After experimenting with inheriting contexts with the => feature that ES6 gives us I noticed that the this context can never be changed. Example:
var otherContext = {
a: 2
};
function foo() {
this.a = 1;
this.bar = () => this.a;
}
var instance = new foo;
instance.bar(); // returns 1
instance.bar.bind(otherContext)(); // returns 1
Without the => operator and using the function keyword:
function foo() {
this.a = 1;
this.bar = function () {
return this.a;
}
}
var instance = new foo;
instance.bar(); // returns 1
instance.bar.bind(otherContext)(); // returns 2
Therefore, if we receive a function from an external call or just have a function in a variable, how can we be sure if we are going to be able to bind a different this to it or if it will just inherit it from somewhere?
It sounds dangerous that javascript does not tell you anything, one might fall for a VERY subtle and difficult bug.
this
value needs to be set, it's your job to document the method properly and it's the user's job to read the documentation and use the correct type of function.