I have this code:
function Tree() {
this.capacity = 1;
this.contents = 0;
this.children = [];
this.divided = false;
this.pour = function(amount) {
this.contents += amount;
if (this.contents <= 1) {
return;
}
if (!this.divided) {
this.divide();
}
amount = this.contents - 1;
this.contents = 1;
for (let child in this.children) {
this.children[child].pour(amount * .5);
}
}
this.divide = function() {
this.children = new Array(2).fill(0).map(x => new Tree());
this.divided = true;
return;
}
this.getContents = function(row, currentRow) {
if (currentRow === undefined) {
currentRow = 0;
}
if (row === currentRow) {
console.log('Contents:', this.contents)
return this.contents;
}
if (this.divided) {
console.log(row, currentRow)
currentRow++;
this.children[0].getContents(row, currentRow);
} else {
return;
}
}
}
Upon creating a tree, pouring into it, and getting its contents using this:
let tree = new Tree();
tree.pour(10);
tree.getContents(1);
It should return 1 because the second rows contents is 1. It logs 1 in the console but does not return the correct value. I am curious to what is going wrong.
Edit: I looked at switching it to a class and it did not solve the problem:
class Tree {
constructor() {
this.capacity = 1;
this.contents = 0;
this.children = [];
this.divided = false;
}
pour(amount) {
this.contents += amount;
if (this.contents <= 1) {
return;
}
if (!this.divided) {
this.divide();
}
amount = this.contents - 1;
this.contents = 1;
for (let child in this.children) {
this.children[child].pour(amount * .5);
}
}
divide() {
this.children = new Array(2).fill(0).map(x => new Tree());
this.divided = true;
return;
}
getContents(row, currentRow) {
if (currentRow === undefined) {
currentRow = 0;
}
if (row === currentRow) {
console.log('Contents:', this.contents)
return this.contents;
}
if (this.divided) {
console.log(row, currentRow)
currentRow++;
this.children[0].getContents(row, currentRow);
} else {
return;
}
}
}
new Tree())$CURRENT_YEAR, Mark_M,$CURRENT_YEAR! SHED YOUR ES1998 SKIN AND EMBRACE TRUE OOP CLASSES (/s, kind of)