2

I have JavaScript that basically looks like the following

function a() {
    b(1);
}

function b(myNumber) {
    c(myNumber);
}

function c(myNumber) {
    var calculation = 5 * (myNumber - 1);
    alert(calculation);
}

When I call the function a(), the alert box ends up saying "NaN". Why is this happening? I've tried using the parseInt() function in a number of places, but nothing seems to work.

EDIT

Full code (what's actually being done rather than a stripped down example):

function updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId) {
    updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId, 1);
}

function updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId, pageNumber) {
    var table = document.getElementById(tableId);
    var rowsPerPageSelect = document.getElementById(rowsPerPageSelectId);
    var rowsPerPage = rowsPerPageSelect.options[rowsPerPageSelect.selectedIndex].text;

    updateTable(table, rowsPerPage, pageNumber);
    //updateTablePageLinks();
}

function updateTable(table, rowsPerPage, pageNumber) {
    var tableRows = table.getElementsByTagName("tr");
    var totalNumberOfRows = tableRows.length;

    var startRow = rowsPerPage * (pageNumber - 1);      
     var endRow = Math.min(startRow + rowsPerPage, totalNumberOfRows - 1);

    alert("Start: " + startRow + "\nEnd: " + endRow);
}

A select box has an onchange calling updateTablePagination('myTableId', 'rowsPerPage'). The ids are both correct.

"Start" and "End" are both NaN.

Edit 2

Alternatively, if I just do alert(pageNumber), it is undefined.

Simplified

Even this says pageNumber is undefined:

function updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId) {
    updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId, 1);
}

function updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId, pageNumber) {
    alert(pageNumber);
}
10
  • 4
    I just tested and I get 0. jsfiddle.net/loktar/pqsVt
    – Loktar
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:24
  • I get 0 on Chrome. What browser?
    – pimvdb
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:24
  • There's nothing wrong with the example you've posted. You need to post the rest of your code.
    – Andy E
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:25
  • We will need to see the actual code. The error doesn't happen in the code you posted above.
    – coderjoe
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:25
  • For me on the latest FF it alerts 0.
    – bbg
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:25

2 Answers 2

6

You have two functions called updateTablePagination. Javascript does not support function overloading. Get rid of the first declaration, because it is getting overwritten with the second. You can use the || to define a default value for the parameter.

function updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId, pageNumber) {
    pageNumber = pageNumber || 1; //Set a default value for pageNumber
    var table = document.getElementById(tableId);
    var rowsPerPageSelect = document.getElementById(rowsPerPageSelectId);
    var rowsPerPage = rowsPerPageSelect.options[rowsPerPageSelect.selectedIndex].text;

    updateTable(table, rowsPerPage, pageNumber);
    //updateTablePageLinks();
}


updateTablePagination(tableId, rowsPerPageSelectId) //Will call the function with pageNumber == 1
3
  • For example, x will either be blank or an integer. How does || work with integer comparison? Aug 31, 2011 at 15:42
  • pageNumber || 1 will return pageNumber if it is defined, and 1 otherwise. Here is a really simple jsfiddle: jsfiddle.net/asYBp
    – Dennis
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:43
  • 1
    Dennis's description of || is almost correct. It doesn't return pageNumber if pageNumber is defined, and the nubmer 1 otherwise. It will return pageNumber if the value is "truish". This means if it's an integer value it will not do what you expect for the value 0.
    – coderjoe
    Aug 31, 2011 at 17:04
2

The problem is that you're overwriting functions. With this:

function a() {
    a(1)
}

function a(x) {
    alert(x);
}

calling a will always call the second (overwritten) function and thus x is always undefined. You want something like overloading. Best thing to do in that case is using the || operator for a default value:

function a(x) {
    var x = x || 1; // x if x is given, otherwise 1
    alert(x);
}
5
  • @Rachel G.: Usually you use it for booleans. || returns the left-side thing if it's 'truthy' and otherwise it returns the right-side thing. true is truthy and false is falsy so it works for booleans. Since some other values are falsy as well (undefined for example), doing undefined || 1 will return 1.
    – pimvdb
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:42
  • For example, x will either be blank or an integer. How does || work with integer comparison? Aug 31, 2011 at 15:42
  • @Rachel G.: Falsy values are 0, "", undefined, null, NaN and false; truthy is everything else.
    – pimvdb
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:43
  • +1. Thanks for the help. It was a toss up between you and pimvdb. Had to choose. Sorry. Aug 31, 2011 at 15:45
  • @Rachel G.: I don't mind :) Dennis gave a more concrete solution in fact.
    – pimvdb
    Aug 31, 2011 at 15:47

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