I'm not sure what is wrong with my code. I keep getting A NaN variable for maxLength. Am I writing this function correctly?
Helper function I am trying to call:
(function($) {
$.fn.countRemainingCharactersHelper = function(maxLength) {
id = this.attr('id');
var textLength = this.val().length;
var textRemaining = maxLength - textLength;
if (textLength >= maxLength) {
textRemaining = 0;
}
var messageId = id.slice(0, (id.indexOf('someTxtBox'))) + 'someTxtBox';
$('#' + messageId).html(textRemaining + ' characters remaining.');
};
})(jQuery);
Functions calling to the helper function above:
function countRemainingCharacters() {
$(this).countRemainingCharactersHelper(1000);
}
function countRemainingCharacters(maxLength) {
$(this).countRemainingCharactersHelper(maxLength);
}
Calling to function passing in the maxLength variable
$('#samplesomeTxtBox').click(function() {
countRemainingCharacters(4000);
});
this will refer to the window in your countRemainingCharacters() functions as you don't call it with a scope. You can fix that using call():
$('#samplesomeTxtBox').click(function() {
countRemainingCharacters.call(this, 4000);
})
Also note that the logic you use to generate the id of the element to place the message in is a little off. You could improve it by using a data attribute to explicitly set the element id.
Your overloaded method is also redundant in this case as you can take advantage of JavaScripts 'falsy' logic to provide a default value if none was provided. This means that you can convert your two countRemainingCharacters() functions in to one:
function countRemainingCharacters(maxLength) {
$(this).countRemainingCharactersHelper(maxLength || 1000);
}
Working example
All that would be left at that point is to create a key event handler to calculate the remaining characters as the user types.
How can I pass an attribute of div into it's own onclick function?
For example, I have this div:
var join_button = document.createElement("div");
join_button.setAttribute("class", "join_button");
join_button.innerHTML = "join";
join_button.setAttribute("room_name", name);
join_button.setAttribute("onclick", "join_room()");
Now, in function join_room() I need to know the room name attribute of this join_button. Ofcourse, I have not only one join_button on my page, I dont know it's names and I need to handle all of them.
If I try to use this It tells me undefined is not a function
function join_room() {
this.getAttribute("room_name");
}
undefined is not a function
You can use this to read the objects attribute.
var join_room = function() {
var room_name = this.getAttribute('room_name);
}
then set the onclick like this.
join_button.onclick = join_room;
JSFIDDLE
The following script works correctly although I need to make few amends. In each function I am getting the values need for the different formulas. However I tend to replicate the same line of code in different functions.
Ex.
function one(){ var v1= document.getElementById('one').value; }
function two(){ var v1= document.getElementById('one').value; }
Full code
I would like to declare all of the variables once and than only use the ones I need for the specific functions. If I declare them right at the top than once they are called they still hold the original value so I need to update that value to the current one if changed of course.
Your code will be very hard to read if you do it like in your fiddle.
Instead do
var myVars;
window.onload=function() {
myVars = {
'list_price': document.getElementById('list_price'),
'negotiated': document.getElementById('negotiated'),
.
.
'lease_payment': document.getElementById('lease_payment')
}
now you can do
var price = myVars.list_price.value;
or perhaps add a function
function getVal(id) {
var val = document.getElementById(id).value;
if (val =="" || isNaN(val)) return 0;
return parsetInt(val,10);
}
now you can do
var price = getVal("list_price");
mplungjan's solution is a great one. If you're at all concerned by your global vars leaking into the window scope, wrap your code in an Immediately Invoked Function Expression to prevent that from happening:
(function(){
// code goes here
}());
There are two ways to go about this:
Update your variable when the value changes
Use a function that always returns the correct value
1) You can add a listener for the change event or the keyup event that changes your global variable:
// save initial value
var val = document.getElementById('one').value;
// update the value when input is changed
addEventListener(document.getElementById('one'), 'change', function() {
val = document.getElementById('one').value;
});
console.log(val);
2) You can use a function that always returns the current value:
var val = function() { return document.getElementById('one').value; };
console.log(val());
2b) If you hate parenthesis, you can define a property that uses the function above as a getter:
Object.defineProperty(window, 'one', {
get : function() { return document.getElementById('one').value; }
});
console.log(one);
Is it possible to change the state of a toggle function? Like:
myDiv.toggle ... function 1 , function 2
I click on the myDiv element, the function 1 executes
I click again, function 2
I click again, function 1
BUT
Change the state
function 1 again
etc.
But I need to be able to change the state from outside the toggle function.
