I am writing a web application which uses YUI3 for all it's JS needs. I need functionality such as Tooltips, Tooltips whose content is determined by AJAX queries, Toggle Buttons and so on.

I was not sure who to build an architecture to achieve all this. I have taken the following approach

var Myapp = function(){

    this.toggleButton(node,config)
    {
        YUI().use(....,function(Y){
            //code to convert NODE into a toggle button;

        });
    }
    return this;
};

In my application I then just convert all the buttons into toggle buttons by calling

var app = Myapp(); 
app.toggleButton(Y.all('.toggle-buttons'),{'text1':'TOGGLE_ME','text2':'TOGGLED_ME'});

All this works. But I wanted to know from more experienced developers if there is anything fundamentally wrong with this approach.

Is this a good way to use JavaScript ?

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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

return this;

This is unneccesary since function constructors return this by default.

var app = Myapp();

You forgot to call new Myapp() without the new keyword this will be the window object and you are effectively writing to global scope.

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There's a fundamental problem in your code:

var MyApp = function(){

    this.toggleButton(node,config)
    {
     ...

You're not defining a function for MyApp. Instead, you try to invoke toggleButton each time you instantiate it. It should fail because the function is undefined


In your case, Class definition and instantiation is not needed because MyApp is being used as a utility.

You can define MyApp as a static Object:

var MyApp = {
    toggleButton: function toggleButton() {
        // your code
    }
};

And you can use it anywhere by:

MyApp.toggleButton();
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