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I have a simple js structure like this :
var Waiting = (function () {
function Waiting() {
this.timer;
}
Waiting.prototype.show = function () {
var self = this;
clearTimeout( self.timer );
self.timer = setTimeout( function(){ self.hideLogo(); },3000);
}
Waiting.prototype.hideLogo = function () {
console.log("ok i passed timeout");
};
return Waiting;
})();
As expected, I get the "ok i passed timeout" log on every browser the first time I execute the show function (which called the hideLogo one). The problem appears in IE9 when I called for the second time the show function. This time, the hideLogo function is never called (log never appears in IE console). I tried a lot of things without any success.
If anyone as an idea...
I have a simple js structure like this :
var Waiting = (function () {
function Waiting() {
this.timer;
}
Waiting.prototype.show = function () {
var self = this;
clearTimeout( self.timer );
self.timer = setTimeout( function(){ self.hideLogo(); },3000);
}
Waiting.prototype.hideLogo = function () {
console.log("ok i passed timeout");
};
return Waiting;
})();
As expected, I get the "ok i passed timeout" log on every browser the first time I execute the show function (which called the hideLogo one). The problem appears in IE9 when I called for the second time the show function. This time, the hideLogo function is never called (log never appears in IE console). I tried a lot of things without any success.
If anyone as an idea...
Share Improve this question edited Feb 5, 2013 at 10:51 Elias Van Ootegem 76.5k10 gold badges121 silver badges159 bronze badges asked Feb 5, 2013 at 10:08 arthurmchrarthurmchr 5102 gold badges10 silver badges29 bronze badges 3- remove the self and try using directly the this...you get the error yet? – Toping Commented Feb 5, 2013 at 10:11
-
How do you call
show
? Please post the code. – Bergi Commented Feb 5, 2013 at 10:12 - 1 @Ark: No, that would just introduce another error. – Bergi Commented Feb 5, 2013 at 10:12
3 Answers
Reset to default 2When you're using setTimeout
, the function that is being called looses the context: in other words this
doesn't post to the instance on which the method is called anymore. You're using self
to cancel this issue out, but self
is, itself, an iffy word (as in reserved keyword). Perhaps use that
, and use an IIFE in the setTimeout
call:
this.timer = setTimeout((function (that)
{
return function()
{
clearTimeout(that.timer);//perhaps clear timeout here?
that.hideLogo.apply(that,[]);//double dutch, the apply _shouldn't_ be required
};
}(this)), 3000);
At first glance, that's the only thing I can see that might be the issue with your code: the clearTimeout
call shouldn't be an issue, but I like to call it at the end of the timeout itself, and the self
ambiguity thing. Let me know if this changes anything for you!
I am not really sure how you'd call show the second time with the code provided, maybe you create a new Waiting()?
Here is what worked for IE8
var Waiting=(function () {
function Waiting() {
this.timer;
}
Waiting.prototype.show = function () {
var self = this;
console.log("will clear pref timeout");
clearTimeout( self.timer );
self.timer = setTimeout(
function(){
self.hideLogo();
},30);
}
Waiting.prototype.hideLogo = function () {
console.log("ok i passed timeout");
};
return new Waiting();
})();
// shows only one time
Waiting.show();
Waiting.show();
// next one will show because it lets the prefious one
// finish without clearing the pref timeout.
setTimeout(function(){
Waiting.show();
},1000);
Try:
setTimeout( function(){
clearTimeout( that.timer );
that.hideLogo();
},3000);
Worked for me on IE and Chrome. IE is very behind on everything.
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