I've tried the
var objA = (){}.call({})
thingy,
How? You want to use call
on the callback that you want to invoke with a custom this
, not on your module closure. It should be
var objB = {
callback: function (callback, context) {
callback.call(context);
}
};
objB.callback(objA.publicA, objA);
I've tried setting
var self = this;
The self
variable is supposed to be in a closure and point to the object on the methods are stored. That is only this
when your module IEFE would be invoked on your module - it's not. Or if it was a constructor - it's not. You could change that with call
as above:
var objA = function () {
var privateA = "found",
self = this;
this.publicA = function () {
console.log("privateA is " + self.publicA_helper());
};
this.publicA_helper = function () {
return privateA;
};
return this;
}.call({});
But that's ugly. In your case, the self variable simply needs to point to the object literal which you're returning as your module:
var objA = function () {
var privateA = "found",
self;
return self = {
publicA: function () {
console.log("privateA is " + self.publicA_helper());
},
publicA_helper: function () {
return privateA;
}
};
}();
Btw, since you're creating a singleton you don't need an explicit self
, you could just reference the variable that contains your module (as long as that doesn't change):
var objA = function () {
var privateA = "found";
return {
publicA: function () {
console.log("privateA is " + objA.publicA_helper());
},
publicA_helper: function () {
return privateA;
}
};
}();
Another method would be to simply make all functions private and then expose some of them - by referencing them local-scoped you will have no troubles.
var objA = function () {
var privateA = "found";
function publicA() {
console.log("privateA is " + helper());
}
function helper() {
return privateA;
}
return self = {
publicA: publicA,
publicA_helper: helper // remove that line if you don't need to expose it
};
}();