3

Are Javascript callbacks just anonymous functions sent as an argument in a function call?

For example,

mySandwich('ham', 'cheese', function() {  
   alert('Finished eating my sandwich.');  
  }); 

3 Answers 3

8

JavaScript callbacks are functions passed as values into an asynchronous function for the purpose of continuation.

Functions are values:

So in JavaScript, you can pass a functions around like values. You can reference a function in a number of ways:

  1. Pass a literal anonymous function as the callback

    doSomeWork(function (err, result) {
        if (err) {
            throw new Error(err);
        } else {
            console.log(result);
        }
    });
    
  2. Pass a literal named function as the callback

    doSomeWork(function magicalCallback(err, result) {
        if (err) {
            throw new Error(err);
        } else {
            console.log(result);
        }
    });
    

    (Naming every function is a smart idea because you can see it in the stack trace)

  3. Pass in the value of a variable which happens to be storing a function as the callback

    var someFunction = function callItWhatYouWant(err, result) {
        if (err) {
            throw new Error(err);
        } else {
            console.log(result);
        }
    }
    
    // reference the callback stored in the someFunction variable
    doSomeWork(someFunction);
    
  4. Pass in the function by referencing the function name as the callback

    function callItWhatYouWant(err, result) {
        if (err) {
            throw new Error(err);
        } else {
            console.log(result);
        }
    }
    
    // reference the callback function using the function name
    doSomeWork(callItWhatYouWant);
    

Continuation?

Continuation is all about the next step. When you call a function which is asynchronous, it needs to notify you that it is done. The callback acts as the next step, i.e. the asynchronous function will call you back when it is done.

So a callback is just a function argument used for a particular purpose, that being, continuation.

Callback signature

There is no standard for which arguments a callback should take, but in the Node.js community we have adopted the general signature

function (err, result)

where err is an Error object if something bad happened, or null if things were successful. If things went bad result is generally undefined, otherwise it contains the result. So your callback is generally called by either

callback(new Error("oops"));

or

callback(null, result);

Also note that it's normal for the last parameter of an asynchronous function to be the callback parameter

function callLater(delay, args, callback) {
    setTimeout(function () {     
        callback(null, args);
    }, delay);
}
3

In your example: yes

But in m example: No

function myCallback()
{
    alert('finished eating my sandwich');
}
mySandwich('ham','cheese', myCallback);

So, from you comment I think the real question is: What is an anonymous function? I did my best, but it is still early in the morning here, so don't shoot me.

Well, gooed question. Hard answer

when defining a function, it lives withing its scope. Scope? huh? Ok, let's start again.

when a webpage is loaded, the browser creates a window object. It then starts parsing everything you wrote in that document (let's assume HTML).

Every DOMElement it encounters, gets put into the window.document object. Every Element inside the widnow.document element is rendered/interpreted in your browser window.

Now, the browser encounters the following <script>:

var myVariable = 'So cool';

The browser sees var myVariable. This tells him to create a variable called myVariable in the current scope (again that word). the current scope is window (the window object the browser created). So it adds the variable to the window object:

window.myVariable === myVariable

The same goes for functions

function myAwesomeFunction()
{
    alert('I am so cool');
}

Creates a function inside the current scope (window) with the name myAwesomeFunction. So again:

window.myAwesomeFunction === myAwesomeFunction

But what if I want to create a function I don't whant any other code to have access to? What if I want a function that should only exist when a certain specific button is clicked.

Well, enter anonymous functions. these are functions that are declared in the anonymous scope. they cannot be accessed using the window object:

myButton = document.getElementById('myButton'); // === window.document.getElementById('myButton');
myButton.addEventListener('click', function()
{
    alert('I am so awesome');
});

Now, the function you passed into the eventlistener only lives inside the eventListener. It doesn't even have a name. So it's scope is 'the on click event of the button' but we can't access it from outside because it doesnt have a name. Thus, anonymous function.

A good read would be to google stuff like 'javascript scope', 'javascript window object', ... A lot of good articles give a better in depth explanation of all the words I threw at you.

2
  • Can you please explain this in detail. Not able to understand what is happening behind the scene? May 27, 2014 at 6:13
  • @AnkurAggarwal I added some words
    – Pinoniq
    May 27, 2014 at 6:30
1

Yes, except that they don't have to be anonymous functions, and there's a bit more to the definition of a callback. The other two answers have covered the details of what callbacks are for and anonymous functions well, but I have had similar confusion to yours when I was first learning so I wanted to add a missing piece. So, your example:

mySandwich('ham', 'cheese', function() {  
   alert('Finished eating my sandwich.');  
   }); 

I've noticed most callback explanations are like this- they don't include the declaration of the larger function, in this case mySandwich. But yes, the function this is being passed into does need to explicitly call the callback function for it to run. So your mySandwich function might look like this:

function mySandwich(meat, topping, callback) {
    //some code here using meat and topping
    //some code here about eating the sandwich
    callback();
}

So your code passes those parameters, including the function, into the mySandwich function, which then invokes it. Because many times the top-level function we are using is a method from a library rather than part of our own code, we don't actually see the step where the callback is invoked, but it does still happen and doesn't just automatically execute itself.

So yes, a callback is really just a function being passed as a parameter to another function, and then it is invoked usually as the last thing to happen in that larger function. There's more than that to callbacks, but they operate by the same rules as other functions in that somewhere they have to be declared and somewhere they have to be called, otherwise they don't run.

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