I've been experimenting with ES6 for a while now, and I've just come to a slight problem.
I really like using arrow functions, and whenever I can, I use them.
However, it would appear that you can't bind them!
Here is the function:
var f = () => console.log(this);
Here is the object I want to bind the function to:
var o = {'a': 42};
And here is how I would bind f
to o
:
var fBound = f.bind(o);
And then I can just call fBound
:
fBound();
Which will output this (the o
object):
{'a': 42}
Cool! Lovely! Except that it doesn't work. Instead of outputting the o
object, it outputs the window
object.
So I'd like to know: can you bind arrow functions? (And if so, how?)
I've tested the code above in Google Chrome 48 and Firefox 43, and the result is the same.
this
of their parent scope.this
in an arrow function.this
of their parent scope. Event handlers is the most common situation I've had, but I'm sure there are lots of others too.var that = this;
orvar self = this;
before storing an anonymous function for later use were quite common! It was workable but awkward, and arrow functions get rid of that non-standard albeit widely-used boilerplate.