2.7 KiB
2.7 KiB
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- Much of the NodeJS core is built around an asynchronous event-driven architecture in which certain kinds of objects (called "emitters") emit named events that cause
Function
objects ("listeners") to be called. - For example: a
fs.ReadStream
emits an event when the file is opened
Event Emitters
- All objects that emit events are instances of the
EventEmitter
class. These objects expose aneventEmitter.on()
function that allows one or more functions to be attached to named events emitted by the object. - These functions are listeners of the emitter.
Basic syntax
const EventEmitter = require('events') // import the module
// Raise an event
const emitter = new EventEmitter('messageLogged')
// Register a listener
emitter.on('messagedLogged', function() {
console.log('The listener was called.')
})
- If we ran this file, we would see
The listener was called
logged to the console. - Without a listener (similar to a subscriber in Angular) nothing happens.
- When the emission occurs the emitter works synchronously through each listener function that is attached to it.
Event arguments
- Typically we would not just emit a string, we would attach an object to the emitter to pass more useful data. This data is called an Event Argument.
- Refactoring the previous example:
// Raise an event
const emitter = new EventEmitter('messageLogged', function(eventArg) {
console.log('Listener called', eventArg)
})
// Register a listener
emitter.on('messagedLogged', {id: 1, url: 'http://www.example.com'})
Extending the EventEmitter
class
- It's not best practice to call the EventEmitter class directly in
app.js
. If we want to use the capabilities of the class we should create our own module that extendsEventEmitter
, inheriting its functionality with specific additional features that we want to add. - So, refactoring the previous example:
// File: Logger.js
const EventEmitter = require('events')
class Logger extends EventEmitter {
log(message){
console.log(message)
this.emit('messageLogged', {id: 1, url: 'http://www.example.com'})
}
}
The this
in the log
method refers to the properties and methods of EventEmitter
which we have extended.
- We also need to refactor our listener code within
app.js
so that it calls the extended class rather than theEventEmitter
class directly:
// File app.js
const Logger = require('./Logger')
const logger = new Logger()
logger.on('messageLogged', function(eventArg){
console.log('Listener called', eventArg)
}
logger.log('message')