Python port of the extended Node.js EventEmitter 2 approach providing namespaces, wildcards and TTL.
Project description
pymitter
Python port of the extended Node.js EventEmitter 2 approach of https://github.com/asyncly/EventEmitter2 providing namespaces, wildcards and TTL.
Features
- Namespaces with wildcards
- Times to listen (TTL)
- Usage via decorators or callbacks
- Coroutine support
- Lightweight implementation, good performance
Installation
pymitter is a registered PyPI module, so the installation with pip is quite easy:
pip install pymitter
The last version with Python 2 support was v0.3.2 (tag, PypI).
Examples
Basic usage
from pymitter import EventEmitter
ee = EventEmitter()
# decorator usage
@ee.on("my_event")
def handler1(arg):
print("handler1 called with", arg)
# callback usage
def handler2(arg):
print("handler2 called with", arg)
ee.on("my_other_event", handler2)
# support for coroutine functions
@ee.on("my_third_event")
async def handler3(arg):
print("handler3 called with", arg)
# emit
ee.emit("my_event", "foo")
# -> "handler1 called with foo"
ee.emit("my_other_event", "bar")
# -> "handler2 called with bar"
ee.emit("my_third_event", "baz")
# -> "handler3 called with baz"
Coroutines
Wrapping async
functions outside an event loop will start an internal event loop and calls to emit
return synchronously.
from pymitter import EventEmitter
ee = EventEmitter()
# register an async function
@ee.on("my_event")
async def handler1(arg):
print("handler1 called with", arg)
# emit
ee.emit("my_event", "foo")
# -> "handler1 called with foo"
Wrapping async
functions inside an event loop a will use the running event loop and emit_async
is awaitable.
from pymitter import EventEmitter
ee = EventEmitter()
async def main():
# emit_async
awaitable = ee.emit_async("my_event", "foo")
# -> nothing printed yet
await awaitable
# -> "handler1 called with foo"
TTL (times to listen)
from pymitter import EventEmitter
ee = EventEmitter()
@ee.once("my_event")
def handler1():
print("handler1 called")
@ee.on("my_event", ttl=2)
def handler2():
print("handler2 called")
ee.emit("my_event")
# -> "handler1 called"
# -> "handler2 called"
ee.emit("my_event")
# -> "handler2 called"
ee.emit("my_event")
# nothing called anymore
Wildcards
from pymitter import EventEmitter
ee = EventEmitter(wildcard=True)
@ee.on("my_event.foo")
def handler1():
print("handler1 called")
@ee.on("my_event.bar")
def handler2():
print("handler2 called")
@ee.on("my_event.*")
def hander3():
print("handler3 called")
ee.emit("my_event.foo")
# -> "handler1 called"
# -> "handler3 called"
ee.emit("my_event.bar")
# -> "handler2 called"
# -> "handler3 called"
ee.emit("my_event.*")
# -> "handler1 called"
# -> "handler2 called"
# -> "handler3 called"
API
EventEmitter(wildcard=False, delimiter=".", new_listener=False, max_listeners=-1)
EventEmitter constructor. Note: always use kwargs for configuration.
When wildcard is True, wildcards are used as shown in this example.
delimiter is used to seperate namespaces within events.
If new_listener is True, the "new_listener" event is emitted every time a new listener is registered.
Functions listening to this event are passed (func, event=None)
.
max_listeners defines the maximum number of listeners per event.
Negative values mean infinity.
-
on(event, func=None, ttl=-1)
Registers a function to an event. When func is None, decorator usage is assumed. ttl defines the times to listen. Negative values mean infinity. Returns the function.
-
once(event, func=None)
Registers a function to an event with
ttl = 1
. When func is None, decorator usage is assumed. Returns the function. -
on_any(func=None)
Registers a function that is called every time an event is emitted. When func is None, decorator usage is assumed. Returns the function.
-
off(event, func=None)
Removes a function that is registered to an event. When func is None, decorator usage is assumed. Returns the function.
-
off_any(func=None)
Removes a function that was registered via
on_any()
. When func is None, decorator usage is assumed. Returns the function. -
off_all()
Removes all functions of all events.
-
listeners(event)
Returns all functions that are registered to an event. Wildcards are not applied.
-
listeners_any()
Returns all functions that were registered using
on_any()
. -
listeners_all()
Returns all registered functions.
-
emit(event, *args, **kwargs)
Emits an event. All functions of events that match event are invoked with args and kwargs in the exact order of their registeration. Wildcards might be applied. There is no return value.
Development
- Source hosted at GitHub
- Python module hostet at PyPI
- Report issues, questions, feature requests on GitHub Issues
Project details
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