E
is a library which combines a eventBus/emitter, DOM events management, delegated events, and event-based utils into a single lightweight and performant library.
E
works in all modern browsers (not IE11!).
- Getting started
- Adding DOM Events
- Adding Delegated events
- Removing events
- The Event Bus
- Binding handlers to maintain scope
In order to use, just import it and go!:
import E from '@unseenco/e'
The on
method attaches an event to one or many DOM elements with an easy-to-use API:
E.on('click', '.js-open', callback)
E.on('resize', window, callback)
// Also accepts NodeLists/Arrays of elements
E.on('click', document.querySelectorAll('.btn'), callback)
// With a HTMLElement
E.on('click', document.getElementById('unique'), callback)
// You can also pass additional addEventListener options as a 4th param
E.on('click', '#btn', callback, { passive: true })
You can also add a callback to multiple events at once:
E.on('click keyup', '.js-open', callback)
Events bound with delegate
are bound to the document
instead of the element, which removes the need to rebind/remove events during page transitions, or when the DOM updates after load.
Intercepted events are dispatched to the correct handler using Selector Set, which matches the event target element incredibly efficiently.
The delegate
method currently only accepts a selector string to match elements:
E.delegate('click', '.js-open', callback)
You can delegate a callback to multiple events at once:
E.delegate('input keyup', '.js-input', callback)
You can remove a bound handler using the off
method. The arguments are exactly the same as the on
method, and events can be removed by passing a string
, HTMLElement
, or a NodeList
.
E.off('click', '.js-open', callback)
If an element has the same callback for multiple events, you can remove them all at once:
E.off('click focus', '.js-open', callback)
The API for the event bus uses the exact same methods as above, but without supplying a DOM element.
Use the on
method to register an event and a listener. As many listeners can be subscribed to your event as you like.
E.on('my.bus.event', callback)
Use the emit
method without an element will attempt to dispatch a bus event. If one exists, all listeners will be run in the order they were originally added:
E.emit('my.bus.event')
// you can also pass arguments through
E.emit('my.bus.event', arg1, arg2)
You can subscribe one or all events from the bus using off
:
// Will remove the supplied callback if found
E.off('my.bus.event', callback)
// Will remove all listeners for the bus event
E.off('my.bus.event')
// returns a object containing the current bus events registered
E.debugBus()
// returns a boolean indicating if the event has listeners or not
E.hasBus('my.bus.event')
There are many ways to ensure that your event handlers keep the correct context when working with OO.
Probably the simplest method way to keep scope in handlers is to use ES6:
class Foo {
bar = (e) => {
console.log(this)
}
}
Unseen.e
has a handy bindAll
method if you prefer to do it the old-fashioned way:
class Foo {
constructor() {
E.bindAll(this, ['bar'])
}
bar() {
console.log(this)
}
}
You can also call bindAll
without providing any methods to automatically bind all public methods to the current instance:
class Foo {
constructor() {
// Will bind bar, but not privateBar
E.bindAll(this)
}
bar() {
console.log(this)
}
#privateBar() {
}
}