Question

How can I call Function.prototype.bind with an array of arguments, as opposed to hardcoded arguments? (Not using ECMA6, so no spread operator).

I'm trying to put a promises wrapper around a module that uses callbacks and I want to bind all of the arguments passed in to my wrapper method and bind them. Then I want to call the partially applied bound function with my own callback, which will resolve or reject a promise.

var find = function() {
  var deferred, bound;
  deferred = Q.defer();
  bound = db.find.bind(null, arguments);
  bound(function(err, docs) {
    if(err) {
      deferred.fail(err);
    } else {
      deferred.resolve(docs);
    }
  });
  return deferred.promise;
}

But obviously this doesn't work because bind expects arguments rather than an array of arguments. I know I could do this by inserting my callback onto the end of the arguments array and using apply:

arguments[arguments.length] = function(err, docs) { ... }
db.find.apply(null, arguments);

Or by iterating over the arguments array and rebinding the function for each argument:

var bound, context;
for(var i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++) {
   context = bound ? bound : db.find;
   bound = context.bind(null, arguments[i]);
}
bound(function(err, docs) { ... })

But both of these methods feel dirty. Any ideas?

Was it helpful?

Solution

.bind is a normal function, so you can call .apply on it.
All you have to do is pass the original function as the first param and the desired THIS variable as the first item in the array of arguments:

bound = db.find.bind.apply(db.find, [null].concat(arguments));
//      ^-----^            ^-----^   THIS

Whether that can be considered cleaner or not is left to the reader.

OTHER TIPS

The following is a common snippet of code I use in all my projects:

var bind = Function.bind;
var call = Function.call;

var bindable = bind.bind(bind);
var callable = bindable(call);

The bindable function can now be used to pass an array to bind as follows:

var bound = bindable(db.find, db).apply(null, arguments);

In fact you can cache bindable(db.find, db) to speed up the binding as follows:

var findable = bindable(db.find, db);
var bound = findable.apply(null, arguments);

You can use the findable function with or without an array of arguments:

var bound = findable(1, 2, 3);

Hope this helps.

Felix's answer didn't work for me because the arguments object isn't really an array (as Otts pointed out). The solution for me was to simply switch bind and apply:

bound = db.find.apply.bind(db.find, null, arguments);

For those using ES6, Babel compiles:

db.find.bind(this, ...arguments)

to:

db.find.bind.apply(db.find, [this].concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)));

I think it's fair to say Babel is pretty definitive. Credit to @lorenz-lo-sauer though, it's almost identical.

Why not simply bind to the arguments array as per your example, and have the bound() function treat it just like that, as an array?

By the looks of your usage, you are then passing in a function as the final argument to bound(), which means by passing in the actual argument array, you avoid having to separate arguments from callbacks inside bound(), potentially making it easier to play with.

Generically, this schema suffices:

//obj = db
//fnName = 'find'
var args = [this||null].concat(Array.prototype.slice.apply(arguments);
obj[fnName].bind.apply(obj[fnName], args);

I find following cleaner than the accepted answers

Function.bind.apply(db.find, [null].concat(arguments));

If someone is looking for an abstract sample:

var binded = hello.apply.bind(hello,null,['hello','world']);

binded();

function hello(a,b){
  console.log(this); //null
  console.log(a); //hello
  console.log(b); //world
}

Just had an alternative idea, partially apply the null value for context and then use apply to call the partially applied function.

bound = db.find.bind.bind(null).apply(null, arguments);

This removes the need for the slightly spooky looking [null].concat() in @Felix's answer.

A definitive and simple answer might be

Function.apply.bind(this.method, this, arguments);

Kinda "hard" to grasp, yet, neat.

Just a side remark in case someone lands here after reading only the title of the question. I know the OP didn't want to use ES6 spread operators and explicitly asked for a call to bind(), so my answer is apparently twice off-topic.

However, it appears the actual need was to apply bind() to an unbound function (i.e. not a method), which makes bind essentially unnecessary.

bind() has to handle special cases (like enforcing the value of this for a constructor) which costs some computation time that is wasted if you just want to apply some parameters to an ordinary function and don't care about this to begin with.

A naive version of bind() stripped of the sanity checks and OOP-specific fiddling with this could be:

Function.prototype.naive_bind = function (fixed_this, ...fixed_args) {
    const fun = this;
    return function(...free_args) {
        return fun.call(fixed_this, ...fixed_args, ...free_args);
    }
}

So you can write your own pseudo-bind that drops this and does a "partial application" of your actual parameters:

function partial_application (fun, ...applied_args) {
    return function(...free_args) {
        return fun.call(null, ...applied_args, ...free_args);
    }
}

If you want to apply all your arguments and leave room for a last one, you can drop the extra parameters too:

function total_application (fun, ...applied_args) {
    return function(free_arg) {
        return fun.call(null, ...applied_args, free_arg);
    }
}

If your arguments are inside an array, you can destructure them:

function total_application_from_array (fun, [...applied_args]) {
    return function(free_arg) {
        return fun.call(null, ...applied_args, free_arg);
    }
}

I suppose you could use apply instead of call, but you'd have to add the extra free parameter to the array.

function total_application_from_array (fun, applied_args) {
    return function(free_arg) {
        return fun.apply(null, [...applied_args, free_arg]);
    }
}

so you'd use that as:

var a = partial_application (console.log, 1, 2, 3);
a(4,5,6);             // 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
a("hello", "world");  // 1, 2, 3, hello, world

a = total_application (console.log, 1, 2, 3);
a()                  // 1, 2, 3, undefined
a(4, 5, 6)           // 1, 2, 3, 4

a = total_application_from_array(console.log, [1,2,3]);
a(4,5,6)             // 1, 2, 3, 4
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