arrive.js provides events to watch for DOM elements creation and removal. It makes use of Mutation Observers internally.
Download arrive.min.js (latest)
or use Bower to install:
# install arrive.js and add it to bower.json dependencies
$ bower install arrive --save
Node.js users can install using npm:
$ npm install arrive --save
Use arrive
event to watch for elements creation:
// watch for creation of an element which satisfies the selector ".test-elem"
document.arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
// newElem refers to the newly created element
});
// the above event would watch for creation of element in whole document
// it's better to be more specific whenever possible, for example
document.querySelector(".container-1").arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
});
// you can bind event to multiple elements at once
// this will bind arrive event to all the elements returned by document.querySelectorAll()
document.querySelectorAll(".box").arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
});
Make sure to remove listeners when they are no longer needed, it's better for performance:
// unbind all arrive events on document element
document.unbindArrive();
// unbind all arrive events on a specific element
document.querySelector(".box").unbindArrive();
// unbind all arrive events on document element which are watching for ".test-elem" selector
document.unbindArrive(".test-elem");
// unbind only a specific callback
document.unbindArrive(callbackFunc);
// unbind only a specific callback on ".test-elem" selector
document.unbindArrive(".test-elem", callbackFunc);
// unbind all arrive events
Arrive.unbindAllArrive();
As of v2.0 arrive
event accepts an optional options
object as 2nd argument. Options object consists of following:
var options = {
fireOnAttributesModification: boolean, // Defaults to false. Setting it to true would make arrive event fire on existing elements which start to satisfy selector after some modification in DOM attributes (an arrive event won't fire twice for a single element even if the option is true). If false, it'd only fire for newly created elements.
onceOnly: boolean // Defaults to false. Setting it to true would ensure that registered callbacks fire only once. No need to unbind the event if the attribute is set to true, it'll automatically unbind after firing once.
existing: boolean // Defaults to false. Setting it to true would ensure that the registered callback is fired for the elements that already exist in the DOM and match the selector. If options.onceOnly is set, the callback is only called once with the first element matching the selector.
};
Example:
document.arrive(".test-elem", {fireOnAttributesModification: true}, function(newElem) {
// 'newElem' refers to the newly created element
});
Use leave
event to watch for elements removal.
The first arugument to leave must not be a descendent or child selector i.e. you cannot pass .page .test-elem
, instead, pass .test-elem
. It's because of a limitation in MutationObserver's api.
// watch for removal of an element which satisfies the selector ".test-elem"
document.querySelector(".container-1").leave(".test-elem", function(removedElem) {
// 'removedElem' refers to the newly removed element
});
You can unbind the leave
event in the same way as arrive
event, using unbindLeave
function i.e:
// unbind all leave events on document element
document.unbindLeave();
// unbind all leave events
Arrive.unbindAllLeave();
If you use jQuery, you can call all arrive functions on jQuery elements as well:
// watch for element creation in the whole HTML document
$(document).arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
// Note: newElem is a javascript element not a jQuery element
});
// this will attach arrive event to all elements returned by $(".container-1")
$(".container-1").arrive(".test-elem", function(newElem) {
// Note: newElem is a javascript element not a jQuery element
});
arrive.js is built over Mutation Observers which is introduced in DOM4. It's supported in latest versions of all popular browsers.
Browser | Supported Versions |
---|---|
Google Chrome | 27.0+ |
Firefox | 14.0+ |
Safari | 6.1+ |
Internet Explorer | 11.0+ |
Opera | 14.0+ |
If you want to report a bug or request a feature, use the Issues section. Before creating a new issue, search the existing ones to make sure that you're not creating a duplicate. When reporting a bug, be sure to include OS/browser version and steps/code to reproduce the bug, a JSFiddle would be great.
If you want to contribute to arrive, here is the workflow you should use:
- Fork the repository.
- Clone the forked repository locally.
- From the
dev
branch, create and checkout a new feature branch to work upon. (If you want to work on some minor bug fix, you can skip this step and continue to work indev
branch) - Make your changes in that branch (the actual source file is
/src/arrive.js
). - If sensible, add some jasmine tests in
/tests/spec/arriveSpec.js
file. - Make sure there are no regressions by executing the unit tests by opening the file
/tests/SpecRunner.html
in a browser. There is a button 'Run tests without jQuery' at the top left of th page, click that button to make sure that the tests passes without jQuery. Run the test cases in all major browsers. - Push the changes to your github repository.
- Submit a pull request from your repo back to the original repository.
- Once it is accepted, remember to pull those changes back into your develop branch!
- #70: Add Typescript types to the project
- #69: Option to watch for text change
- #64: Function firing twice in Firefox 56 on 2.4.1 (regression from bug 54)
- #60: Issue when expose arrive API to window
Keywords
javascript, js, jquery, node.js, watch, listen, creation, dynamically, removal, new, elements, DOM, dynamic, detect, insertions, event, bind, live, livequery