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I already know that apply
and call
are similar functions which set this
(context of a function).
The difference is with the way we send the arguments (manual vs array)
Question:
But when should I use the bind()
method ?
var obj = {
x: 81,
getX: function() {
return this.x;
}
};
alert(obj.getX.bind(obj)());
alert(obj.getX.call(obj));
alert(obj.getX.apply(obj));
jsbin
I already know that apply
and call
are similar functions which set this
(context of a function).
The difference is with the way we send the arguments (manual vs array)
Question:
But when should I use the bind()
method ?
var obj = {
x: 81,
getX: function() {
return this.x;
}
};
alert(obj.getX.bind(obj)());
alert(obj.getX.call(obj));
alert(obj.getX.apply(obj));
jsbin
Share Improve this question edited Jul 5, 2022 at 8:12 Tamir Abutbul 7,6538 gold badges26 silver badges59 bronze badges asked Mar 16, 2013 at 21:40 Royi NamirRoyi Namir 148k144 gold badges491 silver badges827 bronze badges 8 | Show 3 more comments24 Answers
Reset to default 920Use .bind()
when you want that function to later be called with a certain context, useful in events. Use .call()
or .apply()
when you want to invoke the function immediately, and modify the context.
Call/apply call the function immediately, whereas bind
returns a function that, when later executed, will have the correct context set for calling the original function. This way you can maintain context in async callbacks and events.
I do this a lot:
function MyObject(element) {
this.elm = element;
element.addEventListener('click', this.onClick.bind(this), false);
};
MyObject.prototype.onClick = function(e) {
var t=this; //do something with [t]...
//without bind the context of this function wouldn't be a MyObject
//instance as you would normally expect.
};
I use it extensively in Node.js for async callbacks that I want to pass a member method for, but still want the context to be the instance that started the async action.
A simple, naive implementation of bind would be like:
Function.prototype.bind = function(ctx) {
var fn = this;
return function() {
fn.apply(ctx, arguments);
};
};
There is more to it (like passing other args), but you can read more about it and see the real implementation on the MDN.
They all attach this into function (or object) and the difference is in the function invocation (see below).
call attaches this into function and executes the function immediately:
var person = {
name: "James Smith",
hello: function(thing) {
console.log(this.name + " says hello " + thing);
}
}
person.hello("world"); // output: "James Smith says hello world"
person.hello.call({ name: "Jim Smith" }, "world"); // output: "Jim Smith says hello world"
bind attaches this into function and it needs to be invoked separately like this:
var person = {
name: "James Smith",
hello: function(thing) {
console.log(this.name + " says hello " + thing);
}
}
person.hello("world"); // output: "James Smith says hello world"
var helloFunc = person.hello.bind({ name: "Jim Smith" });
helloFunc("world"); // output: Jim Smith says hello world"
or like this:
...
var helloFunc = person.hello.bind({ name: "Jim Smith" }, "world");
helloFunc(); // output: Jim Smith says hello world"
apply is similar to call except that it takes an array-like object instead of listing the arguments out one at a time:
function personContainer() {
var person = {
name: "James Smith",
hello: function() {
console.log(this.name + " says hello " + arguments[1]);
}
}
person.hello.apply(person, arguments);
}
personContainer("world", "mars"); // output: "James Smith says hello mars", note: arguments[0] = "world" , arguments[1] = "mars"
Answer in SIMPLEST form
- Call invokes the function and allows you to pass in arguments one by one.
- Apply invokes the function and allows you to pass in arguments as an array.
- Bind returns a new function, allowing you to pass in a this array and any number of arguments.
