I made some search around but wasn't able to find the exact answer for:
this.age = 20;
var getAge = function () {
return this.age;
};
var person = {
age: 30,
getAge: getAge
};
console.log(this.age); // 20
console.log(getAge()); // undefined
console.log(person.getAge()); // 30
Why, in Node.js, the "this", when used inside the getAge function in the code, is undefined, if it is actually defined?
Considering only the language, it should work?
I know that:
console.log(this === exports);
console.log(this === module.exports);
Notice that in Chrome, it works and the getAge(), when executed, return 20.
var self = this;
at the top of your function, and then have getAge() return self.age instead. It's a common workaround for "this" weirdness in JS.this
isn't the root object.