-1

I'm working my way through an IndexedDB article and right after where it says:

That may sound confusing, but..

They have this snippet:

var db = event.target.result;
objectStore.transaction.oncomplete = function(event) {
   var customerObjectStore = db.transaction("customers", "readwrite").objectStore("customers");

So I'm getting confused on the two different transactions. The first one is called without using parenthesis, the second one uses parenthesis. The first one is a transaction on the objectStore object, the second on is on the db object.

Q: Is it a coincidence that they're both called 'transaction'?

Q: Are they both methods?

1 Answer 1

2

objectStore.transaction.oncomplete Objectstore is a property here on an already opened objectstore (by db.transaction). It adds a oncomplete event, so when the transaction is finished it can do something else, in this case opening a new transaction (maybe on different stores or something)

The second one (db.transaction), is a method on db to open a new transaction.

So the difference in code

var trans = db.transaction("store1", "readonly"); // creates a transaction
store = trans.objectStore("store1"); // opens the objectStore on the just created transaction
// store.transaction is the same as trans, it returns the transaction to which the Objectstore belongs.

The transaction object has some attributes

  • mode - property (readonly/readwrite)
  • db property (database to which the transaction belongs
  • abort method (kill and rollback the transaction)
  • objectStore method (open a objectStore
  • onabort/oncomplete/onerror events

Hope that answers your question

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.