Apply vs. Call vs. Bind Examples
Call
var person1 = {firstName: 'Jon', lastName: 'Kuperman'};
var person2 = {firstName: 'Kelly', lastName: 'King'};
function say(greeting) {
console.log(greeting + ' ' + this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName);
}
say.call(person1, 'Hello'); // Hello Jon Kuperman
say.call(person2, 'Hello'); // Hello Kelly King
Apply
var person1 = {firstName: 'Jon', lastName: 'Kuperman'};
var person2 = {firstName: 'Kelly', lastName: 'King'};
function say(greeting) {
console.log(greeting + ' ' + this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName);
}
say.apply(person1, ['Hello']); // Hello Jon Kuperman
say.apply(person2, ['Hello']); // Hello Kelly King
Bind
var person1 = {firstName: 'Jon', lastName: 'Kuperman'};
var person2 = {firstName: 'Kelly', lastName: 'King'};
function say() {
console.log('Hello ' + this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName);
}
var sayHelloJon = say.bind(person1);
var sayHelloKelly = say.bind(person2);
sayHelloJon(); // Hello Jon Kuperman
sayHelloKelly(); // Hello Kelly King
When To Use Each
Call and apply are pretty interchangeable. Just decide whether it’s easier to send in an array or a comma separated list of arguments.
I always remember which one is which by remembering that Call is for comma (separated list) and Apply is for Array.
Bind is a bit different. It returns a new function. Call and Apply execute the current function immediately.
Bind is great for a lot of things. We can use it to curry functions like in the above example. We can take a simple hello function and turn it into a helloJon or helloKelly. We can also use it for events like onClick where we don’t know when they’ll be fired but we know what context we want them to have.
Reference: codeplanet.io
I created this comparison between function objects, function calls, call/apply
and bind
a while ago:
.bind
allows you to set the this
value now while allowing you to execute the function in the future, because it returns a new function object.
TL;DR:
In simple words, bind creates the function, call and apply executes the function whereas apply expects the parameters in array
Full Explanation
Assume we have multiplication
function
function multiplication(a,b){
console.log(a*b);
}
Lets create some standard functions using bind
var multiby2 = multiplication.bind(this,2);
Now multiby2(b) is equal to multiplication(2,b);
multiby2(3); //6
multiby2(4); //8
What if I pass both the parameters in bind
var getSixAlways = multiplication.bind(this,3,2);
Now getSixAlways() is equal to multiplication(3,2);
getSixAlways();//6
even passing parameter returns 6;
getSixAlways(12); //6
var magicMultiplication = multiplication.bind(this);
This create a new multiplication function and assigns it to magicMultiplication.
Oh no, we are hiding the multiplication functionality into magicMultiplication.
calling
magicMultiplication
returns a blank function b()
on execution it works fine
magicMultiplication(6,5); //30
How about call and apply?
magicMultiplication.call(this,3,2); //6
magicMultiplication.apply(this,[5,2]); //10
It allows to set the value for this
independent of how the function is called. This is very useful when working with callbacks:
function sayHello(){
alert(this.message);
}
var obj = {
message : "hello"
};
setTimeout(sayHello.bind(obj), 1000);
To achieve the same result with call
would look like this:
function sayHello(){
alert(this.message);
}
var obj = {
message : "hello"
};
setTimeout(function(){sayHello.call(obj)}, 1000);
The main concept behind all these methods is Function borrowing.
Function borrowing allows us to use the methods of one object on a different object without having to make a copy of that method and maintain it in two separate places. It is accomplished through the use of .call()
, .apply()
, or .bind()
, all of which exist to explicitly set this on the method we are borrowing.
Call
invokes the function immediately and allows you to pass in arguments one by one.Apply
invokes the function immediately and allows you to pass in arguments as an array.Bind
returns a new function, and you can invoke/call it anytime you want by invoking a function.
