I would recommend a messaging queue model. Have a central MessageQueue that takes events and notifies listeners. Objects that want to do something on certain key presses can register themselves as listeners with the queue, and will be notified when the thing they care about happens.
Let's say you have a predefined set of events "UP", "DOWN", "LEFT", and "RIGHT" events.
var MESSAGE_QUEUE = function() {
var eventListeners = {
UP: [],
DOWN: [],
LEFT: [],
RIGHT: []
};
return {
register: function(event, obj) {
var listeners = eventListeners[event];
if (listeners) {
listeners.push(obj);
}
},
fire: function(event) {
var listeners = eventListeners[event] || [];
for (var i=0; i<listeners.length; i++) {
listeners[i].onEvent(event);
}
}
};
}();
Then an object that wants to be notified on DOWN says:
MESSAGE_QUEUE.register("DOWN", this);
this
would be expected to defined an onEvent
function. Then whatever fires key events:
element.onKeyPress = function(event) {
// ... figure out if down was presses
MESSAGE_QUEUE.fire("DOWN");
}
Something like that would be a clean solution. Clearly this could be changed to suit whatever needs you have, such as a variable number of events, or more clear function names, such as onDown
, onUp
, etc., defined for each listener.