So this is an example of the famous JavaScript Module Pattern:
var Person = (function() {
var _name; // so called 'private variable'
function Person(name) {
_name = name;
}
Person.prototype.kill = function() {
console.log(_name + ' has been shot');
};
return Person;
})();
var paul = new Person('Paul');
paul.kill();
So far so good right? This logs 'Paul has been shot'
to the console, which is what we want.
But.
Is _name
really a private variable? I would define a private variable as a variable that belongs to an instance of an object, which is not accessible for the outside world. The last part works, I can not access _name
from outside the closure.
But if I do this:
var paul = new Person('Paul');
var bran = new Person('Bran');
paul.kill();
bran.kill();
This will then log 'Bran has been shot'
, twice. No Paul there. So _name
is actually shared with all instances of my Person object. That's what I would define as a 'static variable', although it's also not accessible from outside.
So is there any way to create a real private member variable with the module pattern? One that is not static.
Something that also happens a lot is defining this._name
inside the constructor function, but that kills the private part, it's now accessible from outside:
function Person(name) {
this._name = name;
}
var bran = new Person();
console.log(bran._name); // yep, accessible
Question:
So. Private is not really private, just static. How do we create a real private member variable with the module pattern? A variable which belongs to an instance, which is not static, and a variable which is not accessible from the outside.