You can return an array, an object literal, or an object of a type you created that encapsulates the returned values.
Then you can pass in the array, object literal, or custom object into a method to disseminate the values.
Object example:
function myFunction(value1,value2,value3)
{
var returnedObject = {};
returnedObject["value1"] = value1;
returnedObject["value2"] = value2;
return returnedObject;
}
var returnValue = myFunction("1",value2,value3);
if(returnValue.value1 && returnValue.value2)
{
//Do some stuff
}
Array example:
function myFunction(value1,value2,value3)
{
var returnedArray = [];
returnedArray.push(value1);
returnedArray.push(value2);
return returnedArray;
}
var returnValue = myFunction("1",value2,value3);
if(returnValue[0] && returnValue[1])
{
//Do some stuff
}
Custom Object:
function myFunction(value1,value2,value3)
{
var valueHolder = new ValueHolder(value1, value2);
return valueHolder;
}
var returnValue = myFunction("1",value2,value3);
// hypothetical method that you could build to create an easier to read conditional
// (might not apply to your situation)
if(returnValue.valid())
{
//Do some stuff
}
I would avoid the array method because you would have to access the values via indices rather than named object properties.
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