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25 - Event Capture, Propagation, Bubbling and Once

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Event Capture, Propagation, Bubbling and Once

Notes

This exercises uses a set of nested divs with a click event attached to each of them:

<div class="one">
	<div class="two">
		<div class="three">
		</div>
	</div>
</div>
divs.forEach(div => div.addEventListener('click', logText));

So, how does it work when an event is fired???

  1. The user clicks the <div class="three">.

  2. Then the browser ripples down, so goes from the most external element to the deepest one and captures all off the events binded to them. This process is called Event Capture. This process has the aim to figure it out what the user has clicked on:

    // The browser stores the events in this order
    // Event attached to <div class="one">
    // Event attached to <div class="two">
    // Event attached to <div class="three">
  3. At this moment the events are not fired yet. So starting from the bottom, the browser does something called bubble up and fires each of these events:

    // The browser fires the events in this order
    // Event attached to <div class="three">
    // Event attached to <div class="two">
    // Event attached to <div class="one">

    But we can change the way this works using the capture property:

    divs.forEach(div => div.addEventListener('click', logText, {
    	capture: true   	// by default is false
    }));

    So now when the browser captures each of the events, it will inmediately fire them. That means that the handler for the event is not going to get run on the buble up but rather on the capture down:

    // The browser fires the events in this order
    // Event attached to <div class="one">
    // Event attached to <div class="two">
    // Event attached to <div class="three">
  4. We can also call stop propagation in the event handler, this way it will stop a buble up process, firing only the deepest event, or viceversa:

    function logText(e) {
    	console.log(this.classList.value);
    	e.stopPropagation();
    }
    // now the the browser only fires the one event because capture=true
    // Event attached to <div class="one">
  • Last but not least, Once is a very new feature in the browser, that allows to listen for an event and then unbinds itself, so the event will never be triggered again:

     	divs.forEach(div => div.addEventListener('click', logText, {
     		capture: false,
     		once: true
     	}));
    
     	// this is like doing 
     	divs.forEach(div => div.removeEventListener('click', logText));