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vue-xs

v0.1.2

Published

XStream bindings for Vue

Downloads

18

Readme

vue-xs

English | 简体中文

Simple xstream binding for Vue.js. It also supports subscriptions for generic observables that implement the .addListener and .removeListener interface. For example, you can use it to subscribe to most.js or Falcor streams, but some features require xstream to work.

Installation

NPM + ES2015

npm install vue vue-xs xstream --save
import Vue from 'vue'
import xstream from 'xstream'
import VueXS from 'vue-xs'
import fromEvent from 'xstream/extra/fromEvent'

// tada!
Vue.use(VueXS, {
  Stream: xstream,
  fromEvent: fromEvent
})

Usage

// provide XStream streams with the `subscriptions` option
new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  subscriptions: {
    msg: messageStream
  }
})
<!-- bind to it normally in templates -->
<div>{{ msg }}</div>

The subscriptions options can also take a function so that you can return unique streams for each component instance:

Vue.component('foo', {
  subscriptions: function () {
    return {
      msg: xstream.create(...)
    }
  }
})

The streams are exposed as vm.$streams:

var vm = new Vue({
  subscriptions: {
    msg: messageStream
  }
})

vm.$streams.msg.addListener({
  next: msg => console.log(msg)
})

v-stream: Streaming DOM Events

This feature requires XStream fromEvent.

vue-xs provides the v-stream directive which allows you to stream DOM events to a Stream. The syntax is similar to v-on where the directive argument is the event name, and the binding value is the target Stream.

<button v-stream:click="plus$">+</button>

Note that you need to declare plus$ as an instance of xstream on the vm instance before the render happens, just like you need to declare data. You can do that right in the subscriptions function:

new Vue({
  subscriptions () {
    // declare the receiving Subjects
    this.plus$ = xstream.create()
    // ...then create subscriptions using the Subjects as source stream.
    // the source stream emits in the form of { event: HTMLEvent, data?: any }
    return {
      count: this.plus$.map(() => 1)
        .fold((total, change) => total + change, 0)
    }
  }
})

Or, use the domStreams convenience option:

new Vue({
  domStreams: ['plus$'],
  subscriptions () {
    // use this.plus$
  }
})

Finally, you can pass additional data to the stream using the alternative syntax:

<button v-stream:click="{ stream: plus$, data: someData }">+</button>

This is useful when you need to pass along temporary variables like v-for iterators. You can get the data by simply plucking it from the source stream:

const plusData$ = this.plus$.map(({data}) => data)

you can also pass along extra options (passed along to native addEventListener as the 3rd argument):

<button v-stream:click="{
  stream: plus$,
  data: someData,
  options: { once: true, passive: true, capture: true }
}">+</button>

See example for actual usage.

Other API Methods

$watchAsStream(expOrFn, [options])

This feature requires XStream fromEvent.

This is a prototype method added to instances. You can use it to create an stream from a value watcher. The emitted value is in the format of { newValue, oldValue }:

var vm = new Vue({
  data: {
    a: 1
  },
  subscriptions () {
    // declaratively map to another property with Rx operators
    return {
      aPlusOne: this.$watchAsStream('a')
        .map(({newValue}) => newValue)
        .map(a => a + 1)
    }
  }
})

// or produce side effects...
vm.$watchAsStream('a')
  .addListener({
    next: ({ newValue, oldValue }) => console.log('stream value', newValue, oldValue),
    error: err => console.error(err),
    complete: () => console.log('complete')
  })

The optional options object accepts the same options as vm.$watch.

$eventToStream(event)

This feature requires XStream fromEvent.

Convert vue.$on (including lifecycle events) to Streams. The emitted value is in the format of { name, msg }:

var vm = new Vue({
  created () {
    this.$eventToStream('customEvent')
	  .addListener({
      next: (event) => console.log(event.name,event.msg)
    })
  }
})

// vm.$once vue-xs version
this.$eventToStream('customEvent')
  .take(1)

// Another way to auto unsub:
let beforeDestroy$ = this.$eventToStream('hook:beforeDestroy').take(1)
xstream.periodic(500)
  .takeUntil(beforeDestroy$)

$addListenerTo(stream, {next, error, complete})

This is a prototype method added to instances. You can use it to subscribe to an stream, but let VueRx manage the unsubscribe(removeListener).

var vm = new Vue({
  mounted () {
    this.$addListenerTo(xstream.periodic(1000), {
      next: function (count) {
        console.log(count)
      }
    })
  }
})

$fromDOMEvent(selector, event)

This feature requires XStream fromEvent.

This is a prototype method added to instances. Use it to create an stream from DOM events within the instances' element. This is similar to XStream fromEvent, but usable inside the subscriptions function even before the DOM is actually rendered.

selector is for finding descendant nodes under the component root element, if you want to listen to events from root element itself, pass null as first argument.

var vm = new Vue({
  subscriptions () {
    return {
      inputValue: this.$fromDOMEvent('input', 'keyup').map(({target}) => target && target.value)
    }
  }
})

$createStreamMethod(methodName)

This feature requires XStream fromEvent.

Convert function calls to stream sequence which emits the call arguments.

This is a prototype method added to instances. Use it to create a stream from a function name. The function will be assigned as a vm method.

<custom-form :onSubmit="submitHandler"></custom-form>
var vm = new Vue({
  subscriptions () {
    return {
      // requires `share` operator
      formData: this.$createStreamMethod('submitHandler')
    }
  }
})

You can use the streamMethods option to make it more declarative:

new Vue({
  streamMethods: {
    submitHandler:'submitHandler$'
    // or with Array shothand: ['submitHandler']
  }
})

The above will automatically create two things on the instance:

  1. A submitHandler method which can be bound to in template with v-on;
  2. A submitHandler$ stream which will be the stream emitting calls to submitHandler.

example

Caveats

You cannot use the watch option to watch subscriptions, because it is processed before the subscriptions are set up. But you can use $watch in the created hook instead.

Example

See /examples for some simple examples.

License

MIT