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@frui.ts/dirtycheck
Advanced tools
@frui.ts/dirtycheck
Dirty checking is based on the idea that the dirty flag of a particular property of an entity can be handled as a computed value comparing the current value of the property with the value at the time of dirty check initialization. Dirty watcher is thus just a factory that can generate such computed properties.
This feature is usually used to indicate which UI fields have been changed during the current session and have not been saved yet.
A dirty checker not only maintains information about whether an entity is dirty but also if the dirty flag should be displayed to the user (the isDirtyFlagVisible
property). For example, you don't want to display dirty flags when creating a new entity. You can set the isDirtyFlagVisible
property when instantiating / attaching a watcher or anytime later. The visibility is also turned on when checkDirtyChanges()
is called for the first time.
Dirty watcher that automatically observes the target entity and handles respective dirty flags.
// direct usage
const target = { firstName: "John" };
const watcher = new AutomaticDirtyWatcher(target, false);
let isTargetDirty = watcher.isDirty; // false
let isPropertyDirty = watcher.dirtyProperties.firstName; // false
target.firstName = "Jane";
isTargetDirty = watcher.isDirty; // true
isPropertyDirty = watcher.dirtyProperties.firstName; // true
watcher.reset();
isTargetDirty = watcher.isDirty; // false
isPropertyDirty = watcher.dirtyProperties.firstName; // false
// with helpers
import {
attachAutomaticDirtyWatcher,
isDirty,
hasVisibleDirtyChanges,
checkDirtyChanges,
resetDirty
} from "@frui.ts/dirtycheck";
const target = { firstName: "John" };
attachAutomaticDirtyWatcher(target);
// you can also use:
// const target = attachAutomaticDirtyWatcher({ firstName: "John" });
let dirty = isDirty(target); // false
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // false
let dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false
target.firstName = "Jane";
dirty = isDirty(target); // true
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // true
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false!! - the entity is dirty but it is not indicated yet (e.g., UI for new entities)
dirty = checkDirtyChanges(target); // true - sets isDirtyFlagVisible to true and returns isDirty value
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // true
resetDirty(target);
dirty = isDirty(target); // false
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // false
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false
Implements the interface IDirtyWatcher
, but you have to set dirty flags on properties manually.
// direct usage
const target = { firstName: "John" };
const watcher = new ManualDirtyWatcher(false);
watcher.setDirty("firstName");
let isTargetDirty = watcher.isDirty; // true
let isPropertyDirty = watcher.dirtyProperties.firstName; // true
watcher.reset();
isTargetDirty = watcher.isDirty; // false
isPropertyDirty = watcher.dirtyProperties.firstName; // false
// with helpers
import {
attachManualDirtyWatcher,
isDirty,
hasVisibleDirtyChanges,
setDirty,
checkDirtyChanges,
resetDirty
} from "@frui.ts/dirtycheck";
const target = { firstName: "John" };
attachManualDirtyWatcher(target);
// you can also use:
// const target = attachManualDirtyWatcher({ firstName: "John" });
let dirty = isDirty(target); // false
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // false
let dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false
setDirty(target, target, "firstName");
dirty = isDirty(target); // true
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // true
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false!! - the entity is dirty but we don't want to indicate that (e.g., UI for new entities)
dirty = checkDirtyChanges(target); // true - it enables the visibility of dirty changes and returns isDirty value
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // true
resetDirty(target);
dirty = isDirty(target); // false
dirty = isDirty(target, "firstName"); // false
dirtyDisplayed = hasVisibleDirtyChanges(target); // false
FAQs
Observable dirty checking
The npm package @frui.ts/dirtycheck receives a total of 238 weekly downloads. As such, @frui.ts/dirtycheck popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @frui.ts/dirtycheck demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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