You seem to have the correct understanding of what happens with this
in an arrow function. I will offer an explanation that I think adds to the conversation and hopefully solidifies your understanding.
As you probably know, when you define a function and use a variable inside of it, it checks if the variable has been defined in its scope. If it is, it uses it! If not, it checks the enclosing scope for that variable definition. It keeps checking enclosing scopes until it finds the variable or reaches global scope. Now, function definitions that are not arrow functions define this
for you, implicitly. Thus, they will never check an enclosing scope when you try to use this
in their scope (because they find it in their own scope!). Arrow functions do NOT define their own this
, so they go to the enclosing scope and look for it just as they would with any variable you try to use in their scope.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…