Github user deathbearbrown commented on a diff in the pull request:
https://github.com/apache/couchdb/pull/201#discussion_r11135546
--- Diff: src/fauxton/app/addons/fauxton/base.js ---
@@ -202,21 +202,17 @@ function(app, FauxtonAPI, resizeColumns) {
afterRender: function(){
$('#primary-navbar li[data-nav-name="' + app.selectedHeader +
'"]').addClass('active');
- var menuOpen = true;
var $selectorList = $('body');
- $('.brand').off();
- $('.brand').on({
+ this.$('.burger').off();
+ this.$('.burger').on({
click: function(e){
- if(!$(e.target).is('a')){
toggleMenu();
- }
- }
+ }
});
function toggleMenu(){
$selectorList.toggleClass('closeMenu');
- menuOpen = $selectorList.hasClass('closeMenu');
- this.resizeColumns.onResizeHandler();
+ app.windowResize.onResizeHandler();
--- End diff --
app doesn't exist in this context. I think you mean this.resize because
this.resize is defined in the initialize function.
the reason this.resizeColumns.onResizeHandler(); wouldn't work inside this
toggle menu function is that it's context is outside the function.
toggleMenu's context (this) doesn't have a variable called resizeColumns.
If you move toggleMenu out into the view's object, then it will have access
to this.resizeColumns because it shares a context with it.
But in future, if you ever come across this kinda thing, you can always
pass a context into a JS function using .call() or .apply() or if you don't
want to execute the function yet, you can use underscore's _.bind() method.
An example so you know what I mean:
var foo = {
name: "sue"
};
function sayName(greeting){
return greeting+" "+this.name;
};
sayName.call(foo,"hi");
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