Passing parameters into a closure for setTimeout

user126715 picture user126715 · Jun 1, 2012 · Viewed 8.4k times · Source

I've run into an issue where my app lives in an iframe and it's being called from an external domain. IE9 won't fire the load event when the iframe loads properly so I think I'm stuck using setTimeout to poll the page.

Anyway, I want to see what duration is generally needed for my setTimeout to complete, so I wanted to be able to log the delay the setTimeout fires from my callback, but I'm not sure how to pass that context into it so I can log it.

App.readyIE9 = function() {
  var timings = [1,250,500,750,1000,1500,2000,3000];    
  for(var i = 0; i < timings.length; i++) {
    var func = function() {
    if(App.ready_loaded) return;
      console.log(timings[i]);
      App.readyCallBack();
    };
    setTimeout(func,timings[i]);
  }
};

I keep getting LOG: undefined in IE9's console.

What's the proper method to accomplish this?

Thanks

Answer

jfriend00 picture jfriend00 · Jun 1, 2012

When your function gets called by setTimeout sometime in the future, the value of i has already been incremented to the end of it's range by the for loop so console.log(timings[i]); reports undefined.

To use i in that function, you need to capture it in a function closure. There are several ways to do that. I would suggest using a self-executing function to capture the value of i like this:

App.readyIE9 = function() {
  var timings = [1,250,500,750,1000,1500,2000,3000];    
  for(var i = 0; i < timings.length; i++) {
    (function(index) {
        setTimeout(function() {
            if(App.ready_loaded) return;
            console.log(timings[index]);
            App.readyCallBack();
        }, timings[index]);
    })(i);
  }
};

As a bit of explanation for who this works: i is passed to the self-executing function as the first argument to that function. That first argument is named index and gets frozen with each invocation of the self-executing function so the for loop won't cause it to change before the setTimeout callback is executed. So, referencing index inside of the self-executing function will get the correct value of the array index for each setTimeout callback.