@solid-primitives/event-listener
A set of primitives that help with listening to DOM and Custom Events.
Non-reactive primitives:
makeEventListener
— Non-reactive primitive for adding event listeners that gets removed onCleanup.makeEventListenerStack
— Creates a stack of event listeners, that will be automatically disposed on cleanup.
Reactive primitives:
Component global listeners:
Callback Wrappers
Installation
npm install @solid-primitives/event-listener
yarn add @solid-primitives/event-listener
makeEventListener
Added id @2.0.0
Can be used to listen to DOM or Custom Events on window, document, or any EventTarget.
Event listener is automatically removed on root cleanup. The clear() function is also returned for calling it early.
How to use it
import { makeEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const clear = makeEventListener(
document.getElementById("myButton"),
"mousemove",
e => console.log("x:", e.pageX, "y:", e.pageY),
{ passive: true }
);
clear();
let ref!: HTMLDivElement
onMount(() => {
makeEventListener(ref, "click", e => {...}, { passive: true });
});
<div ref={ref} />;
Custom events
makeEventListener<{ myCustomEvent: MyEvent; other: Event }, "myCustomEvent">(
window,
"myCustomEvent",
() => console.log("yup!"),
);
makeEventListenerStack
Added id @2.0.0
Creates a stack of event listeners, that will be automatically disposed on cleanup.
How to use it
import { makeEventListenerStack } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const [listen, clear] = makeEventListenerStack(target, { passive: true });
listen("mousemove", handleMouse);
listen("dragover", handleMouse);
clear();
createEventListener
Reactive version of makeEventListener
, that can take signal target
and type
arguments to apply new listeners once changed.
How to use it
import { createEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const [ref, setRef] = createSignal<HTMLElement>();
const [type, setType] = createSignal("mousemove");
createEventListener(ref, type, e => {...});
let ref;
createEventListener(() => ref, "mousemove", e => {});
<div ref={ref} />;
createEventListener(
document.getElementById("myButton"),
"mousemove",
e => console.log("x:", e.pageX, "y:", e.pageY),
{ passive: true }
);
Custom events
createEventListener<{ myCustomEvent: MyEvent; other: Event }, "myCustomEvent">(
window,
"myCustomEvent",
() => console.log("yup!"),
);
Removing event listeners manually
Since version @2.0.0
createEventListener
and other reactive primitives aren't returning a clear()
function, because of it's flawed behavior described in this issue.
Although there are still ways to remove attached event listeners:
- Changing reactive
target
or type
arguments to an empty array.
const [type, setType] = createSignal<"click" | []>("click");
createEventListener(window, type, e => {...});
setType([]);
- Wrapping usage of
createEventListener
primitive in Solid's createRoot
or createBranch
| createDisposable
from "@solid-primitives/rootless".
import { createDisposable } from "@solid-primitives/rootless";
const clear = createDisposable(() => createEventListener(element, "click", e => {...}));
clear();
Listening to multiple events
Added in @1.4.3
You can listen to multiple events with single createEventListener
primitive.
createEventListener(el, ["mousemove", "mouseenter", "mouseleave"], e => {});
Directive Usage
props passed to the directive are also reactive, so you can change handlers on the fly.
import { eventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
eventListener;
<button use:eventListener={["click", () => console.log("Click")]}>Click!</button>;
createEventSignal
Like createEventListener
, but events are handled with the returned signal, instead of with a callback.
How to use it
import { createEventSignal } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const lastEvent = createEventSignal(el, "mousemove", { passive: true });
createEffect(() => {
console.log(lastEvent()?.x, lastEvent()?.y);
});
createEventListenerMap
A helpful primitive that listens to a map of events. Handle them by individual callbacks.
How to use it
import { createEventListenerMap } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
createEventListenerMap(element, {
mousemove: mouseHandler,
mouseenter: e => {},
touchend: touchHandler,
});
const [target, setTarget] = createSignal(document.getElementById("abc"));
createEventListenerMap(
target,
{
mousemove: e => {},
touchstart: e => {},
},
{ passive: true },
);
createEventListenerMap<{
myEvent: MyEvent;
custom: Event;
other: Event;
}>(target, {
myEvent: e => {},
custom: e => {},
});
WindowEventListener
Listen to the window
DOM Events, using a component.
You can use it with any Solid's Control-Flow components, e.g. <Show/>
or <Switch/>
.
The event handler prop is reactive, so you can use it with signals.
How to use it
import { WindowEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
<WindowEventListener onMouseMove={e => console.log(e.x, e.y)} />;
DocumentEventListener
The same as WindowEventListener
, but listens to document
events.
How to use it
import { DocumentEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
<DocumentEventListener onMouseMove={e => console.log(e.x, e.y)} />;
Callback Wrappers
preventDefault
Wraps event handler with e.preventDefault()
call.
import { preventDefault, makeEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const handleClick = e => {
concole.log("Click!", e);
};
makeEventListener(window, "click", preventDefault(handleClick), true);
<div onClick={preventDefault(handleClick)} />;
stopPropagation
Wraps event handler with e.stopPropagation()
call.
import { stopPropagation, makeEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const handleClick = e => {
concole.log("Click!", e);
};
makeEventListener(window, "click", stopPropagation(handleClick), true);
<div onClick={stopPropagation(handleClick)} />;
stopImmediatePropagation
Wraps event handler with e.stopImmediatePropagation()
call.
import { stopImmediatePropagation, makeEventListener } from "@solid-primitives/event-listener";
const handleClick = e => {
concole.log("Click!", e);
};
makeEventListener(window, "click", stopImmediatePropagation(handleClick), true);
<div onClick={stopImmediatePropagation(handleClick)} />;
Demo
You may view a working example here: https://codesandbox.io/s/solid-primitives-event-listener-elti5
Changelog
See CHANGELOG.md