So consider this problem. Let’s say you are constructing a menu and you need to set up some onclick events for the items in the menu.
So this is how one might set things up from first principles:
// Set up an array of items. var MENUitems = ["Company", "Product", "History", "Contact"]; var H = ''; for (var i=0; i < MENUitems.length; i++) { H+= "<div class='MENUitem'>" + MENUitems[i] + "</div>" } document.body.innerHTML = H;
And you might have some light styling:
.MENUitem { display: inline-block; padding: 5px; border: gray solid; margin: 2px; }
Then you set up some onclick handlers…
var MENUdom = document.querySelectorAll(".MENUitem"); // Get a NodeList for (var i=0; i < MENUitems.length; i++) { MENUdom[i].onclick = function(E){ console.log("Clicked " + MENUitems[i]);} }
But oh crap.
It’s doesn’t work as expected. Instead of forming a closure with the value i being 0, 1, 2 and 3, all the functions get the value of i defined as it is at the end of the loop - namely 4. And so we end up with:
Clicked undefined
A fix for this is to use a special keyword which is “let” instead of var. So you do this instead:
for (let i=0; i < MENUitems.length; i++) { MENUdom[i].onclick = function(E){ console.log("Clicked " + MENUitems[i]);} }
It’s kind of hacky workaround a language flaw in Javascript. Using the let keyword isn’t the only way to solve this problem. There are other workarounds possible. Read this article:
https://davidyoung.tech/loops-closures-and-ajax
For some other good ideas on how to solve this problem.