Possible Duplicate:
Self-references in object literal declarations
How do I do the following:
var object = {
    alpha: 'one',
    beta: **alpha's value**
}
without splitting the object creation into two parts?
Possible Duplicate:
Self-references in object literal declarations
How do I do the following:
var object = {
    alpha: 'one',
    beta: **alpha's value**
}
without splitting the object creation into two parts?
You can't, as noted. The closest equivalent is:
var object = new (function()
{
    this.alpha = 'one';
    this.beta = this.alpha;
})();
This uses a singleton instance created from an anonymous function. You can also declare private fields with var.
 
    
    You can't, object literal syntax just doesn't support this, you'll have to create a variable first then use it for both, like this:
var value = 'one';
var object = {
  alpha: value,
  beta: value
};
Or...something entirely different, but you can't reference alpha when doing beta, because neither property has been created yet, not until the object statement runs as a whole is either accessible.
 
    
    Another idea for a way to create that object, without cluttering the scope with any new variables:
var lit = function(shared) {
return {
    alpha: shared.v1,
    beta: shared.v2,
    gamma: "three", 
    delta: shared.v1
};
}(
 {
    v1: "one",
    v2: "two",
 }
);
One of those statements you're not sure how to indent....
