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Home/ Questions/Q 7604405
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T23:54:05+00:00 2026-05-30T23:54:05+00:00

I’m trying to wrap my head around building a custom JavaScript library. I’ve read

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I’m trying to wrap my head around building a custom JavaScript library. I’ve read a lot about the module pattern, and also read Crockford’s articles on private and public members. I know what is an immediately invoked function expression and why we do stuff like

var myLib = (function() {
}())

However, I’m still a little lost in some cases regarding scope and closures in general. The concrete problem I have is:

Why does the following example alert DOMWindow, rather than the myLib object?
http://jsfiddle.net/slavo/xNJtW/1/

It would be great if you can explain what “this” refers to in all of the methods in that example and why.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T23:54:06+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 11:54 pm

    Inside any function declared (anywhere) and invoked as follows this will be window object

    function anyFunc(){
        alert(this);  // window object
    }
    
    anyFunc();
    
    
    var anyFunc2 = function(){
        alert(this);  // window object
    }
    
    anyFunc2();
    

    If you want to create private functions and access the instance of ‘myObject’ you can follow either of the following methods

    One

    module = (function () {
    
        var privateFunc = function() {
            alert(this);
        }
    
        var myObject = {
            publicMethod: function() {
                privateFunc.apply(this); // or privateFunc.call(this);
            }
        };
    
        return myObject;
    }());
    
    
    module.publicMethod();
    

    Two

    module = (function () {
    
        var _this; // proxy variable for instance
    
        var privateFunc = function() {
            alert(_this);
        }
    
        var myObject = {
            publicMethod: function() {
                privateFunc();
            }
        };
        _this = myObject;
        return myObject;
    }());
    
    
    module.publicMethod();
    

    These are solutions to your issue. I would recommend using prototype based objects.

    EDIT:

    You can use the first method.

    In fact here myObject is in the same scope as privateFunc and you can directly use it inside the function

     var privateFunc = function() {
         alert(myObject);
     }
    

    The real scenario were you can use a proxy for this is shown below. You can use call also.

    Module = function () {
    
        var _this; // proxy variable for instance
    
        var privateFunc = function() {
            alert(this + "," + _this);
        }
    
        this.publicMethod = function() {
            privateFunc(); // alerts [object Window],[object Object]
            privateFunc.call(this); // alerts [object Object],[object Object]
        }
    
        _this = this;
        return this;
    };
    
    var module = new Module();
    module.publicMethod();
    
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