Eventually
Eventually
is a module that facilitates evented callback management similar to the EventEmitter API in NodeJS. Support for Ruby's various callback styles is heavily baked in, so using blocks, lambdas, procs, or even detached methods works out of the box, batteries included. Simply include Eventually
in the class you will be emitting events from, register some listeners and fire away.
class Car
include Eventually
def stop
#...
emit(:stopped, 0)
end
end
car = Car.new
car.on(:stopped) do |mph|
puts 'the car stopped, sitting at %d mph' % mph
end
car.stop # this will indirectly invoke the above callback
Pre-define Events
For documentation purposes, it can often be nice to define up front what events you'll be expecting to emit from the instances of a certain class. Anyone who's ever spent a couple of minutes trying to dig up their database columns from an ActiveRecord model knows what I'm talking about. Annoying. So Eventually
let's you put that all up front in a nice DSL.
class Car
include Eventually
emits :stopped, :started, :turning
emits :reversing
end
The previous snippet acts mostly as documentation.
See the **examples/basic.rb* file for a slightly more complicated setup than this one.*
Callback arity validation
However, sometimes you want to be sure that a given registered callback will conform to your event interface, so specify an arity validation. Let's add another event to our definition and ensure that callbacks registering for that event must have an arity of 1. This will also raise an error if you attempt to emit an event with the wrong argument arity.
class Car
include Eventually
emits :driving, :arity => 1
end
car = Car.new
car.on(:driving) do
puts 'The car is driving'
end
# Error will be raise explaining the arity mismatch (expected 1, received -1)
See the **examples/arity.rb* file for more on this.*
Strict Mode
Strict mode is useful if you want to enforce the #emits
documentation as being the ONLY events that your instances can emit or be registered against.
class Car
include Eventually
enable_strict!
emits :started, :stopped
def turn
# Emitting :turning event here will throw an error in strict mode
emit(:turning)
end
end
car = Car.new
# Registering for the :turning event here will throw an error in strict mode
car.on(:turning) do
puts 'the car is turning'
end
See the **examples/scrict.rb* file for more on this.*
More?
Further examples can be found in the examples directory. I know, novel idea that one.
Contact
@localshred wrote this. He sometimes blogs too.