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What's the normal pure javascript (i.e. not JQuery) way to pass arguments into an anonymous onreadystatechange callback?

For example:

function doRequest(){
    /* Get an XMLHttpRequest in a platform independent way */    
    var xhttp = getXmlHttpRequestObject(); 

    var msg="show this message when done"; /* another variable to pass into callback */

     /* How do I pass 'msg' and 'xhttp' into this anonymous function as locals
       named 'x' and 'm'??? */
    xhttp.onreadychangestate=function(x,m)
    {
       if( x.readyState == 4 )
       {
           alert(m);
       }
    }
    /* do the open() and send() calls here.... */
}
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1 Answer

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Javascript supports closures, so the anonymous function you wrote will be able to access xhttp and msg from the enclosing doRequest() scope.

If wanted to do this explicitly (say, if you want to define the callback function somewhere else in the code and reuse it), you could create a function that creates the callbacks. This also allows you to alias the variables to be accessible with different names (like x and m):

function createCallback(x, m) {
    return function() {
        /* Do whatever */
    };
}

and then in doRequest(), do xhttp.onreadystatechange = createCallback(xhttp, msg);

If all you wanted to do was 'rename' the variables, you can do this inline and anonymously:

xhttp.onreadystatechange = (function(x, m) {
    return function() {
        /* Do stuff */
    }
})(xhttp, msg);
share|improve this answer
Thanks. This answer prompted me to learn a lot more about Javascript. Really all I needed to know was how the closures work. – Brian McFarland Dec 21 '11 at 15:17

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