I think you are answering your own question... The spec
says<http://dev.w3.org/2006/webapi/DOM-Level-3-Events/html/DOM3-Events.html#event-flow>
:

"Each event flow must define how the propagation path shall be determined
> and which event phases are supported. The DOM event flow is an application
> of this model: the propagation path for a Node object shall be determined by
> its Node.parentNode chain, and if applicable, the document's containing
> defaultView; all events accomplish the capture and target phases; whether an
> event accomplishes the bubble phase shall be defined individually for each
> event type. An alternate application of this model can be found in [DOM3
> Load and Save]."


This sounds like the capture/target/bubble route is specifically defined for
Node object. XHR, FileReader, Workers or other objects are not Nodes and may
have their own 'event flows' defined, and it happened to be 'at_target' only
in most cases. The specs for those objects often describe the explicit event
flow<http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-workers/current-work/#runtime-script-errors>.
If it doesn't or if the description is ambiguous, it probably should be
changed.

Dmitry

On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 4:53 PM, Travis Leithead <tra...@microsoft.com>wrote:

> Hi webapps and DOM events folks!
>
>
>
> (Cross-posting this)
>
>
>
> This topic came up internally on the IE team, and we thought it would be
> noteworthy to put this question before the working groups in hopes of
> getting a spec clarification made.
>
>
>
> The question is: for XHR and other non-DOM related objects that support the
> EventTarget interface, meaning objects that will be surfaced off of “window”
> but aren’t really a part of the markup tree, how should event propagation be
> handled?
>
>
>
> There is some good language in the current DOM Level 3 events spec,
> although in the context of this question it reads somewhat ambiguously.
> First, in section 3.1 Event dispatch and DOM event flow [1], the spec hints
> that any phase of the event flow may be skipped if it is “not supported”:
>
>
>
>    A phase shall be skipped if it is not supported, or if the event
> object's propagation has been stopped.
>
>
>
> Then, later in the same section, the spec states that the model “defined
> above” _*must*_ be followed regardless of the specific event flow
> associated with the target. Naturally, the model is the
> capture-target-bubble phase, but the previous section also describes how the
> defaultView is handled in the propagation path:
>
>
>
>    In the production of the propagation path, if the defaultView implements
> the EventTarget interface, the event propagates from defaultView to the
> document object during the capture phase, and from the document object to
> the defaultView during the bubble phase. Note: for legacy reasons, the load
> event does not propagate to the defaultView in HTML implementations.
>
>
>
> In browsers, the defaultView (window) does support the EventTarget
> interface.
>
>
>
> So given all of that background, one of the key questions for XHR is if an
> XHR instance belongs to a defaultView or not. One might ask the same thing
> of localStorage (though storage events fire on the window, not the Storage
> instance), indexDB, Workers, Notifications, FileAPI etc. where the API is
> not really related to the DOM tree (I’ll call these non-DOM objects).
>
>
>
> In each of these cases (or is it the same for all cases?) should we expect
> events to **capture** through the defaultView to the XHR (indexDB,
> FileAPI, etc.) instance, and then optionally bubble back to it, or are these
> objects just islands unto themselves, where there is only an **at_target**
> phase for events the fire on them?
>
>
>
> My recommendation: exempt these non-DOM objects from requiring strict
> adherence to the DOM event flow. In a simple test [2], I show that all major
> browsers (except Opera) fire ‘readystatechange’ directly on the XHR instance
> and *do not* capture the event through the window object (Opera did not
> appear to support addEventListener on the XHR instance when I tried).
>
>
>
> [1]
> http://dev.w3.org/2006/webapi/DOM-Level-3-Events/html/DOM3-Events.html#event-flow
>
> [2]
>
>
>
> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "
> http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd";>
>
> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"; >
>
> <head>
>
>     <title>Capture testing</title>
>
>     <style>input[type="text"] { width: 400px; }</style>
>
> </head>
>
> <body>
>
>   <script>
>
>       function testXHR() {
>
>          window.xhrEventCaptures = false;
>
>          window.xhrEventTarget = false;
>
>
>
>          window.addEventListener('readystatechange', function () {
> window.xhrEventCaptures = true; }, true);
>
>          var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
>
>          xhr.addEventListener('readystatechange', function () {
> window.xhrEventTarget = true; }, true);
>
>          xhr.open("GET", "http://www.bing.com/";);
>
>          xhr.send();
>
>          setTimeout(function () {
>
>              document.querySelectorAll('input[type="text"]')[0].value =
> (window.xhrEventCaptures ? "window captured XHR events" :
> (window.xhrEventTarget ? "window DID NOT capture XHR events" : "test
> error: no events fired"));
>
>          }, 500);
>
>       }
>
>   </script>
>
>   <p><input type="button" onclick="testXHR()" value="Test XHR"/><input
> type="text" /></p>
>
> </body>
>
> </html>
>
>
>

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