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I've run into an issue with Kyle Simpson's excellent "You don't know JS" book on this & Object Prototypes.

OReilly link.

Official GitHub link.

The text of the book is included at the GitHub link if you'd like to read for complete context as to what's going on.

Here's the code in question:

if (!Function.prototype.softBind) {
  Function.prototype.softBind = function(obj) {
    var fn = this,
      curried = [].slice.call( arguments, 1 ),
      bound = function bound() {
        if (this === global) {console.log('this is global')}
        console.log(this);
        return fn.apply(
          (!this ||
          (typeof window !== "undefined" &&
          this === window) ||
          (typeof global !== "undefined" &&
          this === global)
          ) ? obj : this,
          curried.concat.apply( curried, arguments )
        );
      };
    bound.prototype = Object.create( fn.prototype );
    return bound;
  };
}

function foo() {
  console.log("name: " + this.name);
}

var obj = { name: 'obj'};
var obj2 = { name: 'obj2'};
var obj3 = { name: 'obj3'};

var fooOBJ = foo.softBind(obj);

fooOBJ(); // name: obj

obj2.foo = foo.softBind(obj);
obj2.foo(); // name: obj2
fooOBJ.call(obj3); // name: obj3

setTimeout(obj2.foo, 10); // name: obj (only in browser, name: undefined if in node)

For the purposes of this question, I'm only interested in the output of the final line of code, which as the comments show print 'name: obj' in a browser, but 'name: undefined' in node.

Can someone explain the how's and why's of this difference? And is there a change that can be made to the softBind function that will cause the code to work the same in both environments?

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  • running node v0.10.26 Dec 1, 2014 at 19:25

1 Answer 1

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As you can see from logging the value of this inside bound, when the function is called as setTimeout callback, this is set to a special timeout object:

{ _idleTimeout: 10,
  _idlePrev: null,
  _idleNext: null,
  _idleStart: 1417462313179,
  _monotonicStartTime: 36214497,
  _onTimeout: [Function: bound],
  _repeat: false }

I.e. it does not refer to the global object, unlike setTimeout in browsers. That's why

(typeof global !== "undefined" && this === global)

is not fulfilled and this of foo is set to the timeout object, not obj.

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  • Ok, but why does node do this? Thanks for the answer, but just wondering why this behavior is different from what happens in Chrome or Firefox. Dec 1, 2014 at 20:11
  • 1
    I can't give you a definite answer, but keep in mind that setTimeout is not part of the ECMAScript specification. It's provided by the browser and only formalized recently as part of HTML5. However, the specification does not dictate what this should refer to. And actually, the fact that this refers to the global object is seen as disadvantage, which is why this behavior is disabled in strict mode. Dec 1, 2014 at 20:16
  • Not the revelation that I was hoping for, but clarification has been provided. Thank you very much! Dec 1, 2014 at 20:25
  • Clarification: the HTML spec does in fact dictate that the this inside the function invoked by a setTimeout(..) should always be the global. All browsers will/should adhere to this predictably. Node however is not bound by the HTML spec, and therefore is allowed to have, and indeed has, their own implementation of setTimeout(..) that works differently, as stated. :/ Jul 12, 2016 at 5:21

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