = function(val) {
        return a; 
   };
}

var t = new Test();
t.setA(80);
t.getA(); // 80

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