I think the explanation from the Mozilla Docs describes it well:
You can assign a different this object
when calling an existing function.
this refers to the current object, the
calling object. With apply, you can
write a method once and then inherit
it in another object, without having
to rewrite the method for the new
object.
apply is very similar to call, except
for the type of arguments it supports.
You can use an arguments array instead
of a named set of parameters. With
apply, you can use an array literal,
for example, fun.apply(this, [name,
value]), or an Array object, for
example, fun.apply(this, new
Array(name, value)).
As for the parameters:
thisArg
Determines the value of this inside fun. If thisArg is null or
undefined, this will be the global
object. Otherwise, this will be equal
to Object(thisArg) (which is thisArg
if thisArg is already an object, or a
String, Boolean, or Number if thisArg
is a primitive value of the
corresponding type). Therefore, it is
always true that typeof this ==
"object" when the function executes.
argsArray
An argument array for the object, specifying the arguments with which
fun should be called, or null or
undefined if no arguments should be
provided to the function.
The docs give a good example of a use case for apply. In the example below, apply is used to chain a constructor:
function product(name, value)
{
this.name = name;
if (value >= 1000)
this.value = 999;
else
this.value = value;
}
function prod_dept(name, value, dept)
{
this.dept = dept;
product.apply(this, arguments);
}
prod_dept.prototype = new product();
// since 5 is less than 1000 value is set
var cheese = new prod_dept("feta", 5, "food");
// since 5000 is above 1000, value will be 999
var car = new prod_dept("honda", 5000, "auto");
Notice that in the prod_dept constructor, the this supplied refers to the prod_dept object, and arguments is an array of arguments passed to the product constructor.
.applyand.callftw!! – Rudie May 9 '11 at 12:08