Reputation: 37137
How can I define a function's prototype in JavaScript? I want to do this like I would do it in C where you would do something like:
void myfunction(void);
void myfunction(void){
}
So is there any way to do this in JavaScript? I'm asking this because of the function declaration order that is required in JavaScript.
I have an object:
function something(){
var anArrayOfSomethingObjects;
aPrivateFunction(){
// does some stuff
anArrayOfSomethingObjects[3].aPublicFunction();
}
return {
functionA: function() { },
aPublicFunction: function() { },
functionC: function() { }
}
}
privateFunction
needs to access publicFunction
which is declared afterwards.
How can I do this?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 1977
Reputation: 32233
What you are looking for is the Module pattern:
function Something()
{
var someObjects;
var pub = {};
var privateFunction = function()
{
pub.publicFunction();
}
pub.functionA = function() {};
pub.functionB = function() {};
pub.publicFunction = function() {};
return pub;
};
More info and examples: http://www.wait-till-i.com/2007/08/22/again-with-the-module-pattern-reveal-something-to-the-world/
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 41222
JavaScript is dynamic language there is no need to do that. Meaning Javascript has dynamic binding and dynamic typing, so the check will be on the run time. So no need to define forward declaration like in static languages.
Reply to edit:
Even in this case you still do not need to define forward declaration. Once object will have that method or field in run-time it will work fine. But you probably tackled to the problem of scoping in JavaScript, assuming you asking your question after something gone wrong.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 62583
you have to really understand what is a dynamic language, and why your question doesn't really make a lot of sense. your problem is not about 'definition vs. declaration' like on C, it's most about statements order.
in JavaScript (as with most dynamic languages) a function definition like this
function whatever (params) {
...
}
is in fact syntactic sugar for an assignment statement like this:
whatever = function (params) {
...
}
as you can see, whatever
is in fact a variable, and it's assigned a function value. so you can't call it before assigning it.
Of course, execution order doesn't have to follow lexical order. If that's your case, you just have to make sure you assign the needed variable before using it. If it's a local variable and you want closure semantics, you can define it first and assign later, like this:
var myfunc = undefined;
function first () {
...
myfunc (...);
...
}
myfunc = function (...) {
...
}
Upvotes: 3