At first blush, this looks like the same old 'closures in a loop' problem, but applying my usual solution is not actually solving the problem. Here's the code:
G.MultiToggle = function(each){
//data takes the form
//[{"data":(see Toggle), "onOpen":function(){}, "onClosed":function(){}},...]
this.children = [];
var which = null;
var toggles = [];
var that = this;
function makeOpenFn(j){
var info = each[j];
console.log(j);
return function(){
console.log(j);
info["onOpen"]();
if(which!=null){
toggles[which].close_up();
}
which = j;
};
};
function makeClosedFn(j){
var info = each[j];
console.log(j);
return function(){
console.log(j);
info["onClosed"]();
which = null;
};
};
function makeToggler(obj,opener,closer) {
return new G.Toggle(
obj.data,
opener,
closer
);
};
for(var i=0; i<each.length; i++){
var openFn = makeOpenFn(i);
var closedFn = makeClosedFn(i);
toggles[i] = makeToggler(each[i],openFn,closedFn);
toggles[i].close_up();
that.addChild(toggles[i]);
}
console.log(toggles);
}
G.MultiToggle.prototype = new createjs.Container();
The openFn and closedFn are used as event handlers by the toggle object later on. When they're invoked, they all spit out the results from i=2. I've tried moving the info variable declaration into the inner functions, and many other gymnastic permutations. I'm pulling my hair out, over here. Any help would be appreciated. EDIT: Added more of the surrounding code for context.
this
ofthis.children()
orthat = this
? What iseach
? What are the expected semantics ofwhich
? Why do you expect thewhich
referred to in your functions to have anything other than the latest global value when your function is eventually executed?openFn
&closedFn
inside a function inside the loop