Below is an example of all this methods:
let name = {
firstName: "Arham",
lastName: "Chowdhury",
}
printFullName = function(hometown, company) {
console.log(`${this.firstName} ${this.lastName}, ${hometown}, ${company}`);
}
CALL
the first argument e.g name inside call method is always a reference to (this) variable and latter will be function variable:
printFullName.call(name, "Mumbai", "Taufa"); //Arham Chowdhury, Mumbai, Taufa
APPLY
apply()
method is same as thecall()
method, the only difference is that, the function arguments are passed in array list:
printFullName.apply(name, ["Mumbai", "Taufa"]); //Arham Chowdhury, Mumbai, Taufa
BIND
bind()
method is same ascall()
except that ,thebind()
returns a function that can be used later by invoking it — it isn't called automatically immediately:
let printMyName = printFullName.bind(name, "Mumbai", "Taufa");
printMyName(); //Arham Chowdhury, Mumbai, Taufa
printMyName()
is the function which invokes the function.
A playground on Codepen.io.
Both Function.prototype.call()
and Function.prototype.apply()
call a function with a given this
value, and return the return value of that function.
Function.prototype.bind()
, on the other hand, creates a new function with a given this
value, and returns that function without executing it.
So, let's take a function that looks like this :
var logProp = function(prop) {
console.log(this[prop]);
};
Now, let's take an object that looks like this :
var Obj = {
x : 5,
y : 10
};
We can bind our function to our object like this :
Obj.log = logProp.bind(Obj);
Now, we can run Obj.log
anywhere in our code :
Obj.log('x'); // Output : 5
Obj.log('y'); // Output : 10
Where it really gets interesting, is when you not only bind a value for this
, but also for for its argument prop
:
Obj.logX = logProp.bind(Obj, 'x');
Obj.logY = logProp.bind(Obj, 'y');
We can now do this :
Obj.logX(); // Output : 5
Obj.logY(); // Output : 10
bind: It binds the function with provided value and context but it does not executes the function. To execute function you need to call the function.
call: It executes the function with provided context and parameter.
apply: It executes the function with provided context and parameter as array.
Here is one good article to illustrate the difference among bind()
, apply()
and call()
, summarize it as below.
bind()
allows us to easily set which specific object will be bound to this when a function or method is invoked.// This data variable is a global variable var data = [ {name:"Samantha", age:12}, {name:"Alexis", age:14} ] var user = { // local data variable data :[ {name:"T. Woods", age:37}, {name:"P. Mickelson", age:43} ], showData:function (event) { var randomNum = ((Math.random () * 2 | 0) + 1) - 1; // random number between 0 and 1 console.log (this.data[randomNum].name + " " + this.data[randomNum].age); } } // Assign the showData method of the user object to a variable var showDataVar = user.showData; showDataVar (); // Samantha 12 (from the global data array, not from the local data array) /* This happens because showDataVar () is executed as a global function and use of this inside showDataVar () is bound to the global scope, which is the window object in browsers. */ // Bind the showData method to the user object var showDataVar = user.showData.bind (user); // Now the we get the value from the user object because the this keyword is bound to the user object showDataVar (); // P. Mickelson 43
bind()
allow us to borrow methods// Here we have a cars object that does not have a method to print its data to the console var cars = { data:[ {name:"Honda Accord", age:14}, {name:"Tesla Model S", age:2} ] } // We can borrow the showData () method from the user object we defined in the last example. // Here we bind the user.showData method to the cars object we just created. cars.showData = user.showData.bind (cars); cars.showData (); // Honda Accord 14
One problem with this example is that we are adding a new method
showData
on thecars
object and we might not want to do that just to borrow a method because the cars object might already have a property or method nameshowData
. We don’t want to overwrite it accidentally. As we will see in our discussion ofApply
andCall
below, it is best to borrow a method using either theApply
orCall
method.bind()
allow us to curry a functionFunction Currying, also known as partial function application, is the use of a function (that accept one or more arguments) that returns a new function with some of the arguments already set.
