Provides a general purpose Backbone Event Broker implementation based on the Backbone Events API.
The EventBroker
can be used directly to serve as a centralized event management mechanism for an entire application. Namespaced brokers can also be created in order to provide context specific brokers within an application.
The EventBroker
can be used directly to publish and subscribe to events of interest:
var Users = Backbone.Collection.extend{{
initialize: function(){
// subscribe to an event ...
Backbone.EventBroker.on('users:add', this.add, this);
},
add: function(user) {
console.log(user.id);
}
};
var UserEditor = Backbone.View.extend({
el: '#editor',
initialize: function(broker){
this.$userId = this.$('#userId');
},
add: function() {
// publish an event ...
var user = new User({id: this.$userId().val()});
Backbone.EventBroker.trigger('users:add', user);
}
};
// ...
The EventBroker
API can be used to create and retrieve any number of specific namespaced EventBrokers
. A namespaced EventBroker
ensures that all events are published and subscribed against a specific namespace.
Namespaced EventBrokers
are retrieved via Backbone.EventBroker.get([namespace])
. If an EventBroker
has not been created for the given namespace, it will be created and returned. All subsequent retrievals will return the same EventBroker
instance for the specified namespace; i.e. only one unique EventBroker
is created per namespace.
var Users = Backbone.Collection.extend{{
// use the 'users' broker
usersBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('users'),
initialize: function(broker){
this.usersBroker.on('add', this.add, this);
},
add: function(user) {
console.log(user.id);
}
};
var UserEditor = Backbone.View.extend({
el: '#editor',
// use the 'users' broker
usersBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('users'),
// also use the 'roles' broker
rolesBroker : Backbone.EventBroker.get('roles'),
initialize: function(broker){
this.$userId = this.$('#userId');
},
add: function() {
// publish an event
var user = new User({id: this.$userId().val()});
this.usersBroker.trigger('add', user);
}
};
Since namespaced EventBrokers
ensure events are only piped thru the EventBroker
of the given namespace, it is not necessary to prefix event names with the specific namespace to which they belong. While this can simplify implementation code, you can still prefix event names to aid in readability if desired.
var Users = Backbone.Collection.extend{{
// use the 'users' broker
userBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('users'),
initialize: function(broker){
// prefix the namespace if desired
this.userBroker.on('users:add', this.add, this);
},
add: function(user) {
console.log(user.id);
}
};
var UserEditor = Backbone.View.extend({
el: '#editor',
// use the 'users' broker
usersBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('users'),
// also use the unique 'roles' broker
rolesBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('roles'),
initialize: function(broker){
this.$userId = this.$('#userId');
},
add: function() {
// publish an event
var user = new User({id: this.$userId().val()});
// prefix the namespace if desired
this.usersBroker.trigger('users:add', user);
}
};
Modules can register events of interest with an EventBroker
via the default 'on' method or the register
method. The register
method allows for registering multiple event/callback mappings for a given context in a manner similar to that of the events hash in a Backbone.View.
// Register event/callbacks based on a hash and associated context
var Users = Backbone.Collection.extend({
initialize: function() {
Backbone.EventBroker.register({
'user:select' : 'select',
'user:deselect' : 'deselect',
'user:edit' : 'edit',
'user:update' : 'update',
'user:remove' : 'remove'
}, this );
},
select: function() { ... },
deselect: function() { ... },
edit: function() { ... },
update: function() { ... },
remove: function() { ... }
});
Alternately, Modules can simply define an "interests" property containing particular event/callback mappings of interests and register themselves with an EventBroker
// Register event/callbacks based on a hash and associated context
var Users = Backbone.Collection.extend({
// defines events of interest and their corresponding callbacks
this.interests: {
'user:select' : 'select',
'user:deselect' : 'deselect',
'user:edit' : 'edit',
'user:update' : 'update',
'user:remove' : 'remove'
},
initialize: function() {
// register this object with the EventBroker
Backbone.EventBroker.register( this );
},
select: function() { ... },
deselect: function() { ... },
edit: function() { ... },
update: function() { ... },
remove: function() { ... }
});
Modules can use different namespaced EventBrokers
for different things...
// Register event/callbacks with different EventBrokers...
var CartView = Backbone.View.extend({
// Reference the 'items' EventBroker...
itemsBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('items'),
// Reference the 'inventory' EventBroker...
inventoryBroker: Backbone.EventBroker.get('inventory'),
initialize: function() {
// register events/callbacks with 'items' EventBroker...
this.itemsBroker.register({
'add' : 'add',
'update' : 'update',
'remove' : 'remove'
}, this );
// register events/callbacks with 'inventory' EventBroker...
this.inventoryBroker.register({
'select' : 'select',
'deselect' : 'deselect',
'edit' : 'edit'
}, this );
},
add: function() { ... },
update: function() { ... },
remove: function() { ... },
select: function() { ... },
deselect: function() { ... },
edit: function() { ... }
});
To test if an EventBroker
has been created for a given namespace
, invoke the has
method:
// determines if an event broker for the given namespace exists
var EventBroker = Backbone.EventBroker;
EventBroker.get('roles'); // returns the 'roles' EventBroker
EventBroker.has('roles'); //true
EventBroker.has('users'); //false
To destroy an existing EventBroker
for a given namespace
, invoke the destroy
method:
// deletes the event broker for the given namespace
var EventBroker = Backbone.EventBroker;
EventBroker.get('permissions');
EventBroker.destroy('permissions'); // returns the 'permissions' EventBroker
EventBroker.has('permissions'); //false
To destroy all existing EventBrokers
, invoke the destroy
method with no arguments:
// deletes the event broker for the given namespace
var EventBroker = Backbone.EventBroker;
EventBroker.get('permissions'); // returns the 'permissions' EventBroker
EventBroker.get('users'); // returns the 'users' EventBroker
EventBroker.get('roles'); // returns the 'roles' EventBroker
EventBroker.destroy();
EventBroker.has('permissions' ); //false
EventBroker.has('users'); //false
EventBroker.has('roles'); //false