I would like to know why this example shows the following behavior. If we write:
let person = {
name: 'ENoy',
age: 25,
weekendAlarm: 'No alarms needed',
weekAlarm: 'Alarm set to 7AM',
sayHello: () => {
return `Hello, my name is ${this.name}`;
},
sayGoodbye(){
return 'Goodbye!';
}
};
console.log(person.sayHello());
let friend = {
name: 'Bruno'
};
friend.sayHello = person.sayHello;
console.log(friend.sayHello());
We get as output:
Hello, my name is undefined
Hello, my name is undefined
And if we try to use:
let person = {
name: 'ENoy',
age: 25,
weekendAlarm: 'No alarms needed',
weekAlarm: 'Alarm set to 7AM',
sayHello: () => {
return `Hello, my name is ${person.name}`;
},
sayGoodbye(){
return 'Goodbye!';
}
};
console.log(person.sayHello());
let friend = {
name: 'Tori'
};
friend.sayHello = person.sayHello;
console.log(friend.sayHello());
We see:
Hello, my name is ENoy
Hello, my name is ENoy
In Java I have seen various ways to get it done:
Java - get the current class name?
In JavaScript I have seen the constructor:
But I think in the previous link we get the method which instantiated the object we would like in this topic get the variable from the object where the function is declared.
sayHello: function () {
orsayHello() {
sayHello: function () ...
, then it works as you expect. See difference of behaviour wrt.this
between arrow functions and regular functions.=>
you lost the scope ofthis
. In that function console logthis
to see.