function greet (gender, age, name) { // if a male, use Mr., else use Ms. var salutation = gender === "male" ? "Mr. " : "Ms. "; if (age > 25) { return "Hello, " + salutation + name + "."; }else { return "Hey, " + name + "."; } }
We can use
bind()
to curry thisgreet
function// So we are passing null because we are not using the "this" keyword in our greet function. var greetAnAdultMale = greet.bind (null, "male", 45); greetAnAdultMale ("John Hartlove"); // "Hello, Mr. John Hartlove." var greetAYoungster = greet.bind (null, "", 16); greetAYoungster ("Alex"); // "Hey, Alex." greetAYoungster ("Emma Waterloo"); // "Hey, Emma Waterloo."
apply()
orcall()
to set this valueThe
apply
,call
, andbind
methods are all used to set the this value when invoking a method, and they do it in slightly different ways to allow use direct control and versatility in our JavaScript code.The
apply
andcall
methods are almost identical when setting the this value except that you pass the function parameters toapply ()
as an array, while you have to list the parameters individually to pass them to thecall ()
method.Here is one example to use
call
orapply
to set this in the callback function.// Define an object with some properties and a method // We will later pass the method as a callback function to another function var clientData = { id: 094545, fullName: "Not Set", // setUserName is a method on the clientData object setUserName: function (firstName, lastName) { // this refers to the fullName property in this object this.fullName = firstName + " " + lastName; } }; function getUserInput (firstName, lastName, callback, callbackObj) { // The use of the Apply method below will set the "this" value to callbackObj callback.apply (callbackObj, [firstName, lastName]); } // The clientData object will be used by the Apply method to set the "this" value getUserInput ("Barack", "Obama", clientData.setUserName, clientData); // the fullName property on the clientData was correctly set console.log (clientData.fullName); // Barack Obama
Borrow functions with
apply
orcall
Borrow Array methods
Let’s create an
array-like
object and borrow some array methods to operate on the our array-like object.// An array-like object: note the non-negative integers used as keys var anArrayLikeObj = {0:"Martin", 1:78, 2:67, 3:["Letta", "Marieta", "Pauline"], length:4 }; // Make a quick copy and save the results in a real array: // First parameter sets the "this" value var newArray = Array.prototype.slice.call (anArrayLikeObj, 0); console.log (newArray); // ["Martin", 78, 67, Array[3]] // Search for "Martin" in the array-like object console.log (Array.prototype.indexOf.call (anArrayLikeObj, "Martin") === -1 ? false : true); // true
Another common case is that convert
arguments
to array as following// We do not define the function with any parameters, yet we can get all the arguments passed to it function doSomething () { var args = Array.prototype.slice.call (arguments); console.log (args); } doSomething ("Water", "Salt", "Glue"); // ["Water", "Salt", "Glue"]
Borrow other methods
var gameController = { scores :[20, 34, 55, 46, 77], avgScore:null, players :[ {name:"Tommy", playerID:987, age:23}, {name:"Pau", playerID:87, age:33} ] } var appController = { scores :[900, 845, 809, 950], avgScore:null, avg :function () { var sumOfScores = this.scores.reduce (function (prev, cur, index, array) { return prev + cur; }); this.avgScore = sumOfScores / this.scores.length; } } // Note that we are using the apply () method, so the 2nd argument has to be an array appController.avg.apply (gameController); console.log (gameController.avgScore); // 46.4 // appController.avgScore is still null; it was not updated, only gameController.avgScore was updated console.log (appController.avgScore); // null
Use
apply()
to execute variable-arity function
The Math.max
is one example of variable-arity function,
// We can pass any number of arguments to the Math.max () method
console.log (Math.max (23, 11, 34, 56)); // 56
But what if we have an array of numbers to pass to Math.max
? We cannot do this:
var allNumbers = [23, 11, 34, 56];
// We cannot pass an array of numbers to the the Math.max method like this
console.log (Math.max (allNumbers)); // NaN
This is where the apply ()
method helps us execute variadic functions. Instead of the above, we have to pass the array of numbers using apply (
) thus:
var allNumbers = [23, 11, 34, 56];
// Using the apply () method, we can pass the array of numbers:
console.log (Math.max.apply (null, allNumbers)); // 56
The basic difference between Call, Apply and Bind are:
Bind will be used if you want your execution context to come later in the picture.
