lihai 8d6c751f49 feat: push | 2 years ago | |
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test | 2 years ago | |
.travis.yml | 2 years ago | |
LICENSE.APACHE2 | 2 years ago | |
LICENSE.MIT | 2 years ago | |
index.js | 2 years ago | |
package.json | 2 years ago | |
readme.markdown | 2 years ago |
#through
Easy way to create a Stream
that is both readable
and writable
.
write
and end
methods.through
takes care of pause/resume logic if you use this.queue(data)
instead of this.emit('data', data)
.this.pause()
and this.resume()
to manage flow.this.paused
to see current flow state. (write
always returns !this.paused
).This function is the basis for most of the synchronous streams in event-stream.
var through = require('through')
through(function write(data) {
this.queue(data) //data *must* not be null
},
function end () { //optional
this.queue(null)
})
Or, can also be used without buffering on pause, use this.emit('data', data)
,
and this.emit('end')
var through = require('through')
through(function write(data) {
this.emit('data', data)
//this.pause()
},
function end () { //optional
this.emit('end')
})
You will probably not need these 99% of the time.
By default, through
emits close when the writable
and readable side of the stream has ended.
If that is not desired, set autoDestroy=false
.
var through = require('through')
//like this
var ts = through(write, end, {autoDestroy: false})
//or like this
var ts = through(write, end)
ts.autoDestroy = false
MIT / Apache2