I’m just picking up Javascript, and I don’t understand this problem.
I have created a custom object called DeleteReasonCodes with an instance variable called delReasonCodes, declared as an array. However, the inner methods can’t seem to see this instance variable. Every time I try to run it, I get a delReasonCodes is not defined error.
Perhaps I’m just not understanding the Javascript scoping rules?
var DeleteReasonCodes = {
delReasonCodes: [],
get: function ()
{
return delReasonCodes;
},
add: function (code, desc)
{
delReasonCodes.push(new DeleteReasonCode(code, desc));
}
};
No, javascript scoping belongs to functions (and nothing else).
The only variable you have created is
DeleteReasonCodes, and you have assigned it an object with 3 properties. You can access them via a property accessor operator if you have a reference to the object. In your case, you could usethis.delReasonCodeorDeleteReasonCodes.delReasonCode– see this answer for the difference.