telegraph-events
v1.0.3
Published
Minimal event emitter forked from smokesignals.js
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Telegraph
A minimal event emitter for browsers, forked from Benjamin Thomas' smokesignals.js.
This library has three goals:
- Make it easy and intuitive to listen for and initiate events on an object.
- Be as small as possible. Right now the minified version comes in at 528 bytes.
- Capability for handlers to cancel the event process.
There are many other wonderful libraries that do similar things, but none of them worked exactly how I wanted them to work or met all the goals above.
Installing
Just download telegraph.js
and put it in a place you can access from your webpage.
Loading
Just include the Telegraph script:
<script src="telegraph.js"></script>
Using
Make any object an event emitter:
var jill = {};
telegraph(jill);
// or...
var jill = telegraph();
Or if you prefer constructors:
function Person() {
telegraph(this);
}
var jill = new Person();
Now you can listen for events:
function listener(name) {
window.alert('Hello ' + name + '!');
}
jill.on('say hello', listener);
And emit events:
jill.emit('say hello', 'Jack');
// alerts: "Hello Jack!"
// returns: true
And remove a listener:
jill.off('say hello', listener);
Or if you only want to listen for an event once:
jill.once('another event', function() {
window.alert("I'll only be called once!");
});
jill.emit('another event');
Or remove all listeners for an event:
jill.off('say hello');
Or if you want to remove ALL listeners:
// just call off() with no parameters
jill.off();
// or reconvert the object...
telegraph(jill);
Or if you want to cancel the event chain:
// just return false from a handler
jill.on('event', function() { return false; });
jill.on('event', function() { console.log('event!'); });
// emit now returns false, and 'event!' is not printed
jill.emit('event');
That's it! One global object (telegraph
) and when used it adds 4 methods to
your objects (on
, once
, off
and emit
).
By the way, all methods, except for emit
, are chainable:
var jill = telegraph()
.on('event one', function() { ... })
.on('event two', function() { ... })
.once('event three', function() { ... })
.off ('event one');