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Way for single event subscription? #65

Closed
saschanaz opened this issue Sep 15, 2023 · 3 comments · Fixed by #131
Closed

Way for single event subscription? #65

saschanaz opened this issue Sep 15, 2023 · 3 comments · Fixed by #131

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@saschanaz
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saschanaz commented Sep 15, 2023

I think this proposal is mostly for repeated events, but is there corresponding way of once: true in addEventListener?

Something like:

await element.on("click").takeImmediately()
@domfarolino
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Collaborator

Oh, I filed #66 and wrote #67 (which removes once: true from the event listener options that we use) before seeing this by the way. We could keep once in the event listener options, although it seems like your desire is not to use that directly, but instead introduce an operator that more-or-less gives you a Promise for a single Observable event, right? We've discussed adding .toPromise() recently (in contrast with toArray()), which I think offers some pretty explicit language, but also we have .first() currently commented-out in our WebIDL sketch, which I think satisfies this but with less explicit language. How do any of those sound?

My thought is that the .on() method would always create an Observable (over the "add event listener" internals) whose teardown is to remove the event listener. Something like toPromise() or first() would subscribe to the observable, and unsubscribe after the first event (thus removing the event listener like once: true would). Maybe we could just uncomment first() or rename it to toPromise() or takeImmediately()? I might prefer toPromise() to be extra explicit about the scheduling impact.

@benlesh
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benlesh commented Sep 21, 2023

One problem with a promise returning API is that you'll have an event in a different async context, where e.preventDefault() is too late.

This can be done like so:

await element.on('click').take(1).forEach(e => {
  // Do what you need do with the even in here.
  // Since this is synchronously dispatched, things like
  // e.preventDefault() can still be used.
});

chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Nov 30, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Nov 30, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Nov 30, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Nov 30, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 1, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 5, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 5, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 5, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add supported for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 7, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 7, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 7, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
aarongable pushed a commit to chromium/chromium that referenced this issue Dec 14, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <[email protected]>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <[email protected]>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1237501}
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 14, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <[email protected]>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <[email protected]>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1237501}
chromium-wpt-export-bot pushed a commit to web-platform-tests/wpt that referenced this issue Dec 14, 2023
This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <[email protected]>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <[email protected]>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1237501}
moz-v2v-gh pushed a commit to mozilla/gecko-dev that referenced this issue Dec 15, 2023
…1/N, a=testonly

Automatic update from web-platform-tests
DOM: Observable EventTarget integration 1/N

This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <[email protected]>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <[email protected]>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1237501}

--

wpt-commits: aeeea4221bce5c44edeb8adad0296bbd68a4af71
wpt-pr: 43455
gecko-dev-updater pushed a commit to marco-c/gecko-dev-wordified-and-comments-removed that referenced this issue Dec 16, 2023
…1/N, a=testonly

Automatic update from web-platform-tests
DOM: Observable EventTarget integration 1/N

This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: benbenlesh.com

R=masonfchromium.org

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <masonfchromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <domchromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main{#1237501}

--

wpt-commits: aeeea4221bce5c44edeb8adad0296bbd68a4af71
wpt-pr: 43455

UltraBlame original commit: 152cc51982905b4522338a38f9542e691a6a93e3
gecko-dev-updater pushed a commit to marco-c/gecko-dev-wordified that referenced this issue Dec 16, 2023
…1/N, a=testonly

Automatic update from web-platform-tests
DOM: Observable EventTarget integration 1/N

This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: benbenlesh.com

R=masonfchromium.org

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <masonfchromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <domchromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main{#1237501}

--

wpt-commits: aeeea4221bce5c44edeb8adad0296bbd68a4af71
wpt-pr: 43455

UltraBlame original commit: 152cc51982905b4522338a38f9542e691a6a93e3
gecko-dev-updater pushed a commit to marco-c/gecko-dev-comments-removed that referenced this issue Dec 16, 2023
…1/N, a=testonly

Automatic update from web-platform-tests
DOM: Observable EventTarget integration 1/N

This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: benbenlesh.com

R=masonfchromium.org

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <masonfchromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <domchromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main{#1237501}

--

wpt-commits: aeeea4221bce5c44edeb8adad0296bbd68a4af71
wpt-pr: 43455

UltraBlame original commit: 152cc51982905b4522338a38f9542e691a6a93e3
aosmond pushed a commit to aosmond/gecko that referenced this issue Dec 16, 2023
…1/N, a=testonly

Automatic update from web-platform-tests
DOM: Observable EventTarget integration 1/N

This CL implements "limited" and "leaky" EventTarget integration with
the Observable API. See below for what "limited" and "leaky" mean.
Concretely, this involves introducing the `on()` method to the
EventTarget interface, so that all EventTargets can return Observables
that listen for events. This is the part that really makes Observables a
"better addEventListener()".

This is the first instance of a natively-constructed Observable, as
opposed to a JS-constructed Observable. This means the subscription
callback passed to the Observable constructor is not just a JS callback
function with user-defined code, but instead is a C++ delegate class,
called `SubscribeDelegate` which has its first concrete implementation
provided by EventTarget (in event_target.cc). The concrete
implementation of this interface that this CL introduces, adds an event
listener to the given EventTarget, upon subscription. The events are
forwarded to the Subscriber's `next()` method. This is what unlocks
more ergonomic event handling with the composable Observable primitive
and all of its (coming) operators.

1. The EventTarget integration is considered "limited" because we do not
support any of the `AddEventListenerOptions` yet, as of this CL. A
subsequent CL will add support for a more restricted version of the
`AddEventListenerOptions`, called `ObservableEventListenerOptions`,
which does not include a `once` option, or an `AbortSignal`, since
Observable operators and subscription is responsible for managing those
aspects. Concretely, an `ObservableEventListenerOptions` will
resolve to an `AddEventListenerOptionsResolved` accordingly. See:
 - WICG/observable#66
 - WICG/observable#67
 - WICG/observable#65

2. The EventTarget integration is considered "leaky" as of this CL,
because there is currently no way to remove an event listener added by
an EventTarget-vended Observable. This will come in a subsequent CL,
which will pass the test that is currently failing in this CL. See
WICG/observable#75 for discussion about
tying the subscription termination to removing an event listener.
From a technical perspective, this is pretty easy — it involves adding
an abort algorithm to `Subscriber#signal` (which has already been wired
up properly by now!) that removes the given per-Subscription
`ObservableEventListener` NativeEventListener from the associated
EventTarget. That implementation has already been sketched out in
https://crrev.com/c/4262153 and the design doc. It will included in a
follow-up CL, to reduce the complexity of this one.

For WPTs:
Co-authored-by: [email protected]

[email protected]

Bug: 1485981
Change-Id: Iafeddb0894b8eed2be1d95c181fc44d7650c0d47
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5073394
Reviewed-by: Mason Freed <[email protected]>
Commit-Queue: Dominic Farolino <[email protected]>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#1237501}

--

wpt-commits: aeeea4221bce5c44edeb8adad0296bbd68a4af71
wpt-pr: 43455
@domfarolino
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At this point we've decided to add the first() Promise-returning operator (see #131 and #126) which I think satisfies this request, and @benlesh has kindly provided a nice example to keep synchronous scheduling when needing synchronously react to the "first" event (in order to preventDefault() or something like that).

I'll set up #131 to close this issue once merged.

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3 participants