Mitt
Tiny 200b functional event emitter / pubsub.
- Microscopic: weighs less than 200 bytes gzipped
- Useful: a wildcard
"*"
event type listens to all events
- Familiar: same names & ideas as Node's EventEmitter
- Functional: methods don't rely on
this
- Great Name: somehow mitt wasn't taken
Mitt was made for the browser, but works in any JavaScript runtime. It has no dependencies and supports IE9+.
Table of Contents
Install
This project uses node and npm. Go check them out if you don't have them locally installed.
$ npm install --save mitt
Then with a module bundler like rollup or webpack, use as you would anything else:
import mitt from 'mitt'
var mitt = require('mitt')
The UMD build is also available on unpkg:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/mitt/dist/mitt.umd.js"></script>
You can find the library on window.mitt
.
Usage
import mitt from 'mitt'
const emitter = mitt()
emitter.on('foo', e => console.log('foo', e) )
emitter.on('*', (type, e) => console.log(type, e) )
emitter.emit('foo', { a: 'b' })
emitter.all.clear()
function onFoo() {}
emitter.on('foo', onFoo)
emitter.off('foo', onFoo)
Typescript
Set "strict": true
in your tsconfig.json to get improved type inference for mitt
instance methods.
import mitt from 'mitt';
type Events = {
foo: string;
bar?: number;
};
const emitter = mitt<Events>();
emitter.on('foo', (e) => {});
emitter.emit('foo', 42);
Alternatively, you can use the provided Emitter
type:
import mitt, { Emitter } from 'mitt';
type Events = {
foo: string;
bar?: number;
};
const emitter: Emitter<Events> = mitt<Events>();
Examples & Demos
Preact + Mitt Codepen Demo
API
Table of Contents
Contribute
First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute!
Now, take a moment to be sure your contributions make sense to everyone else.
Reporting Issues
Found a problem? Want a new feature? First of all see if your issue or idea has already been reported.
If don't, just open a new clear and descriptive issue.
Submitting pull requests
Pull requests are the greatest contributions, so be sure they are focused in scope, and do avoid unrelated commits.
- Fork it!
- Clone your fork:
git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/mitt
- Navigate to the newly cloned directory:
cd mitt
- Create a new branch for the new feature:
git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Install the tools necessary for development:
npm install
- Make your changes.
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request with full remarks documenting your changes.
License
MIT License Ā© Jason Miller