Debounce Watch
⚠ In active development and subject to major change! ⚠
There are some great libraries out there for triggering code when files change, including chokidar and nodemon.
A file watcher utility that debounces file changes before triggering an event is much harder to find. That's the purpose of Debounce Watch.
📢 Announcement 📢 The deployed version of this package found on npm is from an internal fork of the public repo. The public repo will eventually be deleted. Non-Bscotch users should use the npm package for the most up-to-date version.
What's "Debouncing"?
The goal of "Debouncing" is to prevent an event-invoked action from being invoked multiple times while redundant events keep happening. In essence, once the events start we want to wait until they stop before firing off some action in response.
This is useful for cases where file system changes occur in batches but you only want subsequent actions to occur once all changes are complete (e.g. when compiling a Typescript project to JavaScript).
Nodemon and chokidar provide delay options to approximately get at this, such that the triggered action will occur that amount of time after the first event is detected. However, there is no way to guarantee that the delay will encompass all events in a batch.
How does Debounce Watch work?
Debounce Watch uses chokidar to watch for file system changes, collects a list of all changes that have occurred, and calls a function you provide on that list once the file system changes become less frequent than your debounce timeout.
Requirements
- Available as ECMAScript Modules only, so will not work with Node.js < v13.2
Usage
Install with npm install @bscotch/debounce-watch
.
Use in your code:
import { debounceWatch } from '@bscotch/debounce-watch';
import type { DebouncedEventsProcessor } from '@bscotch/debounce-watch';
const processDebouncedEvents: DebouncedEventsProcessor = (events) => {
for (const event of events) {
if (event.event == 'add') {
}
}
};
const watcher = await debounceWatch('folder/of/files', processDebouncedEvents, {
onlyFileExtensions: ['ts', 'js'],
debounceWaitSeconds: 0.2,
allowOverlappingRuns: true,
});