I have been studying framework development for a few weeks, and I ran across what is highly suggested and pressured in the world of lib development, Immediately-invoking Anonymous Functions.
I never can get it to work, and I have failed to find a resource that explains in-detail the use and logic behind it.
Here's what I know so far:
- It's immediately invoking - It runs everything anonymously, immediately.
- It's anonymous - It does not carry a name therefore the code inside of it is not "reachable" by exterior code.
- You can pass global window, object and undefined parameters - That's about all I know on that, but do not understand them completely.
I am looking not only for a detailed resource, but one that explains the logic behind it. Because I find it very illogical.
Here's what I have:
(function( window, document, undefined ) {
window.myThingy = myThingy;
var myThingy = function() {
};
myThingy.prototype = {
constructor: myThingy,
create: function( elementToBeCreated ) {
return document.createElement( elementToBeCreated );
}
};
})( window, document );
Then,
myThingy().create("div");
But it is still saying myThingy() [object]
is not a function.
What am I doing wrong? Why should I use immediately-invoking functions and not just create a global myThingy = function()
object? Why do I have to use window
?
I know there are several resources on the net about this, but I can't understand any of it. Some of them go half-way into detail, some of them try to go into detail, but fail to explain the critical stuff. Why is this so stressed when developing a framework?
Don't worry, I'm not trying to "re-invent the wheel", but I am trying, however, to actually learn JavaScript, not just the pre-packaged stuff.
A good answer should contain:
- A good resource where it explains the logic behind immediately invoking anonymous functions
- An insight to that link
- What I am doing wrong with the code I provided