A class or method decorator which binds methods to the instance so this
is always correct, even when the method is detached.
This is particularly useful for situations like React components, where you often pass methods as event handlers and would otherwise need to .bind(this)
.
Unlike other alternatives, autobind
is lazy and is only bound once. 👍
// Before:
<button onClick={ this.handleClick.bind(this) }></button>
// After:
<button onClick={ this.handleClick }></button>
As decorators are a part of future ECMAScript standard they can only be used with transpilers such as Babel.
Note Babel 6 users:
The implementation of the decorator transform is currently on hold as the syntax is not final. If you would like to use this project with Babel 6.0, you may use babel-plugin-transform-decorators-legacy which implement Babel 5 decorator transform for Babel 6.
Note TypeScript users:
This package will work out of the box with TypeScript (no Babel needed) and includes the .d.ts
typings along with it.
npm install autobind-decorator
import {boundMethod} from 'autobind-decorator'
class Component {
constructor(value) {
this.value = value
}
@boundMethod
method() {
return this.value
}
}
let component = new Component(42)
let method = component.method // .bind(component) isn't needed!
method() // returns 42
@boundMethod
makes method
into an auto-bound method, replacing the explicit bind call later.
Magical @autobind
that can be used on both classes and methods
import autobind from 'autobind-decorator'
class Component {
constructor(value) {
this.value = value
}
@autobind
method() {
return this.value
}
}
let component = new Component(42)
let method = component.method // .bind(component) isn't needed!
method() // returns 42
// Also usable on the class to bind all methods
// Please see performance if you decide to autobind your class
@autobind
class Component { }
Please see performance if you decide to autobind your class:
import {boundClass} from 'autobind-decorator'
@boundClass
class Component {
constructor(value) {
this.value = value
}
method() {
return this.value
}
}
let component = new Component(42)
let method = component.method // .bind(component) isn't needed!
method() // returns 42
autobind
(boundMethod
) on a method is lazy and is only bound once. 👍
However,
It is unnecessary to do that to every function. This is just as bad as autobinding (on a class). You only need to bind functions that you pass around. e.g.
onClick={this.doSomething}
. Orfetch.then(this.handleDone)
-- Dan Abramov
You should avoid using autobind
(boundClass
) on a class. 👎
I was the guy who came up with autobinding in older Reacts and I'm glad to see it gone. It might save you a few keystrokes but it allocates functions that'll never be called in 90% of cases and has noticeable performance degradation. Getting rid of autobinding is a good thing -- Peter Hunt
You might want to look at Class instance properties.