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I'm creating a JavaScript class (using Prototype) that will set the page state to idle if there's no mouse movement within a specified number of seconds. When the mouse moves, the class will "wake up" the page by sending a message to a list of listeners.

The thing I don't understand is that this.handlers is valid in one function (setIdle), but not another (setActive). The annotated code below illustrates my problem:

var IM2 = Class.create({

handlers: null,

initialize: function(callback, frequency) {
	this.handlers = [];
	Event.observe(document, "mousemove", this.sendActiveSignal);
	Event.observe(document, "keypress", this.sendActiveSignal);
	setInterval(this.sendIdleSignal.bind(this), 5000);
},

addListener: function(h) {
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 0 here, as expected
	this.handlers.push(h);
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 1 here, as expected
},

sendIdleSignal: function(args) {
	console.log("IDLE");
	this.handlers.each(function(i){
		i.setIdle();
	})
},

sendActiveSignal: function() {
                                    // this.handlers is undefined here. Why?
	this.handlers.each(function(r) {
		r.setActive();
	})
}

});
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I'm creating a JavaScript class (using Prototype) that will set the page state to idle if there's no mouse movement within a specified number of seconds. When the mouse moves, the class will "wake up" the page by sending a message to a list of listeners.

The thing I don't understand is that this.handlers is valid in one function (setIdle), but not another (setActive). The annotated code below illustrates my problem:

var IM2 = Class.create({

handlers: null,

initialize: function(callback, frequency) {
	this.handlers = [];
	Event.observe(document, "mousemove", this.sendActiveSignal);
	Event.observe(document, "keypress", this.sendActiveSignal);
	setInterval(this.sendIdleSignal.bind(this), 5000);
},

addListener: function(h) {
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 0 here, as expected
	this.handlers.push(h);
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 1 here, as expected
},

sendIdleSignal: function(args) {
	console.log("IDLE");
	this.handlers.each(function(i){
		i.setIdle();
	})
},

sendActiveSignal: function() {
                                    // this.handlers is undefined here. Why?
	this.handlers.each(function(r) {
		r.setActive();
	})
}
,

});

show/hide this revision's text 1

Javascript/Prototype scope confusion

I'm creating a JavaScript class (using Prototype) that will set the page state to idle if there's no mouse movement within a specified number of seconds. When the mouse moves, the class will "wake up" the page by sending a message to a list of listeners.

The thing I don't understand is that this.handlers is valid in one function (setIdle), but not another (setActive). The annotated code below illustrates my problem:

var IM2 = Class.create({

handlers: null,

initialize: function(callback, frequency) {
	this.handlers = [];
	Event.observe(document, "mousemove", this.sendActiveSignal);
	Event.observe(document, "keypress", this.sendActiveSignal);
	setInterval(this.sendIdleSignal.bind(this), 5000);
},

addListener: function(h) {
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 0 here, as expected
	this.handlers.push(h);
	console.log(this.handlers.size());  // it's 1 here, as expected
},

sendIdleSignal: function(args) {
	console.log("IDLE");
	this.handlers.each(function(i){
		i.setIdle();
	})
},

sendActiveSignal: function() {
                                    // this.handlers is undefined here. Why?
	this.handlers.each(function(r) {
		r.setActive();
	})
},

});