6

When a function is attached to an object and called:

function f() { return this.x; }
var o = {x: 20};
o.func = f;
o.func(); //evaluates to 20

this refers to the object that the function was called as a method of. It's equivalent to doing f.call(o).

When the function is called not as part of an object, this refers to the global object. How do I check if a function is being called from a non-object context? Is there any standard keyword to access the global object? Is the only way to do it something like this?

globalobj = this;
function f() { if (this == globalobj) doSomething(); }

Note: I have no particular use case in mind here - I actually am asking about this exact mechanism.

4

3 回答 3

10

The below should work since using Function.call with a value of null will invoke it in the global scope.

this === ((function () { return this; }).call(null))

A simpler variant,

this === (function () { return this; })()

will also work, but I think the first makes the intent clearer.

于 2008-12-22T01:18:53.733 回答
8

The global object is actually the window so you can do

if (this === window)
于 2008-12-20T10:49:41.820 回答
1

RoBorg's answer is conceptually correct -- except window is only available in the context of the browsers main thread (so this necessarily excludes worker threads and the like, as well as any non-browser hosted JS, which is getting less and less uncommon).

Your safest bet is basically what you had above, but you should use var and === as it is possible for the interpreter to optimise such accesses more completely.

于 2008-12-21T08:25:17.010 回答