The generic issue of dynamic this
in a callback is explained in this answer which is very good - I'm not going to repeat what Felix said. I'm going to discuss promise specific solutions instead:
Promises are specified under the Promises/A+ specification which allows promise libraries to consume eachother's promises seamlessly. Angular $q promises honor that specification and therefor and Angular promise must by definition execute the .then
callbacks as functions - that is without setting this
. In strict mode doing promise.then(fn)
will always evaluate this
to undefined inside fn
(and to window
in non-strict mode).
The reasoning is that ES6 is across the corner and solves these problems more elegantly.
So, what are your options?
- Some promise libraries provide a
.bind
method (Bluebird for example), you can use these promises inside Angular and swap out $q.
- ES6, CoffeeScript, TypeScript and AtScript all include a
=>
operator which binds this
.
- You can use the ES5 solution using
.bind
- You can use one of the hacks in the aforementioned answer by Felix.
Here are these examples:
Adding bind - aka Promise#bind
Assuming you've followed the above question and answer you should be able to do:
Restangular.one('me').get().bind(this).then(function(response) {
this._myVariable = true; // this is correct
});
Using an arrow function
Restangular.one('me').get().then(response => {
this._myVariable = true; // this is correct
});
Using .bind
Restangular.one('me').get().then(function(response) {
this._myVariable = true; // this is correct
}.bind(this));
Using a pre ES5 'hack'
var that = this;
Restangular.one('me').get().then(function(response) {
that._myVariable = true; // this is correct
});
Of course, there is a bigger issue
Your current design does not contain any way to _know when _myVariable
is available. You'd have to poll it or rely on internal state ordering. I believe you can do better and have a design where you always execute code when the variable is available:
app.service('exampleService', ['Restangular', function(Restangular) {
this._myVariable =Restangular.one('me');
}];
Then you can use _myVariable
via this._myVariable.then(function(value){
. This might seem tedious but if you use $q.all
you can easily do this with several values and this is completely safe in terms of synchronization of state.
If you want to lazy load it and not call it the first time (that is, only when myFunction is called) - I totally get that. You can use a getter and do:
app.service('exampleService', ['Restangular', function(Restangular) {
this.__hidden = null;
Object.defineProperty(this,"_myVariable", {
get: function(){
return this.__hidden || (this.__hidden = Restangular.one('me'));
}
});
}];
Now, it will be lazy loaded only when you access it for the first time.