1

Let's say I have a Posts class.

I can do:

Posts.prototype.foo = function () {
  console.log(this);
}

And when I call post1.foo() (with post1 being an instance of the Posts class), the this outputted by the console will be equal to post1.

Now consider the following scenario:

Posts.prototype.baz = {
  foo: function () {
   console.log(this);
  },
  bar: [1,2,3,4]
}

Now when I do post1.baz.foo(), the value of this is no longer post1, but instead {foo: ..., bar: ...}.

My question is: in that second scenario, how can I access post1 from within foo?

0

3 Answers 3

2

You're bumping up against an interesting problem. What you're doing is not a common pattern in Javascript (assigning a nested object to the prototype), and on the surface it looks like it should work.

Javascript this is resolved in two ways. If you're making a function instantiated with new, this becomes a reference to that instantiated object (as you know).

However, this can also resolve to the parent object. That is, this code will log 'bar':

var obj = {
    prop: 'bar',
    log: function() { console.log( this.prop ); }
};
obj.log();

Because this is referencing the object the function is inside. That's what's happening in your case. The scope is being resolved earlier than you want.

Aside: If the function isn't nested inside an object, and you don't use new, this will become the global object (window in the browser).

The proper way to do this is probably in the constructor for Posts, where you can set this.whatever and bind it to the instance. This method is most commonly used for "private" variables, but can also be useful when you need to add computed data to your class, or in your case, declare specific scope.

function Posts() {
    var self = this;

    this.baz = {
        foo: function () {
            console.log(self);
        },
        bar: [1,2,3,4]
    }
}

You could also do:

    ...
    this.baz = {
        foo: function () {
            console.log(this);
        }.bind(this),

You may want to take a closer look at why you need a nested object on the class prototype. Can you break it down into all flat prototype methods? Is it data that doesn't need to be instantiated on every single class instance, and could be pulled out somewhere else?

3
  • Great answer, thanks! I will probably just break it down into flat prototype methods. I actually thought doing it this way would be "cleaner" since I'm not polluting the class' namespace as much. But then I bumped into this issue…
    – Sacha
    Sep 5, 2015 at 8:35
  • Also, I can't modify the Posts class itself, so I guess I couldn't use your other solutions.
    – Sacha
    Sep 5, 2015 at 8:38
  • Depending on your use case, another potential solution is to make a wrapping class (that you control) that has a post inside it. Modifying someone else's prototype often causes problems historically.
    – Andy Ray
    Sep 5, 2015 at 18:18
1

Whenever you have a "this" keyword, the object to which it get bounded depends on the call site. Only on the call site. Here's a deeper discussion you don't know js. I strongly suggest you to read that. However, if you let me over simplify it, consider it this way:

whenever you execute a function, it is roughly as if you were doing the following:

//default binding
fn() ~ fn.call(window)
// the default binding of this, is window, or undefined in strict mode.

you can however, call the function, with a

//implicit binding
obj.fn() ~ fn.call(ojb) 
// in this case you are implicitly binding this as the obj

Or if you want to be explicit, use call or apply:

//explicit bining
fn.call(obj)  
//this is explicitly binding obj as this.

The precedence of those is explicit > implicit > default.

In your case, you are running post1.baz.foo(): your call site is .baz. for rule 2, you are binding this to baz. What you want is to go explicit and call post1.baz.foo.call(post1);.

humble opinion follows

That is really ugly tho, so I feel your pain. The reason it is so complex, is because you are working against the grain of the language. It is probably because you are trying to do inheritance in the java way.

and finally,there's one more binding, but avoid it: new. If you can, never ever use new. JS is not java, and the behavior of new is very confusing. If you want to instantiate new objects, use Object.create.

1
  • Thanks, I'll check out that post. I think I mostly understand the issue with the call site, I just thought there might've been some clever syntaxic workaround somehow.
    – Sacha
    Sep 8, 2015 at 14:06
0

If you can change how you call this method, you could access this inside baz. For example:

post1.baz.foo.call(post1);

Will make this inside your foo function instance of Posts class and will console.log correct object.

Demo.

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