Ex:
var car = {
registrationNumber: "007",
brand: "Mercedes",
displayDetails: function(ownerName){
console.log(ownerName + ' this is your car ' + '' + this.registrationNumber + " " + this.brand);
}
}
car.displayDetails('Nishant'); // **Nishant this is your car 007 Mercedes**
Let's say i want use this method in some other variable
var car1 = car.displayDetails('Nishant');
car1(); // undefined
To use the reference of car in some other variable you should use
var car1 = car.displayDetails.bind(car, 'Nishant');
car1(); // Nishant this is your car 007 Mercedes
Let's talk about more extensive use of bind function
var func = function() {
console.log(this)
}.bind(1);
func();
// Number: 1
Why? Because now func is bind with Number 1, if we don't use bind in that case it will point to Global Object.
var func = function() {
console.log(this)
}.bind({});
func();
// Object
Call, Apply are used when you want to execute the statement at the same time.
var Name = {
work: "SSE",
age: "25"
}
function displayDetails(ownerName) {
console.log(ownerName + ", this is your name: " + 'age' + this.age + " " + 'work' + this.work);
}
displayDetails.call(Name, 'Nishant')
// Nishant, this is your name: age25 workSSE
// In apply we pass an array of arguments
displayDetails.apply(Name, ['Nishant'])
// Nishant, this is your name: age25 workSSE
call/apply executes function immediately:
func.call(context, arguments);
func.apply(context, [argument1,argument2,..]);
bind doesn't execute function immediately, but returns wrapped apply function (for later execution):
function bind(func, context) {
return function() {
return func.apply(context, arguments);
};
}
Call apply and bind. and how they are different.
Lets learn call and apply using any daily terminology.
You have three automobiles your_scooter , your_car and your_jet
which start with the same mechanism (method).
We created an object automobile
with a method push_button_engineStart
.
var your_scooter, your_car, your_jet;
var automobile = {
push_button_engineStart: function (runtime){
console.log(this.name + "'s" + ' engine_started, buckle up for the ride for ' + runtime + " minutes");
}
}
Lets understand when is call and apply used. Lets suppose that you are an engineer and you have your_scooter
, your_car
and your_jet
which did not come with a push_button_engine_start and you wish to use a third party push_button_engineStart
.
If you run the following lines of code, they will give an error. WHY?
//your_scooter.push_button_engineStart();
//your_car.push_button_engineStart();
//your_jet.push_button_engineStart();
automobile.push_button_engineStart.apply(your_scooter,[20]);
automobile.push_button_engineStart.call(your_jet,10);
automobile.push_button_engineStart.call(your_car,40);
So the above example is successfully gives your_scooter, your_car, your_jet a feature from automobile object.
Let's dive deeper
Here we will split the above line of code.
automobile.push_button_engineStart
is helping us to get the method being used.
Further we use apply or call using the dot notation.
automobile.push_button_engineStart.apply()
Now apply and call accept two parameters.
- context
- arguments
So here we set the context in the final line of code.
automobile.push_button_engineStart.apply(your_scooter,[20])
Difference between call and apply is just that apply accepts parameters in the form of an array while call simply can accept a comma separated list of arguments.
what is JS Bind function?
A bind function is basically which binds the context of something and then stores it into a variable for execution at a later stage.
Let's make our previous example even better. Earlier we used a method belonging to the automobile object and used it to equip your_car, your_jet and your_scooter
. Now lets imagine we want to give a separate push_button_engineStart
separately to start our automobiles individually at any later stage of the execution we wish.
var scooty_engineStart = automobile.push_button_engineStart.bind(your_scooter);
var car_engineStart = automobile.push_button_engineStart.bind(your_car);
var jet_engineStart = automobile.push_button_engineStart.bind(your_jet);
setTimeout(scooty_engineStart,5000,30);
setTimeout(car_engineStart,10000,40);
setTimeout(jet_engineStart,15000,5);
still not satisfied?
