This can be accomplished via closing over a reference to your instance and using apply to force the scope of a function:
In step 1 I have your example showing how this
is the element which was clicked: http://jsfiddle.net/JAAulde/GJXpQ/
In step 2 I have an example which stores a reference to your instance in your constructor, then sets an anonymous function as the click handler and calls your click method off the stored reference. http://jsfiddle.net/JAAulde/GJXpQ/1/ This causes this
within your click handler to be your instance and will work for you if you do not need access to the element which was clicked.
In step 3 I have stored the same reference, and used an anonymous function, but inside that function I grab the arguments which come into the anon function on click, I add the reference to the instance to those arguments, and I call the click handler in scope of the clicked element and pass the new set of arguments. http://jsfiddle.net/JAAulde/GJXpQ/2/ Using this methodology, inside the click handler I can access the clicked element via this
, and the instance of myClass
via instance
.
I hope this helps. It can be quite confusing, so ask questions if needed.
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