Here is a javascript object that uses closure to track it's state and toggle:
var TOGGLER = function() {
var _state = true;
var _msg = "function1";
var function1 = function() {
_msg = "function1";
}
var function2 = function() {
_msg = "function2";
}
return {
toggle: (function () {
_state = !_state;
if (_state) {
function1();
} else {
function2();
}
return _msg;
})
}
}();
Here is a jsfiddle that shows how to use it to toggle based with the following jquery: http://jsfiddle.net/yjPKH/5/
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#search").click(function() {
var message = TOGGLER.toggle();
$("#state").text(message);
});
});
The toggle function is meant for simple use cases. Changing the state externally is not "simple" anymore.
You cannot easily/safely (it's internal so it may change during minor versions) access the state variable of the toggle function easily as it's stored in the internal dataset of the element.
If you really want to do it, you can try this code though:
$._data(ELEMENT, "lastToggle" + func.guid, 0);
func is the function you passed to .toggle(), so you need to save this function in a variable. Here's a minimal example: http://jsfiddle.net/xqgrP/
However, since inside the function there's a var guid = fn.guid || jQuery.guid++ statement, I somehow think that the devs actually meant to use guid instead of func.guid for the _data key - in that case a minor update is very likely to break things. And after the fix you'd have to iterate over the data set to retrieve the correct key as there is no way to access the guid from outside.
I edited the question so it would make more sense.
I have a function that needs a couple arguments - let's call it fc(). I am passing that function as an argument through other functions (lets call them fa() and fb()). Each of the functions that fc() passes through add an argument to fc(). How do I pass fc() to each function without having to pass fc()'s arguments separately? Below is how I want it to work.
function fa(fc){
fc.myvar=something
fb(fc)
}
function fb(fc){
fc.myothervar=something
fc()
}
function fc(){
doessomething with myvar and myothervar
}
Below is how I do it now. As I add arguments, it's getting confusing because I have to add them to preceding function(s) as well. fb() and fc() get used elsewhere and I am loosing some flexibility.
function fa(fc){
myvar=something
fb(fc,myvar)
}
function fb(fc,myvar){
myothervar=something
fc(myvar,myothervar)
}
function fc(myvar,myothervar){
doessomething with myvar and myothervar
}
Thanks for your help
Edit 3 - The code
I updated my code using JimmyP's solution. I'd be interested in Jason Bunting's non-hack solution. Remember that each of these functions are also called from other functions and events.
From the HTML page
<input type="text" class="right" dynamicSelect="../selectLists/otherchargetype.aspx,null,calcSalesTax"/>
Set event handlers when section is loaded
function setDynamicSelectElements(oSet) {
/**************************************************************************************
* Sets the event handlers for inputs with dynamic selects
**************************************************************************************/
if (oSet.dynamicSelect) {
var ySelectArgs = oSet.dynamicSelect.split(',');
with (oSet) {
onkeyup = function() { findListItem(this); };
onclick = function() { selectList(ySelectArgs[0], ySelectArgs[1], ySelectArgs[2]) }
}
}
}
onclick event builds list
function selectList(sListName, sQuery, fnFollowing) {
/**************************************************************************************
* Build a dynamic select list and set each of the events for the table elements
**************************************************************************************/
if (fnFollowing) {
fnFollowing = eval(fnFollowing)//sent text function name, eval to a function
configureSelectList.clickEvent = fnFollowing
}
var oDiv = setDiv(sListName, sQuery, 'dynamicSelect', configureSelectList); //create the div in the right place
var oSelected = event.srcElement;
if (oSelected.value) findListItem(oSelected)//highlight the selected item
}
Create the list
function setDiv(sPageName, sQuery, sClassName, fnBeforeAppend) {
/**************************************************************************************
* Creates a div and places a page in it.
