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What underlies this JavaScript idiom: var self = this?
I am confused that when to use self and this in javascript.
I know that this refers to current context and self refers to current window.
As I am developing an application in Titanium. I want to know when to use self or this
OR does is there is any concept of self in titanium development.
here is the sample code that i am doing in my titanium commonJS module
var auth = require('/SDKTest/auth');
var nodeAPI = require('/SDKTest/nodeAPI');
function myAPI() {
this.auth = auth;
this.nodeAPI = nodeAPI;
return this;
}
module.exports = myAPI;
This code works, but can I use self in place of this ? And instead of using this i can create a namespace and do something like this:
function myAPI() {
var api = {};
api.auth = auth;
api.nodeAPI = nodeAPI;
return api;
}
both the approaches work but what is the use of using this over here
self
is not a JavaScript keyword! Programmers use that when defining classes to have always valid reference to object itself.Your question is somewhat confusing, it's like asking: Do I buy apples or tomatoes? The answer is, it really depends on what you want to do, since they're completely different.
Essentially, you have answered your own question to some extent, because you already know the differences between the two:
this
refers to the current contextself
refers towindow
You're asking whether you can use
self
instead. Think about it, what doesthis
allow you to do? It allows you, to refer to the context. What is the context, well, it'smodule
when you callmodule.exports()
. Andmodule
is most likely not going to bewindow
, so no, you can't useself
here.Does that answer the question?
The second code example seems to do something completely different. I don't know what to make of that.