I'm trying to get the principles of doing jQuery-style function chaining straight in my head. By this I mean:
var e = f1('test').f2().f3();
I have gotten one example to work, while another doesn't. I'll post those below. I always want to learn the first principle fundamentals of how something works so that I can build on top of it. Up to now, I've only had a cursory and loose understanding of how chaining works and I'm running into bugs that I can't troubleshoot intelligently.
What I know: 1) Functions have to return themselves, aka "return this;" 2) Chainable functions must reside in a parent function, aka in jQuery, .css() is a sub method of jQuery(), hence jQuery().css(); 3) The parent function should either return itself or a new instance of itself.
This example worked:
var one = function(num){
this.oldnum = num;
this.add = function(){
this.oldnum++;
return this;
}
if(this instanceof one){
return this.one;
}else{
return new one(num);
}
}
var test = one(1).add().add();
But this one doesn't:
var gmap = function(){
this.add = function(){
alert('add');
return this;
}
if(this instanceof gmap){
return this.gmap;
}else{
return new gmap();
}
}
var test = gmap.add();