autocreate.js
provides a function that watches for the creation of elements matching a given selector. The create
callback is called for existing and later inserted elements. The destroy
callback is called whenever the element or one of its ancestors is removed from the DOM.
<div class="page-wrapper">
<ul class="slideshow">
<li class="slide">A</li>
<li class="slide">B</li>
<li class="slide">C</li>
</ul>
</div>
The context
object provided by the create
and destroy
callbacks can be used for arbitary content.
var module = autocreate({
// selector of elements to observe
selector: '.page-wrapper .slideshow',
// called for existing and inserted elements
create: (element, context) => {
// initialize hypothetical slideshow
context.slideshow = new Slideshow(element);
},
// called whenever the element or one of its ancestors is removed
destroy: (element, context) => {
// destroy slideshow
context.slideshow.destroy();
},
});
The following will call the create
callback:
var container = document.createElement('div');
container.innerHTML =
'<ul class="slideshow">' +
' <li class="slide">D</li>' +
' <li class="slide">E</li>' +
' <li class="slide">F</li>' +
'</ul>';
document.querySelector('.page-wrapper').appendChild(container);
The following will call the destroy
callback for each .slideshow
element:
var wrapper = document.querySelector('.page-wrapper');
wrapper.parentNode.removeChild(wrapper);
The parents
option restricts the search to the given elements. This can be a single element or a collection of elements inside an array or array-like object.
var module = autocreate({
// selector of element to initialize
selector: '.element',
// (optional) match only in given parent element(s)
parents: document.querySelectorAll('.wrapper'),
// called for existing and inserted elements
create: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
// called when element is removed
destroy: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
});
To destroy the module and stop watching for the selector, call the destroy
method on the returned module instance. This will also call the destroy
callback for each currently matched element.
module.destroy();
The observer function can also be called using jQuery
or u.js
. The following observes the whole document:
var module = $(document).autocreate({
selector: '.element',
create: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
destroy: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
});
The following searches only in .wrapper
elements. This is the same as using the parents
option.
var module = $('.wrapper').autocreate({
selector: '.element',
create: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
destroy: (element, context) => {
// ...
},
});