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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T21:28:14+00:00 2026-05-10T21:28:14+00:00

I have an onclick handler for an <a> element (actually, it’s a jQuery-created handler,

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I have an onclick handler for an <a> element (actually, it’s a jQuery-created handler, but that’s not important). It looks like this:

function handleOnClick() {     if(confirm('Are you sure?')) {         return handleOnClickConfirmed();     }     return false; } 

From this function, the this object is accessable as the <a> element clicked. However, handleOnClickConfirmed’s this is a Window element! I want handleOnClickConfirmed to have the same this as handleOnClick does. How would I do this?

(I know I can pass this as an argument to handleOnClickConfirmed, but some of my code already uses handleOnClickConfirmed and I don’t want to have to rewrite those calls. Besides, I think using this looks cleaner.)

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  1. 2026-05-10T21:28:14+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 9:28 pm

    The following ought to do it:

    function handleOnClick() {     if( confirm( 'Sure?' ) ) {         return handleOnClickConfirmed.call( this );     }     return false; } 

    The call() function attached to Function objects is designed to allow this; calling a function with a desired context. It’s an extremely useful trick when setting up event handlers that call back into functions within other objects.

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