Lawsun d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
..
benchmark d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
test d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
.lint d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
.npmignore d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
.testignore d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
.travis.yml d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
CHANGES d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
LICENSE d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
README.md d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
all-off.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
emit-error.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
has-listeners.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
index.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
package.json d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
pipe.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa
unify.js d230cfbce0 first commit 1 anno fa

README.md

event-emitter

Environment agnostic event emitter

Installation

$ npm install event-emitter

To port it to Browser or any other (non CJS) environment, use your favorite CJS bundler. No favorite yet? Try: Browserify, Webmake or Webpack

Usage

var ee = require('event-emitter');

var MyClass = function () { /* .. */ };
ee(MyClass.prototype); // All instances of MyClass will expose event-emitter interface

var emitter = new MyClass(), listener;

emitter.on('test', listener = function (args) {
  // … react to 'test' event
});

emitter.once('test', function (args) {
  // … react to first 'test' event (invoked only once!)
});

emitter.emit('test', arg1, arg2/*…args*/); // Two above listeners invoked
emitter.emit('test', arg1, arg2/*…args*/); // Only first listener invoked

emitter.off('test', listener);              // Removed first listener
emitter.emit('test', arg1, arg2/*…args*/); // No listeners invoked

Additional utilities

allOff(obj) (event-emitter/all-off)

Removes all listeners from given event emitter object

hasListeners(obj[, name]) (event-emitter/has-listeners)

Whether object has some listeners attached to the object. When name is provided, it checks listeners for specific event name

var emitter = ee();
var hasListeners = require('event-emitter/has-listeners');
var listener = function () {};

hasListeners(emitter); // false

emitter.on('foo', listener);
hasListeners(emitter); // true
hasListeners(emitter, 'foo'); // true
hasListeners(emitter, 'bar'); // false

emitter.off('foo', listener);
hasListeners(emitter, 'foo'); // false

pipe(source, target[, emitMethodName]) (event-emitter/pipe)

Pipes all events from source emitter onto target emitter (all events from source emitter will be emitted also on target emitter, but not other way).
Returns pipe object which exposes pipe.close function. Invoke it to close configured pipe.
It works internally by redefinition of emit method, if in your interface this method is referenced differently, provide its name (or symbol) with third argument.

unify(emitter1, emitter2) (event-emitter/unify)

Unifies event handling for two objects. Events emitted on emitter1 would be also emitted on emitter2, and other way back.
Non reversible.

var eeUnify = require('event-emitter/unify');

var emitter1 = ee(), listener1, listener3;
var emitter2 = ee(), listener2, listener4;

emitter1.on('test', listener1 = function () { });
emitter2.on('test', listener2 = function () { });

emitter1.emit('test'); // Invoked listener1
emitter2.emit('test'); // Invoked listener2

var unify = eeUnify(emitter1, emitter2);

emitter1.emit('test'); // Invoked listener1 and listener2
emitter2.emit('test'); // Invoked listener1 and listener2

emitter1.on('test', listener3 = function () { });
emitter2.on('test', listener4 = function () { });

emitter1.emit('test'); // Invoked listener1, listener2, listener3 and listener4
emitter2.emit('test'); // Invoked listener1, listener2, listener3 and listener4

Tests Build Status

$ npm test