Subject
In your case, you could simply use a Subject
. A subject allows you to share a single execution with multiple observers when using it as a proxy for a group of subscribers and a source.
In essence, here's your example using a subject:
const subject = new Subject();
function trigger(something) {
subject.next(something);
}
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('a: ' + x));
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('b: ' + x));
trigger('TEST');
Result:
a: TEST
b: TEST
Pitfall: Observers arriving too late
Note that the timing of when you subscribe and when you broadcast the data is relevant. If you send a broadcast before subscribing, you're not getting notified by this broadcast:
function trigger(something) {
subject.next(something);
}
trigger('TEST');
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('a: ' + x));
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('b: ' + x));
Result: (empty)
ReplaySubject & BehaviorSubject
If you want to ensure that even future subscribers get notified, you can use a ReplaySubject or a BehaviorSubject instead.
Here's an example using a ReplaySubject
(with a cache-size of 5, meaning up to 5 values from the past will be remembered, as opposed to a BehaviorSubject which can remember only the last value):
const subject = new ReplaySubject(5); // buffer size is 5
function trigger(something) {
subject.next(something);
}
trigger('TEST');
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('a: ' + x));
subject.subscribe((x) => console.log('b: ' + x));
Result:
a: TEST
b: TEST