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1

I'm having some trouble with plain old JavaScript (no frameworks) in referencing my object in a callback function.

function foo(id) {
    this.dom = document.getElementById(id);
    this.bar = 5;
    var self = this;
    this.dom.addEventListener("click", self.onclick, false);
}

foo.prototype = {
    onclick : function() {
        this.bar = 7;
    }
};

Now when I create a new object (after the DOM has loaded, with a span#test)

var x = new foo('test');

The 'this' inside the onclick function points to the span#test and not the foo object.

How do I get a reference to my foo object inside the onclick function?

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5 Answers

vote up 12 vote down check

this.dom.addEventListener("click", function(event) {self.onclick(event)}, false);

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Thanks, but can you explain why I need to create an anonymous function there? Why does that change the binding? – Chris MacDonald Oct 8 '08 at 15:02
Whenever an event is fired, 'this' refers to the object that invoked the event. – Tom Oct 8 '08 at 15:04
When you use the form in your question, self.onclick is just an anonymous function which, when handled, works like you had attached it directly to the span. When you wrap it in a closure, self.onclick(event) really does what you want, e.g. uses 'self' from the context defining the closure. – Adam Bellaire Oct 8 '08 at 15:07
Thanks, that's what I suspected – Chris MacDonald Oct 8 '08 at 15:09
vote up -2 vote down

this is one of the most confusing points of JS: the 'this' variable means to the most local object... but functions are also objects, so 'this' points there. There are other subtle points, but i don't remember them all.

I usually avoid using 'this', just define a local 'me' variable and use that instead.

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vote up 6 vote down

(extracted some explanation that was hidden in comments in other answer)

The problem lies in the following line:

this.dom.addEventListener("click", self.onclick, false);

Here, you pass a function object to be used as callback. When the event trigger, the function is called but now it has no association with any object (this).

The problem can be solved by wrapping the function (with it's object reference) in a closure as follows:

this.dom.addEventListener(
  "click",
  function(event) {self.onclick(event)},
  false);

Since the variable self was assigned this when the closure was created, the closure function will remember the value of the self variable when it's called at a later time.

An alternative way to solve this is to make an utility function (and avoid using variables for binding this):

function bind(scope, fn) {
    return function () {
    	fn.apply(scope, arguments);
    };
}

The updated code would then look like:

this.dom.addEventListener("click", bind(this, this.onclick), false)
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The createCallback utility function is handy! thanks. – Balaji Sowmyanarayanan Aug 11 at 8:43
closure() is probably a better name though. – hishadow Aug 16 at 18:48
Or bind() or bindMethod(). – outis Aug 16 at 19:08
Nice and short. :) – hishadow Aug 19 at 22:49
vote up 1 vote down

The explanation is that self.onclick does not mean what you think it means in JavaScript. It actually means the onclick function in the prototype of the object self (without in any way referencing self itself).

JavaScript only has functions and no delegates like C#, so it is not possible to pass a method AND the object it should be applied to as a callback.

The only way to call a method in a callback is to call it yourself inside a callback function. Because JavaScript functions are closures, they are able to access the variables declared in the scope they were created in.

var obj = ...;
function callback(){ return obj.method() };
something.bind(callback);
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I called the prototype function 'onclick' to easily associate it. I knew it wasn't going to be called automatically by the actual DOM onclick event, which was why I was trying to do the event listeners to bind my object's onclick with the DOM's onclick function. – Chris MacDonald Oct 11 '08 at 13:23
That was not my point, I understand your onclick function. My point is that there is no difference in JavaScript between self.onclick and foo.prototype.onclick. There is no way in JavaScript to say "this method bound to this object". – Vincent Robert Oct 12 '08 at 15:55
vote up 1 vote down

I wrote this plugin...

i think it will be useful

jquery.callback

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