Let's make it clear as teardrop. Time to experiment. We will go back to call and apply function application and try storing the value of the function as a reference.
The experiment below fails because call and apply are invoked immediately, hence, we never get to the stage of storing a reference in a variable which is where bind function steals the show
var test_function = automobile.push_button_engineStart.apply(your_scooter);
Syntax
- call(thisArg, arg1, arg2, ...)
- apply(thisArg, argsArray)
- bind(thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]])
Here
- thisArg is the object
- argArray is an array object
- arg1, arg2, arg3,... are additional arguments
function printBye(message1, message2){
console.log(message1 + " " + this.name + " "+ message2);
}
var par01 = { name:"John" };
var msgArray = ["Bye", "Never come again..."];
printBye.call(par01, "Bye", "Never come again...");
//Bye John Never come again...
printBye.call(par01, msgArray);
//Bye,Never come again... John undefined
//so call() doesn't work with array and better with comma seperated parameters
//printBye.apply(par01, "Bye", "Never come again...");//Error
printBye.apply(par01, msgArray);
//Bye John Never come again...
var func1 = printBye.bind(par01, "Bye", "Never come again...");
func1();//Bye John Never come again...
var func2 = printBye.bind(par01, msgArray);
func2();//Bye,Never come again... John undefined
//so bind() doesn't work with array and better with comma seperated parameters
JavaScript Call()
const person = {
name: "Lokamn",
dob: 12,
print: function (value,value2) {
console.log(this.dob+value+value2)
}
}
const anotherPerson= {
name: "Pappu",
dob: 12,
}
person.print.call(anotherPerson,1,2)
JavaScript apply()
name: "Lokamn",
dob: 12,
print: function (value,value2) {
console.log(this.dob+value+value2)
}
}
const anotherPerson= {
name: "Pappu",
dob: 12,
}
person.print.apply(anotherPerson,[1,2])
**call and apply function are difference call take separate argument but apply take array like:[1,2,3] **
JavaScript bind()
name: "Lokamn",
dob: 12,
anotherPerson: {
name: "Pappu",
dob: 12,
print2: function () {
console.log(this)
}
}
}
var bindFunction = person.anotherPerson.print2.bind(person)
bindFunction()
Call: call invokes the function and allows you to pass arguments one by one
Apply: Apply invokes the function and allows you to pass arguments as an array
Bind: Bind returns a new function, allowing you to pass in a this array and any number of arguments.
var person1 = {firstName: 'Raju', lastName: 'king'};
var person2 = {firstName: 'chandu', lastName: 'shekar'};
function greet(greeting) {
console.log(greeting + ' ' + this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName);
}
function greet2(greeting) {
console.log( 'Hello ' + this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName);
}
greet.call(person1, 'Hello'); // Hello Raju king
greet.call(person2, 'Hello'); // Hello chandu shekar
greet.apply(person1, ['Hello']); // Hello Raju king
greet.apply(person2, ['Hello']); // Hello chandu shekar
var greetRaju = greet2.bind(person1);
var greetChandu = greet2.bind(person2);
greetRaju(); // Hello Raju king
greetChandu(); // Hello chandu shekar
call() :-- Here we pass the function arguments individually, not in an array format
var obj = {name: "Raushan"};
var greeting = function(a,b,c) {
return "Welcome "+ this.name + " to "+ a + " " + b + " in " + c;
};
console.log(greeting.call(obj, "USA", "INDIA", "ASIA"));
apply() :-- Here we pass the function arguments in an array format
var obj = {name: "Raushan"};
var cal = function(a,b,c) {
return this.name +" you got " + a+b+c;
};
var arr =[1,2,3]; // array format for function arguments
console.log(cal.apply(obj, arr));
bind() :--
var obj = {name: "Raushan"};
var cal = function(a,b,c) {
return this.name +" you got " + a+b+c;
};
var calc = cal.bind(obj);
console.log(calc(2,3,4));
Imagine, bind is not available. you can easily construct it as follow :
var someFunction=...
