Observer pattern in JavaScript

The observer pattern (a subset of the asynchronous publish/subscribe pattern) is a software design pattern in which an object, called the subject, maintains a list of its dependents, called observers, and notifies them automatically of any state changes, usually by calling one of their methods. It is mainly used to implement distributed event handling systems.

Many times, i saw the observer word. For example, in extjs there is a Ext.util.Observable class.

Abstract base class that provides a common interface for publishing events. Subclasses are expected to to have a property “events” with all the events defined.

I look at the code and find something like this:

Ext.util.Observable = function() { };
Ext.util.Observable.prototype = (function() {    

return {

  addListener : function(eventName, fn, scope, o){

  },

          removeListener : function(eventName, fn, scope){

  }

    };

})();

Seems it just an abstract class to maintain functions relation to events.
I didn’t understand the inside logic of observer until i saw this article.
It’s about new feature of ASP.NET4.0 AJAX PREVIEW - JavaScript Observer Pattern, implemented in Sys.Observer.

First, there is an old-plain javascript object:

var latestPost = {title:"JavaScript Observer Patter", url:"..."};
function initComponent() {
$("").attr("href", latestPost.url).html(latestPost.title).appendTo("body");
}

We use this object to create a hyperlink in the DOM.
Second, After a period of time, we retrieve the latest post from server and update latestPost object. The question is how to notify the iniComponent function to execute again?

With the help of Sys.Observer in ASP.NET 4.0 AJAX PREVIEW:

Sys.Observer.makeObservable(latestPost);
Sys.Observer.addPropertyChanged(latestPost, iniComponent);
latestPost.beginUpdate();
latestPost.setValue("title", "I want an iphone.");
latestPost.endUpdate();

When you call the endUpdate function, the function iniComponent registered in lastedPost object has to be execute again.

 You see, the Sys.Observer’s logic should not much complex, which manage event callbacks and add some functions to the plain-old object. When the functions are called, just trigger the callbacks.

It’s clear - Observer, right?

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/sanshi/p/1504812.html