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I am not very familiar with using jquery other than toggling classes. That said, I will try to explain my problem as good as possible. I have three divs. After clicking one of them, the other two should should flip by 90degs and AFTERWARDS reduce their height to 0

I uploaded a short animation to youTube to show you how the final animation is meant to look like https://youtu.be/4ImmHJ04d0w

So my overly complicated script looks like that at the moment

// Add Temporarily Class
(function($){

    $.fn.extend({ 

        addTemporaryClass: function(className, duration) {
            var elements = this;
            setTimeout(function() {
                elements.removeClass(className);
            }, duration);

            return this.each(function() {
                $(this).addClass(className);
            });
        }
    });

})(jQuery);



$('.review--1').on('click', function() {
			$('[class^=review--]').not(this).addClass('review__hidden review__square');	
			$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').removeClass('review__hidden');					
		});

		// Animation
		$('.review--1').on('click', function() {
			
			$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').addTemporaryClass('animate-in', 500);
			setTimeout(function() {
        		$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').addClass('flip')
    			}, 500); 
								
		});


		$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').on('click', function() {
			$(this).removeClass('review__square');
			$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').not(this).addTemporaryClass('animate-out', 500);
			var that = $(this);
  			setTimeout(function() {
        		$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').not(that).removeClass('flip').addClass('review__hidden')
    			}, 500); 

        		
			});
.review--button {
	overflow: hidden;
	color: #aa7f6f;
	width: 100%;
	float: left;
	height: 50px;
	background-color: lightgrey;
}

.review__square {
	margin: 6px 3px;
	width: 190px;
	height: 190px;
	text-align: center;
	transform: rotateY(90deg);
	perspective: 80px;
	-webkit-perspective: 80px;
	/* transition: height .5s ease, transform .3s ease; */
}
.review__hidden {
	height: 0;
	margin: 0;
	transform: rotateY(90deg);
}
.animate-in {
	animation: flip-in .5s forwards;
}



@keyframes flip-in {
	from {transform: rotateY(90deg);}
	to {transform: rotateY(0);}
}
.animate-out {
	animation: flip-out .5s forwards;
}



@keyframes flip-out {
	from {transform: rotateY(0);}
	to {transform: rotateY(90deg);}
}
.flip {
	transform: rotateY(0);
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div class="review--button review--1">
				<i>1</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--2 review__hidden">
				<i>2</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--3 review__hidden">
				<i>3</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--4 review__hidden">
				<i>4</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--5 review__hidden">
				<i>5</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--6 review__hidden">
				<i>6</i>
			</div>

			<div class="review--button review__square review--7 review__hidden">
				<i>7</i>
			</div>

The problem (beside my poor code) is that the .not(this) doesn't work within the Timeout. Can somebody please tell me how to do this? Or even better tell me how my crappy code could be eased :)

2
  • So, when I click one div the other two just animate themselves so that they are no longer visible? Dec 11, 2016 at 22:07
  • Read the MDN on setTimeout. You will see that this inside a setTimeout is changed. Either use ES6 arrow functions to bind the context, manually bind it with .bind or alias it.
    – ste2425
    Dec 11, 2016 at 22:15

3 Answers 3

4

The this object binding is volatile in JavaScript...that is, it doesn't always point to the same object and its binding can change from one line of code to the very next. How you invoke the code that contains the word this determines what object it will bind to.

Had you cached your this object reference prior to the setTimeout like this:

var self = this;

you could then refer to self in the setTimeout and it would have worked.

Here's a checklist that you can follow to know what this will bind to (your scenario is #3 and you can read more about it here under the "The "this" problem" section)...

If the code that contains this is invoked:

  1. As a method or property of an object instance (through an instance variable):

    var o = new Object(); 
    
    // "this" will be bound to the "o" object instance
    // while "someProperty" and "someMethod" code executes
    o.someProperty = someValue;
    o.someMethod();
    
  2. Via a .call(), .apply(), .bind() or Array.prototype.fn invocation:

    // "this" will be bound to the object suppled as the "thisObjectBinding"
    someFunction.call(thisObjectBinding, arg, arg);
    someFunction.apply(thisObjectBinding, [arg, arg]);
    var newFunc = someFunction.bind(thisObjectBinding, arg, arg);
    

    Note: When a callback function is invoked (i.e. event handler), there is an implicit call to the handler when the event is triggered. In these cases, the object responsible for triggering the event becomes the object bound to this.

