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In an article I read about factory functions in jQuery, but I cannot find anything about that on the internet. What are they and what do they do?

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  • In jQuery, the jQuery() function itself - also represented by $() - is a factory function because it is a function that creates new objects.
    – jfriend00
    Jan 18, 2015 at 17:17
  • Could you post a link to the article you are reading?
    – user751651
    Jan 18, 2015 at 17:20

6 Answers 6

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Factory functions generally return new objects without requiring you to explicitly create them with the new keyword.

$.Deferred() is a factory function that creates new Deferred objects. $.when() creates promise objects (a type of object related to Deferredes).

But if you take a step back, $() is a factory function itself - it creates new jQuery objects. Some of the other jQuery API functions are factories as well, namely when they create new jQuery objects (for example, all traversal type functions are factories in jQuery, but others, too).

The main purpose in jQuery is that you can keep up the "fluent interface" style of programming:

   $("body").css("color", "red").find("a").show().parent().addClass("foo");
//-^-----------------------------^----------------^------------------------

Here ^ marks the factories.

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  • Great explanation and example. Should be the top answer. Jan 18, 2015 at 17:26
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I am not expert but what ever i know factory method is same as $(document).ready() . basically you can pass $() to run the function after page load. as $(function(){ }); it is same as $(document).ready(function(){});

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Its a creational design pattern. You ask for a object with given parameter as input and function will return a return one of several families of related objects/functions.

Ex.

function car(name, color,speed) {
var obj = new Object();
//now you can create custom object as per requirement
obj.name = name;
obj.color = color;
obj.speed = speed;

    obj.customFunc = function(){
        console.log("Car name : " + this.name );
    }
    return obj;
}

var customCar = car("carName","red","100kmph");

//log: carName
customCar.customFunc()
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In the context of JavaScript, the factory pattern is useful when creating browser-compatible objects at run time. For example, the XHR object is created by calling "new XMLHttpRequest()" in Firefox, Chrome, and IE 7+, but in older versions of IE, this object is created via an ActiveX object, even though the objects all share the same set of Level 1 AJAX methods. A wrapper function can be written, e.g. the xmlHTTPRequestObject function in the Nano AJAX library detects the object availability at run time, and instantiate the correct object accordingly. Such wrapper function is considered to be a "factory function".

In jQuery, most of the factory functions are not returning different objects based on browser. However, the end user doesn't have to pick an implementation-specific object. For example, a "car rental factory" will get you a rental car. There's no guarantee which make or model the car will be. Even the only make in the jQuery rental company is called, say, "J1", they still don't want you to name the specific car. This allows the library to switch to a different implementation, say "J2" in the future. The factory pattern hides the information about "how it is done", and yet provides a uniform interface for the user to express "what is needed".

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In object-oriented programming, a factory is an object for creating other objects – formally a factory is simply an object that returns an object from some method call, which is assumed to be "new".

from Wikipedia

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It's a design pattern.

Also known as Virtual Constructor, the Factory Method is related to the idea on which libraries work: a library uses abstract classes for defining and maintaining relations between objects. One type of responsibility is creating such objects. The library knows when an object needs to be created, but not what kind of object it should create, this being specific to the application using the library.

The Factory method works just the same way: it defines an interface for creating an object, but leaves the choice of its type to the subclasses, creation being deferred at run-time. A simple real life example of the Factory Method is the hotel. When staying in a hotel you first have to check in. The person working at the front desk will give you a key to your room after you've paid for the room you want and this way he can be looked at as a room factory. While staying at the hotel, you might need to make a phone call, so you call the front desk and the person there will connect you with the number you need, becoming a phone-call factory, because he controls the access to calls, too.

(Source: http://www.oodesign.com/factory-method-pattern.html)

This link is also good information on the Factory Method.

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