Elijah-Bodden / kNow

Plug-and-play, faster-than-native promise/callback event emitter

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kNow

Blazing-fast callback/promise-based events with a tiny footprint

What is this?

With kNow (pronounced "now"—the k's silent), JavaScript event management has never been more intuitive—or lighter-weight. Want to append custom actions to functions on-the-fly? To use awaitable timers to pause and resume execution at any time? To create large numbers of listeners without worrying about performance degradation? If so, you want kNow.

Via https://jsben.ch/ZESbj (Avg. over 25 runs)

Originally developed for use in Membrane, kNow is a fully functional, if lightweight, native event-management utility for any use-case.

Getting Started

Node.js + npm

Installation:

To install in the root of your node project:

npm i @elijah-bodden/know

Or else globally:

npm i @elijah-bodden/know -g

Use in-script

To import the module into your node script, simply paste the following line at the very top:

const kNow = require('@elijah-bodden/know')

Then, to create a usable intance, add const someVariable = new kNow() anywhere, where 'someVariable' is the name you wish to access it by.

HTML script tag

Inclusion

To include the script in your HTML, add the following tag to the top of your document:

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@elijah-bodden/know/index.min.js">

Use in-script

Just as with node, simply drop in const someVariable = new kNow() anywhere in your script, changing 'someVariable' to the name you want to reference the instance with.

Examples

Pause function execution for n milliseconds

  const kNow = require("@elijah-bodden/know");
  const know = new kNow()
  
  async function test() {
    console.log("foo")
    console.log("bar")
    //Creates and awaits a promise that resolves in 3000ms or 3 seconds
    await know.in(3000)
    console.log("baz")
  }
  
  test()
  
  /* Expected Output:
    1. "foo"
    2. "bar"
    *Three-second pause*
    3. "baz"
  */

Track changes to a variable

  const kNow = require("@elijah-bodden/know");
  const know = new kNow()
  
  var variable
  
  function setVariable(newVal) {
    variable = newVal
    know.dispatch("variableChanged", variable)
  }
  
  setInterval(() => setVariable(Math.random()), 1000)
  
  //Listener callbacks can be created and destroyed at any time, on-the-fly.
  const changeListener = know.when("variableChanged", (newVal) => console.log(`Variable "variable" was changed to ${newVal}.`))

  setTimeout(() => know.clearWhen(changeListener), 5000)
  /* Expected Output:
    *1 second pause* "Variable was changed to (some value)" x 4
  */

Call function X next time Y completes

  const kNow = require("@elijah-bodden/know");
  const know = new kNow()

  function unpredictableFunction() {
    for (let i = 0; i < 10000000; i++) {
      //Doing some valuable operations
    }
    console.log("Alerting that task was completed.")
    know.dispatch("taskCompleted")
    setTimeout(unpredictableFunction, Math.floor(Math.random()*10000))
  }
  
  setTimeout(unpredictableFunction, Math.floor(Math.random()*10000))
  
  know.next("taskCompleted").then(() => console.log("Task completed!"))
  
  /* Expected Output:
    *Indefinite pause*
    1. "Alerting that task was completed."
    2. "Task completed!"
  */

Methods

Use any of the following functions on a kNow instance to implement powerful, high-speed event handling in a snap.

Command Description
constructor(number) When you initialize kNow, you can optionally pass a single argument, the length of time, in milliseconds, after which each next listener automatically expires.
when(number | string, function) Automatically attatches a callback, its second argument, which will run every time the first argument's value is dispatched. The function returns an instanceID object which can be passed into clearWhen to destroy the listener.
clearWhen(object | string | number | undefined) Accepts either a string or a number, an instanceID object, or no value. If it recieves a string or a number, kNow will unregister all when callbacks bound to that dispatch value; if it instead gets an instanceID created by when, only the callback created by this call will be destroyed. Otherwise, if the value is undefined, all callbacks registered to all ID's will be destroyed simultaneously.
dispatch(number | string, any) Immediately resolves all promises bound through next to the first parameter, and invokes all callbacks attatched to it by when. All promises will resolve to the second argument, which will also be passed to all callback functions.
forceReject(number | string, any) forceReject does the exact opposite of dispatch, batch-rejecting all promises attatched to the first argument and setting the reasons to the second.
next(number | string, number | undefined) next returns a promise which may either be resolved by dispatching the value provided as the first parameter, or rejected through clearNext or forceReject. Optionally, a second argument, a timeout, may be specified, after which to automatically reject to promise. If this argument is omited, it will default to the value provided to the constructor, and if this too is undefined, there will be no timeout.
clearnext(...string | number | undefined) Accepts a list of dispatch ID's; if none are provided, it defaults to every registered ID. Each promise registered to each of these ID's is forceRejected with the reason "flushed".
in(number) Returns a promise which will resolve to undefined in the specified number of milliseconds.
clearIn() Immediately forceRejects every promise created by in

License

kNow is distributed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more information.

Contributing

Any and all contributions are greatly appreciated. If you want to see this project grow as much as I do, there are several ways to help. Firstly, if you see something you think you can improve within the code, please fork the repository and make a pull request once you have made any changes you'd like to see. If you just have an idea, or spot a bug, that's great too! In this case, please file an issue with a corresponding bug or enhancement tag. Oh, and if you like what you see here, please feel free to leave a star on the project, it would mean a ton to me.

Contact

Elijah Bodden - elijahbodden@protonmail.com
Project - https://github.com/Elijah-Bodden/kNow
npm - https://www.npmjs.com/package/@elijah-bodden/know

About

Plug-and-play, faster-than-native promise/callback event emitter

License:MIT License


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