@tomdionysus/event-tree

1.1.0 • Public • Published

event-tree: A Hierarchical Event System

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event-tree is a JavaScript library designed to facilitate the organization and management of events using a hierarchical tree structure. The library allows developers to easily subscribe and unsubscribe event listeners, as well as trigger events throughout the tree. By organizing events in a tree, the library helps developers visualize and manage event relationships more effectively. event-tree supports adding and removing event listeners, triggering events, and pruning unused nodes, making it an efficient and practical solution for event-driven applications.

Overview

Event-Tree organizes events in a hierarchical tree structure, making it simple to visualize and manage event relationships. Here's an example of an event tree:

factory
├── security
│   ├── signIn
│   ├── signOut
│   └── alarm
├── process
│   ├── production
│   │   ├── start
│   │   └── stop
│   └── assembly
│       ├── start
│       └── stop
└── timeclock
    ├── shift
    │   ├── starts
    │   └── ends
    ├── dayStart
    └── dayEnd

Each node in the tree has an "address" (e.g., factory.process.production.start or factory.timeclock). You can subscribe to a specific event by its address and provide a callback function.

Installation

npm i @tomdionysus/event-tree

Examples

Simple Events

const { EventTree } = require('@tomdionysus/event-tree')

// Create a new event tree
const myTree = new EventTree()

// Add an event listener
myTree.on('myEvent', {}, (data) => {
  console.log(`Received data for 'myEvent': ${data}`)
})

// Trigger the event
myTree.trigger('myEvent', 'Hello, world!')

In this example, we create a new EventTree instance and add an event listener for the myEvent event. When the event is triggered with the string 'Hello, world!', the listener will log a message to the console.

Hierarchical Events

const { EventTree } = require('@tomdionysus/event-tree')

// Create a new event tree
const myTree = new EventTree()

// Add an event listener for event1
myTree.on('event1', {}, (data) => {
  console.log(`Received data for 'event1': ${data}`)
})

// Add an event listener for event1.event2
myTree.on('event1.event2', {}, (data) => {
  console.log(`Received data for 'event1.event2': ${data}`)
})

// Trigger the event1.event2 event
myTree.trigger('event1.event2', 'Hello, world from event1.event2!')

In this example, we create a new EventTree instance and add event listeners for two events, event1 and event1.event2, which is a hierarchical event. When the event1.event2 event is triggered, both event listeners will fire and log messages to the console, since event1 is a parent event of event1.event2. Therefore, the output will be:

Received data for 'event1': Hello, world from event1.event2!
Received data for 'event1.event2': Hello, world from event1.event2!

Attaching Event Listeners

To subscribe to an event, use on or addEventListener:

on(eventName, [options], handler)

The handler function will be called with these parameters: handler({ eventName: <original eventName>, context: <context from trigger>, options: <options from on> })

Removing Event Listeners

To unsubscribe from an event, use unon or removeEventListener:

unon(eventName, [options], handler)

Triggering (Dispatching) Events

When you trigger an event, all handlers in the event's route are also called. For example:

trigger('factory.security.signIn', context)

The following event's listeners will be called:

  • factory
  • factory.security
  • factory.security.signIn

Propogation

If any handler returns explictly false, all downline events will not be triggered. For example:

trigger('factory.security.signIn', context)

Event listeners are registered on the following events:

  • factory - returns null
  • factory.security - returns false
  • factory.security.signIn - These handlers will not be called, because a handler on factory.security returned false.

The following event's listeners will be called:

  • factory
  • factory.security
  • factory.security.signIn

Listing Events

You can get all the handlers that will be called for an event using listeners(eventName). This will include handlers from ancestor events:

on('event1', {}}, handler1)
on('event1.event2', {}}, handler2)
listeners('event1.event2') === [ handler1, handler2 ]

License

This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for details.

Contributor Code Of Conduct

Contributors must observe the Code Of Conduct.

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Install

npm i @tomdionysus/event-tree

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Version

1.1.0

License

MIT

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  • tomdionysus