3:03 AM
Hey, Omar. Are you still around?
Sorry, I was leaving work.
That is a little bit tricky to explain.
The chat, unfortunately, doesn't become part of the question.
That code is a little bit “tricky” and I probably shouldn’t have used it in the code I gave you.
The way variables work in JavaScript is pretty cool. When a function is created (i.e. when a line of code that includes a `function` statement runs), that function has and will always have access to all of the variables which were “in scope” (visible) when it was created. If you’re not familiar with this concept, check out [this question](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/111102/how-do-javascript-closures-work) for a good description.
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Like the old Albert said: "If you can't explain it to a six-year old, you really don't understand it yourself.”. Well, I tried to explain JavaScript closures to a 27-year old friend and completely failed.
How would you explain it to a 6-year old person that is strangely interested in that subjec...
Much of the time this is great, but sometimes it can cause problems. Here's the slideshow
function from my code, for reference:
function slideshow($slide, $link, fade_time, images){
var i = 0;
function step(next){
if (i === images.length) {
i = 0;
}
$slide
.fadeOut(fade_time)
.queue(function(nextSlide){ return function(next){
$slide.css("background-image", "url('" + nextSlide.image + "')");
$link.attr("href", nextSlide.link);
next();
}; }(images[i]))
.fadeIn(fade_time)
.queue(step);
Without that weird function(nextSlide){ return function(next){ … }; }(images[i]))
, the middle lines would look like this:
.queue(function(next){
$slide.css("background-image", "url('" + images[i].image + "')");
$link.attr("href", images[i].link);
next();
})
This looks like it should work, and it mostly does. But, remember that the function passed to .queue()
doesn’t run immediately — jQuery will run it after the fade out finishes. And, because JavaScript has “closures” (I don’t love the word because a closure isn’t a thing, it’s just the way JavaScript works), when jQuery does call that function you passed into .queue()
, it will be using the images
and i
variables from slideshow()
when it was created.
Look just below that big chain of jQuery methods:
i
will already have been incremented by the time jQuery actually calls function(next){ $slide.css(… }
!
So, the wrong image will get loaded.
This is a nasty trick to get around that:
function(nextSlide){ return function(next){ … }; }(images[i])
I’m creating a function which takes one argument, nextSlide
. Neither this function, nor the anonymous (unnamed) function inside it directly accesses images
or i
, so they won't be affected if either of them changes.
I call it right away: function(nextSlide){ … }(images[i])
. That's like doing this:
function makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide(nextSlide){
return function(next){
$slide.css("background-image", "url('" + nextSlide.image + "')");
$link.attr("href", nextSlide.link);
next();
}
}
var goToNextSlide = makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide(images[i]);
The current value of images[i]
gets passed into makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide
, as the nextSlide
argument. It returns a function which has access to that nextSlide
argument — even though makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide
has already exit.
I could keep calling makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide
and get different copies of the inner function that will always go to specific slides:
var goToSlideOne = makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide(images[0]);
var goToSlideTwo = makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide(images[1]);
var goToSlideThree = makeAFunctionThatGoesToASlide(images[2]);
Calling each of those functions (goToSlideOne()
, etc.) will always go to the slide that you passed in when you created it!
What you see being passed into .queue()
is the same, just consolidated down into a few lines.
This is perfectly valid JavaScript:
function(text){ alert(text); }("Hello!")
It does the same thing as
function mySpecialAlert(text){
alert(text);
}
mySpecialAlert("Hello!");
Does that make any more sense?
I need to go to sleep soon, but I’ll try to check back in tomorrow.