Below is a simple JavaScript OOP that I am trying to understand. I want to know why getA()
and getC()
return undefined, but the same getB()
returns 2 when I change the variable B
in the constructor and assign it to the b
.
When I run getD()
it returns, what I am assigning? How is this
working here?
var a,b,c,d;
var encap = function(a,B,c,d){
a = a;
b = B;
this.c = c;
this.d = d;
}
encap.prototype.getA = function() {
return a; // returns undefined
};
encap.prototype.getB = function() {
return b; // returns 2
};
encap.prototype.getC = function() {
return c; // undefined
};
encap.prototype.getD = function() {
return this.d;
};
encap.prototype.setA = function(A) {
a = A;
};
encap.prototype.setB = function(B) {
b = B;
};
var encapObj = new encap(1,2,4,6);
console.log(encapObj.getA()); // undefined
console.log(encapObj.getB()); // 2
console.log(encapObj.getC()); // undefined
console.log(encapObj.getD()); // 6
a = a
doesn't assign to the global a, it assigns to the local one. Those global vars really shouldn't exist in any real scenario.