I have a three-step process that is entirely reliant upon JavaScript and Ajax to load data and animate the process from one step to the next. To further plicate matters, the transition (forward and backward) between steps is animated :-(. As user's progress through the process anchor's appear showing the current step and previous steps. If they click on a previous step, then it takes them back to the previous step.
Right now, the entire process (forward and backward) works correctly, if you begin at step 1, but if you jump straight to step 3 then the anchors for step 1 and step 2 also perform the same action as step 3.
This is the portion of the code that loops through all of the steps up to the current step that the user would be on and displays each anchor in turn and assigns the appropriate function to the click event:
for (var i = 0; i < profile.current + 1; i++) {
if ($('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML.empty()) {
var action = profile.steps[i].action;
var dao_id = profile.steps[i].dao_id;
$('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML = profile.steps[i].anchor;
$('step_anchor_' + i).observe('click', function(){
pm.loadData(action, dao_id, true);
});
Effect.Appear('step_anchor_' + i, {
duration: 1,
delay: (down_delay++)
});
}
}
I know that problem lies in the way that the action and dao_id parameters are being passed in. I've also tried passing profile.steps[i].action and profile.steps[i].dao_id but in that case both profile and i or at least i are out scope.
How do I make it so that I can assign the parameters for action and dao_id correctly for each step? (If it makes any difference we are using Prototype and Scriptaculous)
I have a three-step process that is entirely reliant upon JavaScript and Ajax to load data and animate the process from one step to the next. To further plicate matters, the transition (forward and backward) between steps is animated :-(. As user's progress through the process anchor's appear showing the current step and previous steps. If they click on a previous step, then it takes them back to the previous step.
Right now, the entire process (forward and backward) works correctly, if you begin at step 1, but if you jump straight to step 3 then the anchors for step 1 and step 2 also perform the same action as step 3.
This is the portion of the code that loops through all of the steps up to the current step that the user would be on and displays each anchor in turn and assigns the appropriate function to the click event:
for (var i = 0; i < profile.current + 1; i++) {
if ($('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML.empty()) {
var action = profile.steps[i].action;
var dao_id = profile.steps[i].dao_id;
$('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML = profile.steps[i].anchor;
$('step_anchor_' + i).observe('click', function(){
pm.loadData(action, dao_id, true);
});
Effect.Appear('step_anchor_' + i, {
duration: 1,
delay: (down_delay++)
});
}
}
I know that problem lies in the way that the action and dao_id parameters are being passed in. I've also tried passing profile.steps[i].action and profile.steps[i].dao_id but in that case both profile and i or at least i are out scope.
How do I make it so that I can assign the parameters for action and dao_id correctly for each step? (If it makes any difference we are using Prototype and Scriptaculous)
Share Improve this question edited Jul 21, 2019 at 18:16 Brian Tompsett - 汤莱恩 5,89372 gold badges61 silver badges133 bronze badges asked Nov 24, 2008 at 22:19 Noah GoodrichNoah Goodrich 25.3k14 gold badges68 silver badges98 bronze badges2 Answers
Reset to default 7Your closure scope chain is causing your problems. By declaring the handler function inline, you've created a closure. Obviously you did this to take advantage of the loop.
However, since you have created a closure, you're playing by closure scoping rules. Those rules state that the local variables within the parent function remain active and available as long as the closure exists.
You are trying to pass and then use "action" and "dao_id" to your closure, but you are passing references here, not values. So when your closures (handlers) are called they use the value that the reference was last assigned. In your case, the Step 3 handler.
Closure scoping rules are confusing enough, but you may also be confused by the fact that "action" and "dao_id" are still alive even though the loop block has finished executing. Well, in JavaScript there is no such thing as block scope. Once you declare a variable it is available until the end of the function or until is it deleted. Whichever es first.
All that said, you need to break the scope chain. Here are two ways to do that:
Try this:
for (var i = 0; i < profile.current + 1; i++) {
if ($('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML.empty()) {
var action = profile.steps[i].action;
var dao_id = profile.steps[i].dao_id;
$('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML = profile.steps[i].anchor;
$('step_anchor_' + i).observe('click', function(a, b){
return function(){pm.loadData(a, b, true)};
}(action, dao_id));
Effect.Appear('step_anchor_' + i, {
duration: 1,
delay: (down_delay++)
});
}
}
Or this:
function createHandler(action, dao_id) {
return function(){pm.loadData(action, dao_id, true);};
}
/* snip - inside some other function */
for (var i = 0; i < profile.current + 1; i++) {
if ($('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML.empty()) {
var action = profile.steps[i].action;
var dao_id = profile.steps[i].dao_id;
$('step_anchor_' + i).innerHTML = profile.steps[i].anchor;
$('step_anchor_' + i).observe('click', createHandler(action, dao_id));
Effect.Appear('step_anchor_' + i, {
duration: 1,
delay: (down_delay++)
});
}
}
First, remember your execution scope in the click event. The this keyword in that context refers to the element being clicked on. Is there any way you can determine the dao_id from the element that is clicked on?