var objToBind=....
var bindHelper = function (someFunction, objToBind) {
return function() {
someFunction.apply( objToBind, arguments );
};
}
bindHelper(arguments);
function sayHello() {
//alert(this.message);
return this.message;
}
var obj = {
message: "Hello"
};
function x(country) {
var z = sayHello.bind(obj);
setTimeout(y = function(w) {
//'this' reference not lost
return z() + ' ' + country + ' ' + w;
}, 1000);
return y;
}
var t = x('India')('World');
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = t;
Use bind for future calls to the function. Both apply
and call
invoke the function.
bind()
also allows for additional arguments to be perpended to the args array.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_objects/Function/bind
The first difference between call(), apply(), and bind() methods in JavaScript is their time of execution! call() and apply() being similar are executed instantly, whereas, bind() creates a new function which we have to explicitly call at any later point of time!
Another difference is, that while passing arguments, call() allows us to pass one by one separated by commas, apply() allows us to pass as an array of arguments, and bind() allows us to do both!
I have attached the example code below!
const person = {
fullName : function (randomMessage) {
return `Hello, ${this.firstName} ${this.lastName} ${randomMessage}`;
}
}
const personOne = {
firstName : "John",
lastName : "Doe"
}
const personTwo = {
firstName : "Jack",
lastName : "Adhikari"
}
let fullNameBind = person.fullName.bind(personOne, "--Binding");
let fullNameCall = person.fullName.call({firstName : "Sarah", lastName: "Holmes"}, "--Calling");
let fullNameApply = person.fullName.apply(personTwo, ["--Applying"]);
console.log(fullNameBind());
console.log(fullNameCall);
console.log(fullNameApply);
In simple terms, all methods are used to set the context(this) explicitly in the regular function
Call: call invokes the function on given context and allows to pass arguments one by one
Apply: apply invokes the function on given context and allows to pass arguments as an array
Bind: bind returns a new function by setting the provided context, and allows to pass arguments one by one
Notes:
- Call and Apply both are similar only difference is the way they expect arguments
- The mentioned methods do not work with arrow function
I think the same places of them are: all of them can change the this value of a function.The differences of them are: the bind function will return a new function as a result; the call and apply methods will execute the function immediately, but apply can accept a array as params,and it will parse the array separated.And also, the bind function can be Currying.
bind function should be use when we want to assign a function with particular context for eg.
var demo = {
getValue : function(){
console.log('demo object get value function')
}
setValue : function(){
setTimeout(this.getValue.bind(this),1000)
}
}
in above example if we call demo.setValue() function and pass this.getValue function directly then it doesn't call demo.setValue function directly because this in setTimeout refers to window object so we need to pass demo object context to this.getValue function using bind. it means we only passing function with the context of demo object not actully calling function.
Hope u understand .
for more information please refer javascript bind function know in detail
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call()
you pass arguments individually andapply()
as an argument array. For more details check out the linked documentation which should be able to completely answer your question. – Nope Commented Mar 16, 2013 at 22:15kind of weird there is not an existing question about this :
Regarding that. That is probably becausebind()
was added after the other two already existed in JavaScript 1.8.5 - ECMA-262, 5th edition. Whilecall()
andapply()
have been around since JavaScript 1.3 - ECMA-262 3rd Edition. SO has questions on them like: what-is-the-difference-between-call-and-apply. I'm only guessing though as I was wondering that myself. – Nope Commented Mar 16, 2013 at 22:31bind
is likemap
.map
creates a new array andbind
creates a new function. Am I? – Praneet Dixit Commented Aug 3, 2020 at 12:24