A very small, fast implementation of the Flux design pattern. It does exactly what you need, and nothing more. Less than 200 lines uncompressed, 800 bytes when minified and gzipped.
npm install tiny-flux
If you're not using npm you can simply download the source here: tiny-flux.js, or as a minified file here: bin/tiny-flux.min.js.
var Dispatcher = require('tiny-flux').Dispatcher,
Store = require('tiny-flux').Store;
// Alternative without require:
var Dispatcher = TinyFlux.Dispatcher,
Store = TinyFlux.Store;
/* Constructing a Dispatcher */
var MyDispatcher = new Dispatcher();
/* Constructing a Store */
var MyStore = new Store({
dispatcher: MyDispatcher,
initialize: function() {
this.number = 0; // only accessible from inside the Store methods
this.func = function() {
// autobinding 'this'
return this.number * 2;
};
},
callback: function(action) {
switch (action.type) {
case INCREMENT_NUMBER:
this.number++;
this.emitChange();
break;
}
},
getNumber: function() {
return this.number;
},
getCalculation: function() {
return this.func();
}
});
/* Constructing another Store */
var MyOtherStore = new Store({
dispatcher: MyDispatcher,
initialize: function() {
this.otherNumber = MyStore.getNumber() * 10;
},
callback: function(action) {
MyDispatcher.waitFor(MyStore);
if (MyDispatcher.didEmitChange(MyStore)) {
this.otherNumber = MyStore.getNumber() * 10;
this.emitChange();
}
},
getOtherNumber: function() {
return this.otherNumber;
}
});
/* Dispatching an action */
MyDispatcher.dispatch({
type: INCREMENT_NUMBER
});
/* Listening to changes */
function updateView() {
var otherNumber = MyOtherStore.getOtherNumber();
// ...
};
MyOtherStore.addChangeListener(updateView);
/* Removing change listeners */
MyOtherStore.removeChangeListener(updateView);
The Dispatcher
is a simple constructor that takes no arguments. You construct a Dispatcher
like so:
var MyDispatcher = new Dispatcher();
// That's all!
This registers a new store to the dispatcher. The store
argument can be anything, but a TinyFlux Store
object is recommended. The callback
will be the function that's called for handling an action.
Example usage:
var MyStore = {};
MyDispatcher.register(MyStore, function(action) {
// ...
});
Note: If you use a custom object like in this example instead of a TinyFlux Store
, your callback needs to return whether or not it emitted a change (boolean). If you use the TinyFlux Store
, this will be handled automatically.
This dispatches the supplied object, action
, handing it to all the registered stores.
Example usage:
MyDispatcher.dispatch({
type: ACTION_TYPE,
property: // ...
});
When called it makes sure that stores 1
through N
have handled the current action before continuing in the current callback.
Note: Must be called from within a store callback.
Example usage:
var MyStore = {};
MyDispatcher.register(MyStore, function(action) {
// ...
});
var MyOtherStore = {};
MyDispatcher.register(MyOtherStore, function(action) {
// ... might execute before MyStore, might execute after MyStore
MyDispatcher.waitFor(MyStore);
// ... will definitely execute after MyStore
});
Tells you whether any of the stores from 1
through N
have emitted a change. If any have, it'll return true
, otherwise false
.
Note: Must be called from within a store callback.
Example usage:
var MyStore = {};
MyDispatcher.register(MyStore, function(action) {
// ...
});
var MyOtherStore = {};
MyDispatcher.register(MyOtherStore, function(action) {
MyDispatcher.waitFor(MyStore);
if (!MyDispatcher.didEmitChange(MyStore))
return;
// ... will only execute if MyStore has changed.
// ... useful for creating stores whos data depends on other stores
});
Internal functions...
The Store
is a constructor for creating a TinyFlux Store
object that gives you all the functionality you want from a Flux Store in a simple package.
A Store
works like so:
var MyStore = new Store({
dispatcher: MyDispatcher, // what Dispatcher does this store listen to?
initialize: function() {
this.myPrivateNumber = 0; // only accessible from inside the store
this.myPrivateFunction = function() {
// 'this' can always from within private functions as well
return this.myPrivateNumber * 2;
};
},
callback: function(action) {
// this callback function is automatically registered with the dispatcher: MyDispatcher
switch (action.type) {
case INCREMENT_NUMBER:
this.myPrivateNumber++;
this.emitChange(); // call this to emit a change
break;
default:
break;
}
},
getPrivateNumber: function() {
// public function
return this.myPrivateNumber;
},
getPrivateCalculation: function() {
return this.myPrivateFunction();
}
});
The methods you define in the constructor object will be available.
Example usage:
MyStore.getPrivateNumber();
This method allows you to listen for changes emitted by the Store
.
Example usage:
MyStore.addChangeListener(function() {
updateUI();
});
This method allows you to remove callbacks from the Store
.
Example usage in a React component:
var MyComponent = React.createComponent({
componentWillMount: function() {
MyStore.addChangeListener(this.handleChange);
},
componentWillUnmount: function() {
MyStore.removeChangeListener(this.handleChange);
},
handleChange: function() {
// ...
},
render: function() {
// ...
}
});