Adobe® Flex® 4 Language Reference
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flash.events 
IEventDispatcher 
Packageflash.events
Interfacepublic interface IEventDispatcher
Implementors AbstractService, DataManager, EventDispatcher, LinkElement, OLAPCube, OnDemandEventDispatcher, ShaderFilter, Style, TextFlow

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

The IEventDispatcher interface defines methods for adding or removing event listeners, checks whether specific types of event listeners are registered, and dispatches events.

Event targets are an important part of the Flash® Player and Adobe AIR event model. The event target serves as the focal point for how events flow through the display list hierarchy. When an event such as a mouse click or a keypress occurs, an event object is dispatched into the event flow from the root of the display list. The event object makes a round-trip journey to the event target, which is conceptually divided into three phases: the capture phase includes the journey from the root to the last node before the event target's node; the target phase includes only the event target node; and the bubbling phase includes any subsequent nodes encountered on the return trip to the root of the display list.

In general, the easiest way for a user-defined class to gain event dispatching capabilities is to extend EventDispatcher. If this is impossible (that is, if the class is already extending another class), you can instead implement the IEventDispatcher interface, create an EventDispatcher member, and write simple hooks to route calls into the aggregated EventDispatcher.

View the examples



Public Methods
 MethodDefined By
  
addEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false, priority:int = 0, useWeakReference:Boolean = false):void
Registers an event listener object with an EventDispatcher object so that the listener receives notification of an event.
IEventDispatcher
  
Dispatches an event into the event flow.
IEventDispatcher
  
Checks whether the EventDispatcher object has any listeners registered for a specific type of event.
IEventDispatcher
  
removeEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false):void
Removes a listener from the EventDispatcher object.
IEventDispatcher
  
Checks whether an event listener is registered with this EventDispatcher object or any of its ancestors for the specified event type.
IEventDispatcher
Method Detail

addEventListener

()method
public function addEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false, priority:int = 0, useWeakReference:Boolean = false):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

Registers an event listener object with an EventDispatcher object so that the listener receives notification of an event. You can register event listeners on all nodes in the display list for a specific type of event, phase, and priority.

After you successfully register an event listener, you cannot change its priority through additional calls to addEventListener(). To change a listener's priority, you must first call removeEventListener(). Then you can register the listener again with the new priority level.

After the listener is registered, subsequent calls to addEventListener() with a different value for either type or useCapture result in the creation of a separate listener registration. For example, if you first register a listener with useCapture set to true, it listens only during the capture phase. If you call addEventListener() again using the same listener object, but with useCapture set to false, you have two separate listeners: one that listens during the capture phase, and another that listens during the target and bubbling phases.

You cannot register an event listener for only the target phase or the bubbling phase. Those phases are coupled during registration because bubbling applies only to the ancestors of the target node.

When you no longer need an event listener, remove it by calling EventDispatcher.removeEventListener(); otherwise, memory problems might result. Objects with registered event listeners are not automatically removed from memory because the garbage collector does not remove objects that still have references.

Copying an EventDispatcher instance does not copy the event listeners attached to it. (If your newly created node needs an event listener, you must attach the listener after creating the node.) However, if you move an EventDispatcher instance, the event listeners attached to it move along with it.

If the event listener is being registered on a node while an event is also being processed on this node, the event listener is not triggered during the current phase but may be triggered during a later phase in the event flow, such as the bubbling phase.

If an event listener is removed from a node while an event is being processed on the node, it is still triggered by the current actions. After it is removed, the event listener is never invoked again (unless it is registered again for future processing).

Parameters

type:String — The type of event.
 
listener:Function — The listener function that processes the event. This function must accept an event object as its only parameter and must return nothing, as this example shows:

function(evt:Event):void

The function can have any name.
 
useCapture:Boolean (default = false) — Determines whether the listener works in the capture phase or the target and bubbling phases. If useCapture is set to true, the listener processes the event only during the capture phase and not in the target or bubbling phase. If useCapture is false, the listener processes the event only during the target or bubbling phase. To listen for the event in all three phases, call addEventListener() twice, once with useCapture set to true, then again with useCapture set to false.
 
priority:int (default = 0) — The priority level of the event listener. Priorities are designated by a 32-bit integer. The higher the number, the higher the priority. All listeners with priority n are processed before listeners of priority n-1. If two or more listeners share the same priority, they are processed in the order in which they were added. The default priority is 0.
 
useWeakReference:Boolean (default = false) — Determines whether the reference to the listener is strong or weak. A strong reference (the default) prevents your listener from being garbage-collected. A weak reference does not.

