1

Here is my object and I have defined all the properties and functions but it still gives me this error result is not defined.

Here is my code

var Xml = {
    to      : null,
    from    : null,
    url     : null,
    result  : null,  //<--- I defined result here

    init: function (fromaddress, toaddress, link) {
        from    = fromaddress;
        to      = toaddress;
        url     = link;

        this.requestXml();
        return this;
    },

    requestXml: function () {
        $.ajax({
            type: "GET",
            url: url,
            dataType: "xml",
            success: this.parseXml
        });
    },

    parseXml: function (xml) {
        console.log('xml: ' + $(xml));
        result = $(xml); //<--- Assigning value to result here
    },

    getResult: function () {
        console.log('Result: ' + result); // <--- Here is says result is not defined
        return result;
    }
};

How can I solve this problem?

Update

I am calling getResult() below

var Route = {
fromurl : null,
tourl   : null,
from    : null,
to      : null,

init: function (fromaddress, toaddress) {
    from        = fromaddress;
    to          = toaddress;
    fromurl     = 'http://demo.com/url'+fromurl;
    tourl       = 'http://demo.com/url'+tourl;

    Route.searchRoute();
},

searchRoute: function () {
    var xml = Xml.init(from, to, fromurl);
    console.log(xml.getResult()); //<---- calling getResult();
}

 };
3
  • 2
    This is because an AJAX request is asynchronous and I would assume that you're calling obj.getResult() straight after obj.requestXml(). At that point the AJAX request would not have completed, so result is undefined. Nov 8, 2012 at 9:10
  • @RoryMcCrossan so how can I force it to wait until ajax request is completed?
    – Om3ga
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:13
  • Make sure to call getResult after your assignment in parseXml. You should restructure the code so that you pass in a callback to actually process your result right after you call parseXml, rather that squirreling it away inside the object so that you have to call a getter at some later time. Having a "getter" like this is not the way asynchronous code was meant to be structured.
    – Ray Toal
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:20

3 Answers 3

2

The "undecorated" expression result would refer to a global variable named result, which you do not have.

It is not correct to assume that just because a reference to result is textually inside of an object that the reference refers to a property of that object. That may be the case in other languages, but not in JavaScript.

The solution to your problem is in one of the comments to the question. Using this. as a prefix works in these cases. Try this code:

var x = 1;

var p = {
   x: 2,
   f: function () {alert(x); alert(this.x);}
}

p.f();

Here you will see 1 alerted and then 2.

Answer to updated question

What you have here is a classic problem. You write

var xml = Xml.init(from, to, fromurl);
console.log(xml.getResult()); //<---- calling getResult();

The first line eventually fires of an Ajax request. Once that request is fired off, you immediately go to your second line, where you call xml.getResult(). Chances are nearly 100% that the call to getResult will happen before your Ajax call is able to fill in the value of result.

One approach is to pass the thing you want to do with the result to the init method. In this case it looks like you want to log the result, so try

var xml = Xml.init(from, to, fromurl, function () {console.log(xml.getResult()});

Here we have a new fourth parameter to Xml.init so we have to handle that by updating the Xml object, like so (not tested):

.
.
.
init: function (fromaddress, toaddress, link, callback) {
    from    = fromaddress;
    to      = toaddress;
    url     = link;

    this.requestXml(callback);
    return this;
},

requestXml: function (callback) {
    $.ajax({
        type: "GET",
        url: url,
        dataType: "xml",
        success: callback
    });
},

.
.
.

In other words, when you are going to make asynchronous calls, consume the results right away. Don't save them away for later, because you never know when they are going to be "ready".

8
  • How can I resolve this problem? Any demo code would be helpful. Thanks in advance.
    – Om3ga
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:12
  • It first alerts 1 (the global x) then 2 (the x property of the object through which the function was called).
    – Ray Toal
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:17
  • This way it has a value of undefined
    – Om3ga
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:21
  • If you are referring to the fact that simply adding this. to the code in your question results in undefined then yes, this is true because your code is not "doing Ajax properly." Your actual question, though, was why you got a reference error. The reference error occurred because you didn't have the this. The undefined issue is something extra. You might want to ask another question about why you get undefined, or update your question accordingly. In either case, I commented on your question regarding that issue. Hope it makes sense.
    – Ray Toal
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:25
  • Ok I asked another question regarding this
    – Om3ga
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:30
1

You should use this, but it might be easier if you use a constructor so you have access to the properties in all methods:

function Xml(to, from, url, result) {
  this.to      = to || null;
  this.from    = from || null;
  this.url     = url || null;
  this.result  = result || null;
  // init logic
}

Xml.prototype = {

  parseXml: function (xml) {
    console.log('xml: ' + $(xml));
    this.result = $(xml);
  },

  getResult: function () {
    console.log('Result: ' + this.result);
    return this.result;
  }

  ...

}

var xml = new Xml(to, from, url, result); // init

Edit: An object literal might not be the best option. Your case is more suited for a constructor like above, or a module pattern if you want to avoid the this confusion:

function Xml() {

  var xml = {}
    , to = null
    , from = null
    , url = null
    , result = null;

  xml.parseXml = function( xml ) {
    ...
  };

  ...

  return xml;

}

var xml = Xml();
2
  • It does not work in your example because you're using a literal object. Declare an empty object first like xml = {} and add methods with dot notation like xml.getResult = function(){ ... }, then to use properties that already exist just do xml.property instead of this..
    – elclanrs
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:18
  • Even if I use this.result then it returns undefined unlike result is not defined.
    – Om3ga
    Nov 8, 2012 at 9:21
0

try XML.result

See Understanding "this" in Javascript for a discussion of the ins and outs of this and what it points to a different times.

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