For preserving the context, the bind
method is really useful, it's now part of the recently released ECMAScript 5th Edition Specification, the implementation of this function is simple (only 8 lines long):
// The .bind method from Prototype.js
if (!Function.prototype.bind) { // check if native implementation available
Function.prototype.bind = function(){
var fn = this, args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments),
object = args.shift();
return function(){
return fn.apply(object,
args.concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)));
};
};
}
And you could use it, in your example like this:
MyClass.prototype.myfunc = function() {
this.element.click((function() {
// ...
}).bind(this));
};
Another example:
var obj = {
test: 'obj test',
fx: function() {
alert(this.test + '\n' + Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).join());
}
};
var test = "Global test";
var fx1 = obj.fx;
var fx2 = obj.fx.bind(obj, 1, 2, 3);
fx1(1,2);
fx2(4, 5);
In this second example we can observe more about the behavior of bind
.
It basically generates a new function, that will be the responsible of calling our function, preserving the function context (this
value), that is defined as the first argument of bind
.
The rest of the arguments are simply passed to our function.
Note in this example that the function fx1
, is invoked without any object context (obj.method()
), just as a simple function call, in this type of invokation, the this
keyword inside will refer to the Global object, it will alert "global test".
Now, the fx2
is the new function that the bind
method generated, it will call our function preserving the context and correctly passing the arguments, it will alert "obj test 1, 2, 3, 4, 5" because we invoked it adding the two additionally arguments, it already had binded the first three.