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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
}  
4
  • 1
    Truly grokking JavaScript's this is key to understanding the language.
    – Matt Greer
    Nov 14, 2011 at 21:41
  • @AutoSponge -- this always has a value. If you are in the global scope, then it is the global object (DOMWindow in web browsers)
    – Matt Greer
    Nov 14, 2011 at 21:42
  • You can't use this in a variable definition to refer to the object begin defined. @divad12 has the right way to do this in a variable definition.
    – jfriend00
    Nov 14, 2011 at 21:50
  • 2
    JavaScript is an OO language as well... just saying :) Nov 14, 2011 at 22:19

3 Answers 3

3

You should have

var myExtension = {
    instructionServers: ["http://server.com/json.php"],

    // ...

};

Alternatively, you can also assign properties in JavaScript directly, as in

myExtension.instructionServers = ["http://server.com/json.php"];

This would make instructionServers an array property of myExtension. You can then get the value of the property with

myExtension.instructionServers

or

myExtension['instructionServers']

As an aside, note that in JavaScript you can use handy array literals.

['hello', 3]

is equivalent to the more verbose and discouraged

new Array('hello', 3)
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var myExtension = {
        url: 'http://server.com/json.php',
        init: function() {
            alert( this.url );
        }
}

myExtension.init();

Technically init is a property itself, just a property of type function. To declare a string property simply set one the same way as above.

To reference that property inside of your object use

this

0

You are using the object notation (think JSON) so there is no "=". it should be :

instructionServers: ["http://server.com/json.php"],

2
  • Object literals should not be confused with JSON. They look similar but are two different things. Nov 14, 2011 at 22:20
  • i did not mean that to be taken literally, but just the notation. Sorry, should have been a little more specific.
    – mithun_daa
    Nov 14, 2011 at 22:23

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