Attribute change events are one of the key benefits of using attributes to maintain state for your objects, instead of regular object properties. This example shows how you can listen for attribute change events and work with the event payload they receive.
In this example, we'll look at how you can setup listeners for attribute change events, and work with the event payload which the listeners receive.
We start by setting up the same custom class we created for the basic example with 3 attributes foo
, bar
and foobar
, using the code below:
YUI().use("attribute", "node", function(Y) { // Setup a custom class with attribute support function MyClass(cfg) { // Setup attribute configuration var attrs = { "foo" : { value:5 }, "bar" : { value:"Hello World!" }, "foobar" : { value:true } }; this.addAttrs(attrs, cfg); } Y.augment(MyClass, Y.Attribute); });
Once we have an instance of the custom class, we can use the on
and after
methods provided by Attribute, to listen for changes in the value of each of the attributes:
var o1 = new MyClass(); ... // Event Listners o1.after("fooChange", function(e) { displayEvent(e, "After fooChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); }); o1.after("barChange", function(e) { displayEvent(e, "After barChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); }); o1.on("foobarChange", function(e) { if (preventFoobarChk.get("checked")) { // Calling preventDefault, in an "on" listener // will prevent the attribute change from occuring // and the after listener being called. e.preventDefault(); displayEvent(null, "On foobarChange (prevented)"); } }); o1.after("foobarChange", function(e) { // This foobar after listener will not get called, // if we end up preventing default in the "on" // listener above. displayEvent(e, "After foobarChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); });
As seen in the above code, the event type for attribute change events is created by concatenating the attribute name with "Change"
(e.g. "fooChange"
), and this event type is used for both the on
and after
subscription methods. Whenever an attribute value is changed through Attribute's set
method, both "on" and "after" subscribers are notified.
on : Subscribers to the "on" moment, will be notified before any actual state change has occurred. This provides the opportunity to prevent the state change from occurring, using the preventDefault
method of the event facade object passed to the subscriber. If you use get
to retrieve the value of the attribute in an "on" subscriber, you will receive the current, unchanged value. However the event facade provides access to the value which the attribute is being set to, through it's newVal
property.
after : Subscribers to the "after" moment, will be notified after the attribute's state has been updated. This provides the opportunity to update state in other parts of your application, in response to a change in the attribute's state.
Based on the definition above, after
listeners are not invoked if state change is prevented, for example, due to one of the on
listeners calling preventDefault
on the event object, as is done in the on
listener for the foobar
attribute:
o1.on("foobarChange", function(event) { // Calling preventDefault, in an "on" listener // will prevent the attribute change from occurring // and prevent the after listeners from being called displayEvent(event, "on foobarChange (change prevented)"); event.preventDefault(); });
For primitive values (non-Object values), the after
listeners will also not be invoked if there is no change in the actual value of the attribute. That is, if the new value of the attribute is the same as the current value (based on the identity operator, ===
), the after
listeners will not be notified because there is no change in state. You can see this, by setting an attribute to the same value twice in a row.
The event object (an instance of EventFacade) passed to attribute change event subscribers, has the following interesting properties and methods related to attribute management:
set
method (e.g. o1.set("x.y.z")
). This property will contain the path to the property which was changed.The "Attribute Event Based Speed Dating" example provides a look at how you can leverage attribute change events in your applications, to decouple logic both within your class, and when interacting with other objects.
<form id="changeValue" class="attrs" action="#"> <div class="header">Enter a new value and click the "Change Value" button:</div> <div class="body"> <p> <label for="attrSel">Attribute</label>: <select id="attrSel"> <option value="foo">foo</option> <option value="bar">bar</option> <option value="foobar">foobar</option> </select> <label id="preventFoobar" class="hidden"><input type="checkbox" checked="true"> Prevent change</label> </p> <p><label for="currentVal">Current Value</label>: <span id="currentVal"></span></p> <p><label for="newVal">New Value</label>: <input type="text" id="newVal" /></p> </div> <div class="footer"> <button type="submit">Change Value</button> </div> </form> <div id="example-out"></div> <script type="text/javascript"> // Get a new YUI instance YUI().use("node", "attribute", "escape", function(Y) { // Setup a custom class with attribute support function MyClass(cfg) { // Setup attribute configuration var attrs = { "foo" : { value:5 }, "bar" : { value:"Hello World!" }, "foobar" : { value:true } }; this.addAttrs(attrs, cfg); } Y.augment(MyClass, Y.Attribute); var o1 = new MyClass(); function displayEvent(e, title) { var str = '<div class="event"><div class="event-title">' + title + '</div>'; if (e) { str += '<ul class="event-props"><li>e.attrName: ' + e.attrName + '</li><li>e.prevVal: ' + Y.Escape.html(e.prevVal + "") + '</li><li>e.newVal: ' + Y.Escape.html(e.newVal + "") + '</li></ul></div>'; } str += '</div>'; Y.one("#example-out").prepend(str); } // Start Example Form Handling var attrSel = Y.one("#attrSel"); var newValTxt = Y.one("#newVal"); var currentValSpan = Y.one("#currentVal"); var preventFoobarChk = Y.one("#preventFoobar input[type=checkbox]"); var preventFoobarLbl = Y.one("#preventFoobar"); var attrOpts = attrSel.get("options"); function updateVal(e) { e.preventDefault(); var selIndex = attrSel.get("selectedIndex"); var attr = attrOpts.item(selIndex).get("value"); o1.set(attr, newValTxt.get("value")); } Y.on("submit", updateVal, "#changeValue"); function populateCurrentValue() { var selIndex = attrSel.get("selectedIndex"); var attr = attrOpts.item(selIndex).get("value"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(o1.get(attr) + "")); newValTxt.set("value", ""); if (attr === "foobar") { preventFoobarLbl.removeClass("hidden"); } else { preventFoobarLbl.addClass("hidden"); } } populateCurrentValue(); Y.on("change", populateCurrentValue, attrSel); // End Example Form Handling // Attribute Change Event Listners o1.after("fooChange", function(e) { displayEvent(e, "After fooChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); }); o1.after("barChange", function(e) { displayEvent(e, "After barChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); }); o1.on("foobarChange", function(e) { if (preventFoobarChk.get("checked")) { // Calling preventDefault, in an "on" listener // will prevent the attribute change from occuring // and the after listener being called. e.preventDefault(); displayEvent(null, "On foobarChange (prevented)"); } }); o1.after("foobarChange", function(e) { // This foobar after listener will not get called, // if we end up preventing default in the "on" // listener above. displayEvent(e, "After foobarChange"); currentValSpan.set("innerHTML", Y.Escape.html(e.newVal+"")); }); }); </script>