EventEmitter
Facebook's EventEmitter is a simple emitter implementation that prioritizes speed and simplicity. It is conceptually similar to other emitters like Node's EventEmitter, but the precise APIs differ. More complex abstractions like the event systems used on facebook.com and m.facebook.com can be built on top of EventEmitter as well DOM event systems.
API Concepts
EventEmitter's API shares many concepts with other emitter APIs. When events are emitted through an emitter instance, all listeners for the given event type are invoked.
var emitter = new EventEmitter();
emitter.addListener('event', function(x, y) { console.log(x, y); });
emitter.emit('event', 5, 10); // Listener prints "5 10".
EventEmitters return a subscription for each added listener. Subscriptions provide a convenient way to remove listeners that ensures they are removed from the correct emitter instance.
var subscription = emitter.addListener('event', listener);
subscription.remove();
Usage
First install the fbemitter
package via npm
, then you can require or import it.
var {EventEmitter} = require('fbemitter');
var emitter = new EventEmitter();
Building from source
Once you have the repository cloned, building a copy of fbemitter
is easy, just run gulp build
. This assumes you've installed gulp
globally with npm install -g gulp
.
gulp build
API
constructor()
Create a new emitter using the class' constructor. It accepts no arguments.
var {EventEmitter} = require('fbemitter');
var emitter = new EventEmitter();
addListener(eventType, callback)
Register a specific callback to be called on a particular event. A token is returned that can be used to remove the listener.
var token = emitter.addListener('change', (...args) => {
console.log(...args);
});
emitter.emit('change', 10); // 10 is logged
token.remove();
emitter.emit('change', 10); // nothing is logged
once(eventType, callback)
Similar to addListener()
but the callback is removed after it is invoked once. A token is returned that can be used to remove the listener.
var token = emitter.once('change', (...args) => {
console.log(...args);
});
emitter.emit('change', 10); // 10 is logged
emitter.emit('change', 10); // nothing is logged
removeAllListeners(eventType)
Removes all of the registered listeners. eventType
is optional, if provided only listeners for that event type are removed.
var token = emitter.addListener('change', (...args) => {
console.log(...args);
});
emitter.removeAllListeners();
emitter.emit('change', 10); // nothing is logged
listeners(eventType)
Return an array of listeners that are currently registered for the given event type.
emit(eventType, ...args)
Emits an event of the given type with the given data. All callbacks that are listening to the particular event type will be notified.
var token = emitter.addListener('change', (...args) => {
console.log(...args);
});
emitter.emit('change', 10); // 10 is logged
__emitToSubscription(subscription, eventType, ...args)
It is reasonable to extend EventEmitter
in order to inject some custom logic that you want to do on every callback that is called during an emit, such as logging, or setting up error boundaries. __emitToSubscription()
is exposed to make this possible.
class MyEventEmitter extends EventEmitter {
__emitToSubscription(subscription, eventType) {
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 2);
var start = Date.now();
subscription.listener.apply(subscription.context, args);
var time = Date.now() - start;
MyLoggingUtility.log('callback-time', {eventType, time});
}
}
And then you can create instances of MyEventEmitter
and use it like a standard EventEmitter
. If you just want to log on each emit and not on each callback called during an emit you can override emit()
instead of this method.