#Events
This library is intended to supply an event interface to javascript objects using a Mixin pattern. The library is designed with encapsulation and uninterupptability in mind. This means a broken function will not stop the event loop (on modern browsers).
Events now also supports AMD and CommonJS syntax.
##Features
- Easy to integrate - can be used as a mixin, thus making it easy to integrate with any existing codebase.
- Fast - On modern browsers (FF, Chrome, Safari and IE > 8) the library uses costume DOM events to handle the events.
- Encapsulated - When used on modern browsers, broken functions will not break the event loop.
- Supports creating pseudo events (like
:once
and:latched
). - Comes with built in useful utilities.
- Cross-browser - falls back to a more standard costume events handler.
npm install eventsjs
##Usage
The simplest way to enable events support is like this:
function MyObject(){
Events.call(this);
}
This method will introduce the entire events API onto the object. You could also create an instance of the object:
var ev = new Events();
Or, if you wish, you could always inherit it:
obj.prototype = new Events();
##Methods
###addEvent(type, fn) Adds a listener. When fired, the function will be passed an event object, with 2 parameters:
- args - arguments that were passed by dispatcher.
- dispatcher - the object dispatching the event
obj.addEvent('show',function(e){
e.dispatcher; //obj
e.args; //whatever arguments were passed
});
###addEvents(events) Adds multiple events in one callback
obj.addEvents({
'show' : show_fn,
'hide' : hide_fn
});
###fireEvent(type, args) Dispathces an event, passing arguments:
obj.fireEvent('show', {counter:1});
###removeEvent(type, fn) Removes a listener.
obj.removeEvent('show', this.bound.handleShow);
###addEventOnce(type, fn)
Same as addEvent
only it will remove the listener automatically once dispatched.
##Pseudo events The library supports a few pseudo events out of the box:
:once
- when used event will be added once.:latched
- see latched section:times(number)
- same as once, only it will execute X times (as passed by parameter).:delay(ms)
- onfireEvent
, will delay X miliseconds before firing the event. OnaddEvent
will delay each execution of specific function.
obj.addEvent('test:once', function(){/* ... */ }); //will add a function to be fired once
obj.fireEvent('load:latched'); //will fire a latched event
obj.addEvent('test:times(5)', fn); //will add an event that will remove itself after 5 runs
obj.addEvent('test:delay(500)',fn); //will add an event that will wait 500ms before executing when fired
obj.fireEvent('test:delay(500)',args); //will wait 500ms before firing the event
You can also add your own pseudo events, by adding them to Events.Pseudoes.
In order to create a new pseudo-event, add an object to the collection, containing either addEvent
method, fireEvent
method or both.
You can even add a parameter to the pseudo-event.
The addEvent
and fireEvent
methods will be fired instead of the default methods. It's arguments will be the same as their default, with a third argument, which is the passed pseudo-parameter (if any).
In order to see more simply look at the code.
###Important note
The library does not support multiple pseudo events. This is by design - the pseudo events hide complex logic and function-wrapping.
Doing addEvent:once:delay(1000)
might look nice, but hides the fact that it uses 3 levels of function wrapping.
By default, The library would simply fail to assign the pseudo event properly (will try to match once:delay
which doesn't exist), and will log an error to the console.
However, you can make the librart throw exceptions for multiple pseudo events by setting the Events.strict
flag to true.
##Latched events Latched events are events that once fired once will dispatch automatically afterwards. Examples for such events can be a 'load' event, or a 'domready' event. If any arguments were passed, they will be passed on as well. For example:
obj.fireEvent('load:latched',{someParam:"a"});
//will be fire automatically
obj.addEvent('load', function(e){
e.args.someParam; //a
});
##Cleanup
In case you want to ensure cleanup, the Mixin automatically listens to the destroy
event and cleans itself up for destruction