I've got a problem concerning the javascript "this" keyword when used within a javascript functional object. I want to be able to create an object for handling a Modal popup (JQuery UI Dialog).
The object is called CreateItemModal. Which i want to be able to instantiate and pass some config settings. One of the config settings. When the show method is called, the dialog will be shown, but the cancel button is not functioning because the this refers to the DOM object instead of the CreateItemModal object.
How can I fix this, or is there a better approach to put seperate behaviour in seperate "classes" or "objects". I've tried several approaches, including passing the "this" object into the events, but this does not feel like a clean solution.
See (simplified) code below:
function CreateItemModal(config) {
// initialize some variables including $wrapper
};
CreateItemModal.prototype.show = function() {
this.$wrapper.dialog({
buttons: {
// this crashes because this is not the current object here
Cancel: this.close
}
});
};
CreateItemModal.prototype.close = function() {
this.config.$wrapper.dialog('close');
};
Try to add a variable that is equal to global this e.g
As for me, it works in most cases
You need to create a closure to trap the
this
context, I tend to use an anonymous function to do this as follows:-try this:
The reason why it doesn't work, because the "this" is referring to the dialog, not to that class.
Everyone who encounters problems with "this" in JavaScript should read and digest this blog post: http://howtonode.org/what-is-this
You would also do well to Google "Douglas Crockford" and watch some of his (free) videos on the subject.