**************************************************************************************/
var oSelected = event.srcElement;
var sCursor = oSelected.style.cursor; //remember this for later
var coords = getElementCoords(oSelected);
var iBorder = makeNumeric(getStyle(oSelected, 'border-width'))
var oParent = oSelected.parentNode
if (!oParent.id) oParent.id = sAutoGenIdPrefix + randomNumber()//create an ID
var oDiv = document.getElementById(oParent.id + sWindowIdSuffix)//see if the div already exists
if (!oDiv) {//if not create it and set an id we can use to find it later
oDiv = document.createElement('DIV')
oDiv.id = oParent.id + sWindowIdSuffix//give the child an id so we can reference it later
oSelected.style.cursor = 'wait'//until the thing is loaded
oDiv.className = sClassName
oDiv.style.pixelLeft = coords.x + (iBorder * 2)
oDiv.style.pixelTop = (coords.y + coords.h + (iBorder * 2))
XmlHttpPage(sPageName, oDiv, sQuery)
if (fnBeforeAppend) {
fnBeforeAppend(oDiv)
}
oParent.appendChild(oDiv)
oSelected.style.cursor = ''//until the thing is loaded//once it's loaded, set the cursor back
oDiv.style.cursor = ''
}
return oDiv;
}
Position and size the list
function configureSelectList(oDiv, fnOnClick) {
/**************************************************************************************
* Build a dynamic select list and set each of the events for the table elements
* Created in one place and moved to another so that sizing based on the cell width can
* occur without being affected by stylesheet cascades
**************************************************************************************/
if(!fnOnClick) fnOnClick=configureSelectList.clickEvent
if (!oDiv) oDiv = configureSelectList.Container;
var oTable = getDecendant('TABLE', oDiv)
document.getElementsByTagName('TABLE')[0].rows[0].cells[0].appendChild(oDiv)//append to the doc so we are style free, then move it later
if (oTable) {
for (iRow = 0; iRow < oTable.rows.length; iRow++) {
var oRow = oTable.rows[iRow]
oRow.onmouseover = function() { highlightSelection(this) };
oRow.onmouseout = function() { highlightSelection(this) };
oRow.style.cursor = 'hand';
oRow.onclick = function() { closeSelectList(0); fnOnClick ? fnOnClick() : null };
oRow.cells[0].style.whiteSpace = 'nowrap'
}
} else {
//show some kind of error
}
oDiv.style.width = (oTable.offsetWidth + 20) + "px"; //no horiz scroll bars please
oTable.mouseout = function() { closeSelectList(500) };
if (oDiv.firstChild.offsetHeight < oDiv.offsetHeight) oDiv.style.height = oDiv.firstChild.offsetHeight//make sure the list is not too big for a few of items
}
Okay, so - where to start? :) Here is the partial function to begin with, you will need this (now and in the future, if you spend a lot of time hacking JavaScript):
function partial(func /*, 0..n args */) {
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1);
return function() {
var allArguments = args.concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments));
return func.apply(this, allArguments);
};
}
I see a lot of things about your code that make me cringe, but since I don't have time to really critique it, and you didn't ask for it, I will suggest the following if you want to rid yourself of the hack you are currently using, and a few other things:
The setDynamicSelectElements() function
In this function, you can change this line:
onclick = function() { selectList(ySelectArgs[0], ySelectArgs[1], ySelectArgs[2]) }
To this:
onclick = function() { selectList.apply(null, ySelectArgs); }
The selectList() function
In this function, you can get rid of this code where you are using eval - don't ever use eval unless you have a good reason to do so, it is very risky (go read up on it):
if (fnFollowing) {
fnFollowing = eval(fnFollowing)
configureSelectList.clickEvent = fnFollowing
}
And use this instead:
if(fnFollowing) {
fnFollowing = window[fnFollowing]; //this will find the function in the global scope
}
Then, change this line:
var oDiv = setDiv(sListName, sQuery, 'dynamicSelect', configureSelectList);
To this:
var oDiv = setDiv(sListName, sQuery, 'dynamicSelect', partial(configureSelectListAlternate, fnFollowing));
Now, in that code I provided, I have "configureSelectListAlternate" - that is a function that is the same as "configureSelectList" but has the parameters in the reverse order - if you can reverse the order of the parameters to "configureSelectList" instead, do that, otherwise here is my version:
function configureSelectListAlternate(fnOnClick, oDiv) {
configureSelectList(oDiv, fnOnClick);
}
The configureSelectList() function
In this function, you can eliminate this line:
if(!fnOnClick) fnOnClick=configureSelectList.clickEvent
That isn't needed any longer. Now, I see something I don't understand:
if (!oDiv) oDiv = configureSelectList.Container;
I didn't see you hook that Container property on in any of the other code. Unless you need this line, you should be able to get rid of it.
The setDiv() function can stay the same.
Not too exciting, but you get the idea - your code really could use some cleanup - are you avoiding the use of a library like jQuery or MochiKit for a good reason? It would make your life a lot easier...
A function's properties are not available as variables in the local scope. You must access them as properties. So, within 'fc' you could access 'myvar' in one of two ways:
// #1
arguments.callee.myvar;
// #2
fc.myvar;
Either's fine...
Try inheritance - by passing your whatever object as an argument, you gain access to whatever variables inside, like:
function Obj (iString) { // Base object
this.string = iString;
}
var myObj = new Obj ("text");
function InheritedObj (objInstance) { // Object with Obj vars
this.subObj = objInstance;
}
var myInheritedObj = new InheritedObj (myObj);
var myVar = myInheritedObj.subObj.string;
document.write (myVar);
subObj will take the form of myObj, so you can access the variables inside.
Maybe you are looking for Partial Function Application, or possibly currying?
Here is a quote from a blog post on the difference:
Where partial application takes a function and from it builds a function which takes fewer arguments, currying builds functions which take multiple arguments by composition of functions which each take a single argument.
If possible, it would help us help you if you could simplify your example and/or provide actual JS code instead of pseudocode.