    Additionally, several Array.prototype methods allow for a thisObject to be passed which will alter the binding for the duration of the method call:

    Array.prototype.every( callbackfn [ , thisArg ] )
    Array.prototype.some( callbackfn [ , thisArg ] )
    Array.prototype.forEach( callbackfn [ , thisArg ] )
    Array.prototype.map( callbackfn [ , thisArg ] )
    Array.prototype.filter( callbackfn [ , thisArg ] )
    
  3. If none of the other scenarios apply, Default binding occurs.

    3a. With "use strict" in effect: this is undefined

    3b. Without "use strict" in effect: this binds to the Global object

** NOTE: this binding can also be affected by using eval(), but as a general best practice, the use of eval() should be avoided.

Having said all that, I'm not sure why you need a setTimeout at all (if I understood your scenario correctly):

var divs = document.querySelectorAll("div:not(#parent)");

divs.forEach(function(div){
  div.addEventListener("click", function(){
    
    var self = this;
    
    // get other two divs, not this one
    var $otherDivs = $(divs).not(this);
    
    // Fade them out:
    $otherDivs.fadeOut(function(){
       // JQuery animations accept a callback function to run when the animation is complete
       $(self).addClass("clickedDiv");
    });
  });
});
#parent { width:350px; border: 0; background:inherit;}

div {
  width:100px;
  height:100px;
  background:#ff0;
  text-align:center;
  float:left;
  border:1px solid black;
}

.clickedDiv {
  background:#f99;
  width:100%;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="parent">
   <div>I'm DIV 1</div>
   <div>I'm DIV 2</div>
   <div>I'm DIV 3</div>
</div>

11
  • Good write up, but you forgot to mention the new arrow functions () => {}. How it binds context to the calling scope. (Essentially the same as manually calling .bind().
    – ste2425
    Dec 12, 2016 at 7:45
  • Great answer, thanks. I need the timeout because the staying div also transforms to width:100%. So if all animations happen at the same time the staying div forces the fading divs to switch the row before they leave. That looks very messy. So my idea was to have a class that flips the leaving divs by 90degs and after this animation is finished the geht the height:0 class so that they don't block coming divs. Do you get what I mean? Dec 12, 2016 at 13:01
  • @SinanAl-Kuri Even so, you don't need a setTimeout since the JQuery animations accept a callback function to run when the animation is complete. See my updated answer for an example. Dec 12, 2016 at 15:31
  • @ste2425 I didn't forget. Arrow functions don't actually cause any binding at all (so they are not like bind). In actuality, they just don't affect this binding, so they are not added to my checklist. Dec 12, 2016 at 15:35
  • @ScottMarcus yup your right about it not binding a this however they are still worth a mention. They would perfectly solve the OP's issue (Which is the point after all) assuming he is in a compliant environment. Without needing all the sub standard alternatives. (Every time i see var self = this i cry a little :p)
    – ste2425
    Dec 12, 2016 at 15:41
0

May be, you should use link to this? var self= $(this)

$('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').on('click', function() {
  $(this).removeClass('review__square');
  $('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').not(this).addTemporaryClass('animate-out', 500);

  var self = $(this);

  setTimeout(function() {
      $('.review--2 ,.review--3, .review--4').not(self).removeClass('flip').addClass('review__hidden')
  }, 500); 

  });
});
1
  • It's a bit dangerous to set self = $(this) as opposed to self = this because caching this in a variable called self is a common convention in JavaScript. Your suggestion would mean that self is actually referencing a JQuery wrapped set, not the actual this object. Another common convention is that if you are going to cache a JQuery wrapped set, you should qualify your variable with a prefix of $ to remind you and others that the object is a JQuery object, so var $self = $(this) would be fine, except that is does mean that you have to "unpack" this out of the wrapped set. Dec 11, 2016 at 22:34
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Whilst Scott Marcus provides a very good explanation of how invoking a method can change its this object for some reason he doesn't want to update his answer to include how invoking a method using arrow functions affects the this object.

Quoting directly from MDN

An arrow function does not create its own this context, so this has the original meaning from the enclosing context.

So to extend Marcus's very good answer

var divs = document.querySelectorAll("div:not(#parent)");

divs.forEach(function(div){
  div.addEventListener("click", function(){
    // get other two divs, not this one
    var $otherDivs = $(divs).not(this);

    // Fade them out:
    $otherDivs.fadeOut(() => {
       // JQuery animations accept a callback function to run when the animation is complete
       $(this).addClass("clickedDiv");
    });
  });
});

As Marcus has pointed out in the comments Arrow functions are not the tool to use where you wish to have dynamic binding of this however if you find your self having to use var self = this often because your callback is having its context re-bound for you when you don't want it to then arrow functions may be useful.

Either way its another tool to the tool belt and all that,

1
  • "for some reason he doesn't want to update his answer to include how invoking a method using arrow functions affects the this object." Full discussion on this in the comments of my answer above....But, I didn't include it because, in fact (and as your quote from MSDN states), arrow functions simply don't affect this binding and my answer focuses on what does affect this binding. Arrow functions don't make that list. Sep 16, 2017 at 20:45

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