The problem here is that you didn't isolate the loop variable i
inside the closure. However, this can be solved much more elegantly by using objects.
First off, I'm introducing the object that will encapsulate what you want; it gets initialized with a bar element and a function to call when it's done counting to 100. So, I'll call it BarCounter
:
function BarCounter(element, fn)
{
this.element = element;
this.fn = fn;
this.text = element.getElementsByTagName('div')[0];
this.counter = 0;
}
This is just the constructor; it doesn't do anything useful; it resolves the text element, which is simply the first <div>
tag it can find underneath the given element and stores that reference for later use.
Now we need a function that will do the work; let's call it run()
:
BarCounter.prototype.run = function()
{
var that = this;
if (this.counter < 100) {
this.text.innerHTML = this.counter++;
setTimeout(function() {
that.run();
}, 70);
} else {
this.fn(this.element);
}
}
The function will check whether the counter has reached 100 yet; until then it will update the text element with the current value, increase the counter and then call itself again after 70 msec. You can see how the reference to this
is kept beforehand to retain the context in which the run()
function is called later.
When all is done, it calls the completion function, passing in the element on which the BarCounter
object operates.
The completion function is much easier if you pass the element to remove:
function removeDiv(element)
{
element.parentNode.removeChild(element);
}
The final step is to adjust the rest of your code:
var array = [1];
for (var i = 0; i < array.length; ++i) {
var bar = new BarCounter(
document.getElementById('bar' + array[i]),
removeDiv
);
bar.run();
}
It's very simple now; it creates a new BarCounter
object and invokes its run()
method. Done :)
Btw, you have the option to remove the element from within the object as well; this, of course, depends on your own needs.
Demo