I come from OOP languages (Java, C# and PHP). I'm just doing some OOP in Javascript and am seriously confused on how to define a property. The code below is based on a Mozilla code example, which is the same as what I'm working with. I've also included the way I thought properties should be declared, but don't seem to work.
var myExtension = {
// This is how I thought it'd be done
this.instructionServers = new Array(
"http://server.com/json.php",
),
init: function() {
// The event can be DOMContentLoaded, pageshow, pagehide, load or unload.
if(gBrowser) {
gBrowser.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", this.onPageLoad,false);
}
},
onPageLoad: function(aEvent) {
var doc = aEvent.originalTarget; // doc is document that triggered the event
var win = doc.defaultView; // win is the window for the doc
// Skip frames and iFrames
if (win.frameElement) return;
// Code removed
}
this
is key to understanding the language.this
always has a value. If you are in the global scope, then it is the global object (DOMWindow in web browsers)this
in a variable definition to refer to the object begin defined. @divad12 has the right way to do this in a variable definition.