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Home/ Questions/Q 8057225
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T08:57:34+00:00 2026-06-05T08:57:34+00:00

I’m trying to make a class without prototypes. Here is an example: test =

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I’m trying to make a class without prototypes. Here is an example:

test = (function() {
  this.value = 1;
  this.print = function() {
    console.log(this.value);
  };
  return this;
})();

This works perfectly as intended. What I don’t understand is this.value inside the this.print function. How does this.print correctly know that any mention of this refers to test and not window? Would any function defined via this.___ = function(){} automatically have this added as a context?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T08:57:36+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 8:57 am

    this always1 evaluates to the object upon which the function-object was invoked. It will evaluate to window if it was “invoked upon nothing” (or is a property of window).

    (Note that this is not a variable and is thus not closed-over in a closure! This is why sometimes closures are needed to get the “correct” this which is often known by the variable self or that or _this.)

    For example:

    function f () { return this; }
    var a = {f: f}
    var b = {f: f}
    a.f() === a     // true
    b.f() === b     // true
    f() === window  // true
    

    An example of using a variable to create a binding to the current (as of when the enclosing function was invoked) this:

    test = (function() {
      var self = this // <-- variable, which is "closed over"
      this.value = 1; // self === this
      this.print = function() {
        console.log(self.value); // <-- self "names" previous this object
      };
      return this;
    })();
    

    1 This is a little lie. The Function.call and Function.apply functions allow specifying the this context and can be used by “context binding” functions such as Function.bind to eliminate the need for an explicit “self closure” as shown above.

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