3

I have a widget like this

$.widget("ui.myWidget", {
    //default options
    options: {
        myOptions: "test"
    },
    _create: function () {
        this.self = $(this.element[0]);
        this.self.find("thead th").click(function () {
            this.self._headerClick(); //how do I do this!!!
        });
        this.self._somethingElse();
    },
    _headerClick: function (){
    },
    _somethingElse: function (){
    },
.
.
.

The line this.self._headerClick(); throws an error. This is because in that context this is the th element that was clicked. How do I get a reference to the _headerClick function?

2 Answers 2

6

Store the scope of desired this within a variable.

$.widget("ui.myWidget", {
    //default options
    options: {
        myOptions: "test"
    },
    _create: function () {
        var that = this; // that will be accessible to .click(...
        this.self = $(this.element[0]);
        this.self.find("thead th").click(function () {
            that._headerClick(); //how do I do this!!!
        });
        this.self._somethingElse();
    },
    _headerClick: function (){
    },
    _somethingElse: function (){
    },
2
  • Wouldn't you need to do that._somethingElse();? I don't think this.self._somethingElse(); will fire. May 19, 2011 at 17:03
  • yes, I just realized that before, I simplified the example so you wouldn't get a headache reading through unessential code, and i screwed that up.
    – kralco626
    May 19, 2011 at 17:07
2

Untested, but maybe something like this:

_create: function () {
    var self = this,
        $elem = $(self.element[0]);

    $elem.find("thead th").click(function() {
        self._headerClick();
    });

    self._somethingElse();
},

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