Events ====== This package provides a simple event system on which application-specific event systems can be built. Application code can generate events without being concerned about the event-processing frameworks that might handle the events. Events are objects that represent something happening in a system. They are used to extend processing by providing processing plug points. The package has a list of subscribers. Application code can manage subscriptions by manipulating this list. For the examples here, we'll save the current contents away and empty the list. We'll restore the contents when we're done with our examples. >>> import zope.event >>> old_subscribers = zope.event.subscribers[:] >>> del zope.event.subscribers[:] The package provides a `notify` function, which is used to notify subscribers that something has happened: >>> class MyEvent: ... pass >>> event = MyEvent() >>> zope.event.notify(event) The notify function is called with a single object, which we call an event. Any object will do: >>> zope.event.notify(None) >>> zope.event.notify(42) An extremely trivial subscription mechanism is provided. Subscribers are simply callback functions: >>> def f(event): ... print 'got:', event that are put into the subscriptions list: >>> zope.event.subscribers.append(f) >>> zope.event.notify(42) got: 42 >>> def g(event): ... print 'also got:', event >>> zope.event.subscribers.append(g) >>> zope.event.notify(42) got: 42 also got: 42 To unsubscribe, simply remove a subscriber from the list: >>> zope.event.subscribers.remove(f) >>> zope.event.notify(42) also got: 42 Generally, application frameworks will provide more sophisticated subscription mechanisms that build on this simple mechanism. The frameworks will install subscribers that then dispatch to other subscribers based on event types or data. We're done, so we'll restore the subscribers: >>> zope.event.subscribers[:] = old_subscribers