[][src]Crate event_listener_primitives

This crate provides a low-level primitive for building Node.js-like event listeners.

The 2 primitives are Bag that is a container for event handlers and HandlerId that will remove event handler from the bag on drop.

Trivial example:

use event_listener_primitives::{Bag, HandlerId};

fn main() {
    let bag = Bag::<dyn Fn() + Send>::default();

    let handler_id = bag.add(Box::new(move || {
        println!("Hello")
    }));

    bag.call_simple();
}

Close to real-world usage example:

use event_listener_primitives::{Bag, HandlerId};
use std::sync::Arc;

#[derive(Default)]
struct Handlers {
    bar: Bag<'static, dyn Fn() + Send>,
    closed: Bag<'static, dyn FnOnce() + Send>,
}

struct Inner {
    handlers: Arc<Handlers>,
}

impl Drop for Inner {
    fn drop(&mut self) {
        self.handlers.closed.call_once_simple();
    }
}

#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct Foo {
    inner: Arc<Inner>,
}

impl Foo {
    pub fn new() -> Self {
        let handlers = Arc::<Handlers>::default();

        let inner = Arc::new(Inner { handlers });

        Self { inner }
    }

    pub fn do_bar(&self) {
        // Do things...

        self.inner.handlers.bar.call_simple();
    }

    pub fn do_other_bar(&self) {
        // Do things...

        self.inner.handlers.bar.call(|callback| {
            callback();
        });
    }

    pub fn on_bar<F: Fn() + Send + 'static>(&self, callback: F) -> HandlerId {
        self.inner.handlers.bar.add(Box::new(callback))
    }

    pub fn on_closed<F: FnOnce() + Send + 'static>(&self, callback: F) -> HandlerId {
        self.inner.handlers.closed.add(Box::new(callback))
    }
}

fn main() {
    let foo = Foo::new();
    let on_bar_handler_id = foo.on_bar(|| {
        println!("On bar");
    });
    foo
        .on_closed(|| {
            println!("On closed");
        })
        .detach();
    // This will trigger "bar" callback just fine since its handler ID is not dropped yet
    foo.do_bar();
    drop(on_bar_handler_id);
    // This will not trigger "bar" callback since its handler ID was already dropped
    foo.do_other_bar();
    // This will trigger "closed" callback though since we've detached handler ID
    drop(foo);

    println!("Done");
}

The output will be:

On bar
On closed
Done

Structs

Bag

Data structure that holds event handlers

HandlerId

Handler ID keeps event handler in place, once dropped handler will be removed automatically.