Applications have the ability to publish events from time to time to communicate that something of interest has happened at runtime. Events will be triggered by the application during each of its life cycle phases, also when MVC groups are created and destroyed.

All application event handlers are guaranteed to be called in the same thread that originated the event.

Any artifact or class can trigger an application event, by routing it through the reference to the current running application instance. All artifacts posses an instance variable that points to that reference. All other classes can use ApplicationHolder to gain access to the current application's instance.

Publishing an event can be done synchronously on the current thread or asynchronously relative to the UI thread. For example, the following snippet will trigger an event that will be handled in the same thread, which could be the UI thread itself

app.event('MyEventName', ['arg0', 'arg1'])

Whereas the following snippet guarantees that all event handlers that are interested in an event of type MyEventName will be called outside of the UI thread

app.eventOutside('MyEventName', ['arg0', 'arg1'])

Finally, if you'd want event notification to be handed in a thread that is not the current one (regardless if the current one is the UI thread or not) then use the following method

app.eventAsync('MyEventName', ['arg0', 'arg1'])

There may be times when event publishing must be stopped for a while. If that's the case then you can instruct the application to stop delivering events by invoking the following code

app.eventPublishingEnabled = false

Any events sent through the application's event bus will be discarded after that call; there's no way to get them back or replay them. When it's time to enable the event bus again simply call

app.eventPublishingEnabled = true