0.2.0 • Published 12 years ago

CompoundSignal v0.2.0

Weekly downloads
13
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
12 years ago

CompoundSignal

CompoundSignal works like a group of signals which should be dispatched automatically after all the signals contained by the group are dispatched. Arguments are passed to listeners as Arrays on the same order as the signals were passed on the constructor.

If you are familiar with Promise/Deferred think of it as Promise which will be resolved after all the signals on the group are dispatched. (similar to jQuery.when, Q.join and when.all)

Dependency

JS-Signals v0.7.0+

Example

Inside the browser it will simply add a new constructor inside the signals object:

var endedAnimation = new signals.Signal();
var completedSomething = new signals.Signal();

var completedManyThings = new signals.CompoundSignal(endedAnimation, completedSomething);

// CompoundSignal is just a regular Signal that gets dispatched after the other
// signals are dispatched (and have a similar API)
completedManyThings.addOnce( doSomethingOnCompletedManyThings );

function doSomethingOnCompletedManyThings(paramsArr1, paramsArr2){
  //handler will receive parameters of each signal as arrays since
  //they can dispatch an arbitrary number of parameters
  console.log( paramsArr1, paramsArr2 );
}

If loaded using an AMD loader (e.g. RequireJS) or inside nodejs it will return the constructor and also add itself to the signals object (to keep consistency with browser environment).

AMD

define(['signals', 'CompoundSignal'], function(signals, CompoundSignal){
    console.log( signals.CompoundSignal === CompoundSignal );  // true
});

nodejs

var signals = require('signals'),
    CompoundSignal = require('CompoundSignal');

console.log( signals.CompoundSignal === CompoundSignal );  // true

For more examples check the unit tests inside the "tests/" folder.

Extra properties / functionalities

A compound Signal inherits all the methods and properties from a regular Signal but have a couple properties to toggle the behavior and some additional methods as well.

memorize:Boolean

If true it will store a reference to previously dispatched arguments and will automatically execute callbacks during add()/addOnce() (similar to a "Promise"). Default value is false.

override:Boolean

Sets if multiple dispatches of same signal should override previously registered parameters. Default value is false.

unique:Boolean

If true CompoundSignal will act like a "Promise", after first dispatch, subsequent dispatches will always pass same arguments. It will also remove all the listeners automatically after dispatch. Default value is false.

dispatch()

Works similar to a regular Signal dispatch() method but if CompoundSignal was already "resolved" and it is unique, it will always dispatch the same arguments, no mather which parameters are passed to the dispatch method.

isResolved():Boolean

Check if CompoundSignal did resolved.

reset()

Restore CompoundSignal to it's original state. Will consider as if no signals was dispatched yet and will mark CompoundSignal as unresolved.

Distribution Files

You can use the same distribution file for all the evironments, browser script tag, AMD, CommonJS.

You can install it on Node.js using NPM

npm install CompoundSignal

Running unit tests

On the browser

Open tests/spec_runner.html on your browser.

On Node.js

Install npm and run:

npm install jasmine-node -g
npm link
jasmine-node dev/tests/spec