Coming from the Java (OOP) world, I am used to classes, inheritance and multi threading. Now for my little walkabout in the JavaScript domain, I try to utilize these paradigms and patterns where applicable. Read: use prototypes ("classes" / objects) and WebWorkers for parallel execution. However, this one case does not work ...
HTML site starting a worker:
<html>
<head>
<script>
var worker = new Worker("worker.js");
worker.onmessage(event) {
// here be fancy script
}
worker.postMessage("run, worker, run!");
</script>
</head>
...
</html>
Worker called by HTML ("worker.js"):
self.loadScripts("handler.js");
var handler = null;
self.onmessage = function(event) {
if(!handler) {
handler = new Handler();
}
handler.compute();
}
The Handler as called by the worker ("handler.js"):
function Handler() {
}
Handler.prototype = {
compute: function() {
this.doSomething(); // <-- ERROR! "this" points to the worker context,
// not to the Handler instance. So "doSomething" is
// undefined. However, the following line would work:
// Handler.prototype.doSomething();
},
doSomething: function() {
// More code here
}
}
Is JavaScript prototyping and "inheritance" meant to work this way? Should I always use the prototype property instead of this? What if I want to access this.myProperty instead of a function?
Also: is there any reasonable way to bind this to the Handler instance in the constructor? At least the code is not cluttered with lengthy Handler.prototype references.
Thanks!
thiswill reference whatever the global scope is. – Jared Farrish Dec 18 '11 at 17:50thisin thecomputefunction should be thehandlerobject it was called against. – RightSaidFred Dec 18 '11 at 17:53thisshould be set to the object like you are expecting so there is something amiss in the code (which I don't see at the moment). – jfriend00 Dec 18 '11 at 18:03var obj = thisbefore the setTimeout captured a closure and refer toobjin the setTimeout function instead ofthis. – jfriend00 Dec 18 '11 at 18:28