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Home/ Questions/Q 7764451
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T14:54:55+00:00 2026-06-01T14:54:55+00:00

I want to call an internal function once an ajax call back function is

  • 0

I want to call an internal function once an ajax call back function is activated. Because there is a delay I want to know if my local variables will still be correct when it is called, particularly this.response_element as it is used by the call back function.

The callback function is initiated when ajax status == 200

var ControlSignIn = function( ) 
{
    this.form_element = document.getElementById( 'signin' ),
    this.response_element = document.getElementById( 'signin_response' ),
    this.text_object = new Text( this.form_element ), 
    this.message_object = new Message( this.response_element );
};

ControlSignIn.interface = function()
{
    new ControlSignIn().invoke();
};

ControlSignIn.prototype.invoke = function( ) 
{
    if( CONSTANT.VALIDATE_ON === 1 )
    {
        if( !this.text_object.checkEmpty() ) 
        {
            this.message_object.display( 'empty' );
            return false;
        }
        if( !this.text_object.checkPattern( 'email' ) ) 
        {
            this.message_object.display( 'email' );
            return false;
        }
        if( !this.text_object.checkPattern( 'pass' ) ) 
        {
            this.message_object.display( 'pass' );
            return false;
        }
    }

/* new internal call_back */    

        AjaxNew.use( ajaxSerialize( this.form_element ) + '&ajax_type=ControlSignIn', ControlSignIn.invoke.callBack );

    function callBack( server_response_text )
    {
        ajaxType( server_response_text, this.response_element, 'respond' ); 
    }

/*  Removed
    Ajax.repeatUse( ajaxSerialize( this.form_element ) + '&ajax_type=ControlSignIn', ajaxTypeRespond, this.response_element );
*/

};

Solution:

AjaxNew.use( ajaxSerialize( this.form_element ) + '&ajax_type=ControlSignIn', ControlSignIn.invoke.callBack );

var response_element = this.response_element;
function callBack( server_response_text )
{
    ajaxType( server_response_text, response_element, 'respond' ); 
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T14:54:56+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 2:54 pm

    No, it won’t. Eventhough the property may be intact, this won’t point to the object.

    Copy the value to a local variable, and use a function literal, then the local variable will be catched in the closure for the function and kept intact and accessible:

    var element = this.response_element;
    AjaxNew.use(
      ajaxSerialize(this.form_element) + '&ajax_type=ControlSignIn',
      function(server_response_text) {
        ajaxType(server_response_text, element, 'respond'); 
    });
    
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