Class-level member functions are not subject to garbage collection, so you can set useWeakReference to true for class-level member functions without subjecting them to garbage collection. If you set useWeakReference to true for a listener that is a nested inner function, the function will be garbge-collected and no longer persistent. If you create references to the inner function (save it in another variable) then it is not garbage-collected and stays persistent.

dispatchEvent

()method 
public function dispatchEvent(event:Event):Boolean

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

Dispatches an event into the event flow. The event target is the EventDispatcher object upon which dispatchEvent() is called.

Parameters

event:Event — The event object dispatched into the event flow.

Returns
Boolean — A value of true unless preventDefault() is called on the event, in which case it returns false.

hasEventListener

()method 
public function hasEventListener(type:String):Boolean

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

Checks whether the EventDispatcher object has any listeners registered for a specific type of event. This allows you to determine where an EventDispatcher object has altered handling of an event type in the event flow hierarchy. To determine whether a specific event type will actually trigger an event listener, use IEventDispatcher.willTrigger().

The difference between hasEventListener() and willTrigger() is that hasEventListener() examines only the object to which it belongs, whereas willTrigger() examines the entire event flow for the event specified by the type parameter.

Parameters

type:String — The type of event.

Returns
Boolean — A value of true if a listener of the specified type is registered; false otherwise.

See also

removeEventListener

()method 
public function removeEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

Removes a listener from the EventDispatcher object. If there is no matching listener registered with the EventDispatcher object, a call to this method has no effect.

Parameters

type:String — The type of event.
 
listener:Function — The listener object to remove.
 
useCapture:Boolean (default = false) — Specifies whether the listener was registered for the capture phase or the target and bubbling phases. If the listener was registered for both the capture phase and the target and bubbling phases, two calls to removeEventListener() are required to remove both: one call with useCapture set to true, and another call with useCapture set to false.

willTrigger

()method 
public function willTrigger(type:String):Boolean

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Runtime Versions: AIR 1.0 Flash Player 9

Checks whether an event listener is registered with this EventDispatcher object or any of its ancestors for the specified event type. This method returns true if an event listener is triggered during any phase of the event flow when an event of the specified type is dispatched to this EventDispatcher object or any of its descendants.

The difference between hasEventListener() and willTrigger() is that hasEventListener() examines only the object to which it belongs, whereas willTrigger() examines the entire event flow for the event specified by the type parameter.

Parameters

type:String — The type of event.

Returns
Boolean — A value of true if a listener of the specified type will be triggered; false otherwise.
IEventDispatcherExample.as

The following example uses the IEventDispatcherExample and DecoratedDispatcher sample classes to show how the IEventDispatcher class can be implemented and used. The example accomplishes this by implementing each method of DecoratedDispatcher in the same manner as in EventDispatcher. Within the constructor for IEventDispatcherExample, a new instance (named decorDispatcher) of the DecoratedDispatcher class is constructed and the decorDispatcher variable is used to call addEventListener() with the custom event doSomething, which is then handled by didSomething(), which prints a line of text using trace().
 
package {
        import flash.events.Event;
        import flash.display.Sprite;
       
        public class IEventDispatcherExample extends Sprite {
                public function IEventDispatcherExample() {
                        var decorDispatcher:DecoratedDispatcher = new DecoratedDispatcher();
                        decorDispatcher.addEventListener("doSomething", didSomething);
                        decorDispatcher.dispatchEvent(new Event("doSomething"));
                }
               
                public function didSomething(evt:Event):void {
                        trace(">> didSomething");
                }
        }
}

import flash.events.IEventDispatcher;
import flash.events.EventDispatcher;
import flash.events.Event;
               
class DecoratedDispatcher implements IEventDispatcher {       
    private var dispatcher:EventDispatcher;
               
    public function DecoratedDispatcher() {
        dispatcher = new EventDispatcher(this);
    }
           
    public function addEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false, priority:int = 0, useWeakReference:Boolean = false):void{
        dispatcher.addEventListener(type, listener, useCapture, priority);
    }
           
    public function dispatchEvent(evt:Event):Boolean{
        return dispatcher.dispatchEvent(evt);
    }
    
    public function hasEventListener(type:String):Boolean{
        return dispatcher.hasEventListener(type);
    }
    
    public function removeEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false):void{
        dispatcher.removeEventListener(type, listener, useCapture);
    }
                   
    public function willTrigger(type:String):Boolean {
        return dispatcher.willTrigger(type);
    }
}