Skip to main content
Version: v4.20

Events

There is NOT such a thing as stencil events, instead, Stencil encourages the use of DOM events. However, Stencil does provide an API to specify the events a component can emit, and the events a component listens to. It does so with the Event() and Listen() decorators.

Event Decorator

Components can emit data and events using the Event Emitter decorator.

To dispatch Custom DOM events for other components to handle, use the @Event() decorator.

import { Event, EventEmitter } from '@stencil/core';

...
export class TodoList {

@Event() todoCompleted: EventEmitter<Todo>;

todoCompletedHandler(todo: Todo) {
this.todoCompleted.emit(todo);
}
}

The code above will dispatch a custom DOM event called todoCompleted.

The Event(opts: EventOptions) decorator optionally accepts an options object to shape the behavior of dispatched events. The options and defaults are described below.

export interface EventOptions {
/**
* A string custom event name to override the default.
*/
eventName?: string;
/**
* A Boolean indicating whether the event bubbles up through the DOM or not.
*/
bubbles?: boolean;

/**
* A Boolean indicating whether the event is cancelable.
*/
cancelable?: boolean;

/**
* A Boolean value indicating whether or not the event can bubble across the boundary between the shadow DOM and the regular DOM.
*/
composed?: boolean;
}

Example:

import { Event, EventEmitter } from '@stencil/core';

...
export class TodoList {

// Event called 'todoCompleted' that is "composed", "cancellable" and it will bubble up!
@Event({
eventName: 'todoCompleted',
composed: true,
cancelable: true,
bubbles: true,
}) todoCompleted: EventEmitter<Todo>;

todoCompletedHandler(todo: Todo) {
const event = this.todoCompleted.emit(todo);
if(!event.defaultPrevented) {
// if not prevented, do some default handling code
}
}
}
note

In the case where the Stencil Event type conflicts with the native web Event type, there are two possible solutions:

  1. Import aliasing:
import { Event as StencilEvent, EventEmitter } from '@stencil/core';

@StencilEvent() myEvent: EventEmitter<{value: string, ev: Event}>;
  1. Namespace the native web Event type with globalThis:
@Event() myEvent: EventEmitter<{value: string, ev: globalThis.Event}>;

Listen Decorator

The Listen() decorator is for listening to DOM events, including the ones dispatched from @Events. The event listeners are automatically added and removed when the component gets added or removed from the DOM.

In the example below, assume that a child component, TodoList, emits a todoCompleted event using the EventEmitter.

import { Listen } from '@stencil/core';

...
export class TodoApp {

@Listen('todoCompleted')
todoCompletedHandler(event: CustomEvent<Todo>) {
console.log('Received the custom todoCompleted event: ', event.detail);
}
}

Listen's options

The @Listen(eventName, opts?: ListenOptions) includes a second optional argument that can be used to configure how the DOM event listener is attached.

export interface ListenOptions {
target?: 'body' | 'document' | 'window';
capture?: boolean;
passive?: boolean;
}

The available options are target, capture and passive:

target

Handlers can also be registered for an event other than the host itself. The target option can be used to change where the event listener is attached, this is useful for listening to application-wide events.

In the example below, we're going to listen for the scroll event, emitted from window:

  @Listen('scroll', { target: 'window' })
handleScroll(ev) {
console.log('the body was scrolled', ev);
}

passive

By default, Stencil uses several heuristics to determine if it must attach a passive event listener or not. The passive option can be used to change the default behavior.

Please check out https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2016/06/passive-event-listeners for further information.

capture

Event listener attached with @Listen does not "capture" by default. When a event listener is set to "capture", it means the event will be dispatched during the "capture phase". Check out https://www.quirksmode.org/js/events_order.html for further information.

  @Listen('click', { capture: true })
handleClick(ev) {
console.log('click');
}

Keyboard events

For keyboard events, you can use the standard keydown event in @Listen() and use event.keyCode or event.which to get the key code, or event.key for the string representation of the key.

@Listen('keydown')
handleKeyDown(ev: KeyboardEvent){
if (ev.key === 'ArrowDown'){
console.log('down arrow pressed')
}
}

More info on event key strings can be found in the w3c spec.

Using events in JSX

Within a stencil compiled application or component you can also bind listeners to events directly in JSX. This works very similar to normal DOM events such as onClick.

Let's use our TodoList component from above:

import { Event, EventEmitter } from '@stencil/core';

...
export class TodoList {

@Event() todoCompleted: EventEmitter<Todo>;

todoCompletedHandler(todo: Todo) {
this.todoCompleted.emit(todo);
}
}

We can now listen to this event directly on the component in our JSX using the following syntax:

<todo-list onTodoCompleted={ev => this.someMethod(ev)} />

This property is generated automatically and is prefixed with "on". For example, if the event emitted is called todoDeleted the property will be called onTodoDeleted:

<todo-list onTodoDeleted={ev => this.someOtherMethod(ev)} />

Listening to events from a non-JSX element

<todo-list></todo-list>
<script>
const todoListElement = document.querySelector('todo-list');
todoListElement.addEventListener('todoCompleted', event => { /* your listener */ })
</script>