1

Is there any way to pass this into an Immediately-Invoked Function Expression, without resolving to var that = this (which isn't applicable on some cases)?

Tried the following but with no luck:

(function(that) {
    console.log(that);
})(this)
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  • what's this in the context? are you calling that function on an object or in a function context? .. the function.apply(context,arguments) form could be what you're looking for .. Sep 17, 2012 at 9:54

2 Answers 2

5

You might be able to use call or apply for this purpose. For example:

(function() {
    console.log(this); // whatever that was specified in the "call" method
}).call(this);
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(function(that) {
    console.log(that);
})(this);

The code should work, make sure there is no code before it without a semicolon.

 (function(that) {
        console.log(that);
 })(this) // if here is no semicolon, the next code will be syntax error.
 (function(that) {
        console.log(that);
 })(this);

You could try the code below, which will be ok even the code before it omit the semicolon.

!function(that) {
    console.log(that);
}(this);

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