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What Does "with" Do In Javascript?

I saw JavaScript code which begins with with. That's a bit confusing. What does it do and how can it be used correctly? with (sObj) return options[selectedIndex].value;

Solution 1:

It adds to the scope of the statements contained in the block:

return sObj.options[selectedIndex].value;

can become:

with (sObj)
    return options[selectedIndex].value;

In your case, it doens't do a whole lot...but consider the following:

var a, x, y;
var r = 10;
a = Math.PI * r * r;
x = r * Math.cos(PI);
y = r * Math.sin(PI /2);

Becomes:

var a, x, y;
var r = 10;
with (Math) {
  a = PI * r * r;
  x = r * cos(PI);
  y = r * sin(PI / 2);
}

...saves a couple of keystrokes. The Mozilla documentation actually does a pretty good job of explaining things in a little more detail (along with pros and cons of using it):

with - Mozilla Developer Center

Solution 2:

the with statement is pure syntactical sugar, but it also can cause some nasty bugs.

See with Statement Considered Harmful for clarification:

If you can't read a program and be confident that you know what it is going to do, you can’t have confidence that it is going to work correctly. For this reason, the with statement should be avoided.

Solution 3:

In that with block you dont have to type:

sObj.options[selectedIndex].value

but you can just use:

options[selectedIndex].value

Solution 4:

Its the equivalent of

return sObj.options[selectedIndex].value;

With lets you issue a block of statements in the context of a particular object. Therefore all of the statements in the with block are taken to be members of the object in parenthesis.

This can make code more readable at times, but it also can lead to ambiguity, since the variable references can either be with sObj or global.

legitimate uses for javascript's "with" statement :D

Solution 5:

I would recommend NOT using this because of performance issues, but what the above means is:

for the object sObj (here presumably a select element), all children and properties referenced on this one (or between following curly braces) treat that as their parent scope.

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