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1

Consider such loop:

for(var it = 0; it < 2; it++)
{
    setTimeout(function() {
        alert(it);
    }, 1);
}

The output is:

=> 2
=> 2

I would like it to be: 0, 1. I see two ways to fix it:

Solution # 1.

This one based on the fact that we can pass data to setTimeout.

for(var it = 0; it < 2; it++)
{
    setTimeout(function(data) {
        alert(data);
    }, 1, it);
}

Solution # 2.

function foo(data)
{
    setTimeout(function() {
        alert(data);
    }, 1);
}

for(var it = 0; it < 2; it++)
{
    foo(it);
}

Are there any other alternatives?

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74% accept rate

1 Answer

vote up 3 vote down check

Not really anything more than the two ways that you have proposed, but here's another

for(var it = 0; it < 2; it++)
{
    (function() {
        var m = it;   
        setTimeout(function() {
            alert(m);
        }, 1);
    })(); 
}

Essentially, you need to capture the variable value in a closure. This method uses a self-invoking anonymous function to capture the outer variable value it in a local variable m.

Here's a Working Demo to play with. add /edit to the URL to see the code

link|flag
+1 - Darn, I didn't get mine submitted in time. – James Black Nov 4 at 20:35

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