evental
v2.5.0
Published
Simple, environment-agnostic event handling
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Evental
Simple, environment-agnostic event handling. Use Evental to create and handle custom events that don't depend on the existence of the DOM or Node and can be used in just about any environment.
Install
npm install evental
Include
// get Evental class
const Evental = require('evental');
In html:
<script type="text/javascript" src="/node_modules/evental/dist/evental.min.js"></script>
<script type="module" src="/node_modules/evental/dist/evental.es.js"></script>
Instantiate:
You can get a new Evental
instance in one of two ways:
const evental = new Evental(caller);
// or:
const evental = require('evental').instance;
Properties:
instance (static)
Returns a new instance of the Evental class with no events attached andevental.caller
set to the Evental objectstate
Returns the current state of events in the form of an object keyed by the event names referencing an object with two properties:- handlers: an array of key names representing each callback function to be called when the event fires, or an empty array if none
- calc: the key representing the calculatable function (see below) attached to the event or null if none
events
Returns an array with the names of all of the currently registered events
Methods:
on (eventName, callback, [option], [discardAfterCall])
Registers an event if it's not already registered and attaches a callback to be called every time the event is fired.
Returns an automatically generated, unique key that that can be passed to theoff
method to detach the callback from the event.
The optionaloption
parameter can modify this method's behavior in several ways (see below).one (eventName, callback, [option])
Just likeon
, but callback will be called only once. This can be combined with thefirst
,before
,after
, andlast
options by setting thediscardAfterCall
parameter totrue
.onCalc (eventName, callback)
Alias ofevental.on(eventName, callback, 'calc')
orevental.on(eventName, callback, true)
- attaches the callback as the event's calculatable callback and replacing the current one if it exists. Each event can only have one calculatable callback at a time to be called and return a value every time thecalc
method is called for that event. The value returned bycalc
can also optionally be passed to the callbacks of theon
,first
,before
,after
, andlast
methods (see Callbacks section below)first(eventName, callback, [discardAfterCall])*
Alias ofevental.on(eventName, callback, 'first')
- attaches the associated callback as the first callback to be called when the event is fired. If this is called more than once on the same event, the most recently called will be first, and all precedingfirst
event handlers will be converted tobefore
.before (eventName, callback, [discardAfterCall])
Alias ofevental.on(eventName, callback, 'before')
- callbacks classified with this flag will be called before all callbacks except for the currentfirst
callback, assuming one exists, when an event is fired.after (eventName, callback, [discardAfterCall])
Alias ofevental.on(eventName, callback, 'after')
- callbacks classified with this flag will be called after all callbacks except for the currentlast
callback, assuming one exists, when an event is fired.last (eventName, callback, [discardAfterCall])
Alias ofevental.on(eventName, callback, 'last')
- attaches the associated callback as the last callback to be called when the event is fired. If this is called more than once on the same event, the most recently called will be last, and all precedinglast
event handlers will be converted toafter
.off (eventName, key)
Detaches the callback that the key represents from the event if it existsfire (eventName, [...args])
Activates the event, calling all handlers attached to it in the order they were attached, withthis
referring to theevental
instance and passing all of theargs
to each callback. Returns theevental
instance.calc (eventName, [...args])
Activates the calculatable event, calling the calculatable function attached to the event if it exists, withthis
referring to theevental
instance and passing all of the arguments to the callback. Returns the return value of the callback.
Both fire
and calc
can be called multiple times.
get (eventName)
Returns the individualEventalEvent
instance for the named event if it exists.count (eventName)
Returns the current number of times the event has been fired or calculated.getEvent (eventName, [key])
Ifkey
is given, returns the specific callback function the key represents, otherwise returns all functions attached to the eventgetCalc (eventName)
Returns the calculatable function attached to the event ornull
if none existssetCaller (caller)
Sets thethis
value of all event callbacks to the object represented bycaller
.bypass (eventName)
For events where there is a calculatable callback set, you can call this function to prevent the calculated value being passed to the event stack when the named event is fired. Callingbypass
will guarantee that the arguments passed to thefire
method will always be the arguments passed to the callbacks in the event stack. You can disablebypass
at any time by callingevental.removeBypass(eventName)
.
Callbacks
The second parameter of the on
, onCalc
, first
, before
, after
, and last
methods is always the callback, much as it is in other event handlers. In the callback, this
defaults to the Evental instance, but you can change that by passing a different caller into the Evental constructor, or at any time by setting the value of evental.caller
.
Pass parameters into the evental.fire
method that will then be available in every callback for the event, with one exception:
If the event has an active calculatable callback (called using evental.onCalc
or by calling evental.on
with the third parameter set to calc
or true
), evental.calc
will silently be called before cycling through the event stack, then the returned value of calc
will be passed to the callbacks rather than the arguments passed in the fire
method. If you want to use calc
on an event for other reasons and don't want the returned value passed to the event stack, you can bypass this default behavior by calling eventalevent.bypass(eventName)
.
Examples:
Bind an existing event:
document.addEventListener('click', e => {
evental.fire('click', e);
});
document.getElementById('myButton').addEventListener('click', e => {
evental.fire('myButtonClick', e);
});
Conditionally fire several events at once:
function onComplete(request) {
if (request.status == 'success') {
evental.fire(['success', 'complete'], request.data);
} else {
evental.fire(['error', 'complete'], request.error);
}
}
Control the order in which events are called:
let order = [];
evental.after('order', () => {
order.push(4);
});
evental.on('order', () => {
order.push(3);
});
evental.last('order', () => {
order.push(5);
});
evental.first('order', () => {
order.push(1);
});
evental.before('order', () => {
order.push(2);
});
evental.fire('order');
// Result: order == [1,2,3,4,5];
Mutate data before passing to the next step:
evental.onCalc('chunkReady', (data, number) => {
console.log(`Data Chunk ${number}: ${JSON.stringify(data)}`);
});
let chunkNumber = 0;
stream.on('data', data => {
chunkNumber++;
data = evental.calc('chunkReady', data, chunkNumber);
return data;
}
Use the one
method to set a callback to run once, then reactivate the callback later
let signedIn = evental.one('activity', () => {
alert('User is signed in.');
});
// Do stuff
evental.fire('activity'); // alert('User is signed in.')
evental.on('signOut', () => {
evental.one('activity', signedIn);
});
evental.fire('activity'); // no alert
evental.fire('signOut');
// Do stuff
evental.fire('activity'); // alert('User is signed in.')