Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory:UsertContributed Perl DGtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Context(3)NAMEGtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Context - Context in a FormFactory framework
SYNOPSIS
my $context = Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Context->new (
default_get_prefix => Default prefix for read accessors,
default_set_prefix => Default prefix for write accessors,
);
$context->add_object (
name => Name of the application object in
this Context,
aggregated_by => Object.Attribute of the parent object
aggregating this object
object => The application object itself or a
callback which returns the object,
or undef if aggregated or set later
get_prefix => Prefix for read accessors,
set_prefix => Prefix for write accessors,
accessor => CODEREF which handles access to all object
attributes
attr_activity_href => Hash of CODEREFS for attributes which return
activity of the corresponding attributes,
attr_depends_href => Hash defining attribute dependencies,
attr_accessors_href => Hash of CODEREFS which override correspondent
accessors in this Context,
buffered => Indicates whether changes should be buffered,
changes_attr_filter => Regex for attributes which should not trigger
the object's 'changed' status
);
DESCRIPTION
This module implements a very importent concept of the
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory framework.
The Context knows of all your application objects, how attributes of
the objects can be accessed (for reading and writing), which attributes
probably depend on other attributes and knows of how to control the
activity state of attributes resp. of the Widgets which represent these
attributes.
So the Context is a layer between your application objects and the GUI
which represents particular attributes of your objects.
OBJECT HIERARCHYGtk2::Ex::FormFactory::ContextATTRIBUTES
Attributes are handled through the common get_ATTR(), set_ATTR() style
accessors, but they are mostly passed once to the object constructor
and must not be altered after associated FormFactory's were built.
default_get_prefix = SCALAR [optional]
Usually your application's objects use a common prefix for all
attribute accessors. This defines the default prefix for read
accessors and defaults to "get_".
default_set_prefix = SCALAR [optional]
Usually your application's objects use a common prefix for all
attribute accessors. This defines the default prefix for write
accessors and defaults to "set_".
METHODS
$context->add_object (...)
All your application objects must be added to the Context using
this method. Parameters are passed to the method as a hash:
name = SCALAR [mandatory]
Each object in a Context need a unique name, so this parameter
is mandatory. You refer to this name when you create Widgets
and want to associate these with your application object's
attributes.
object = BLESSED REF|CODEREF [optional]
This is the application object itself, or a code reference
which returns the object. Using the code reference option gives
you very flexible control of what this object actually is. But
also note that this may have some impact on performance,
because this code reference will be called quite often.
Often objects are aggregated by other objects, in that case
don't set the object reference here but use the aggregate_by
option described below.
An application object in terms of the Context may become undef,
that's why the object parameter is optional here. Also the code
reference may return undef.
Once an object gets undef, all associated widgets will be set
inactive automatically. You can control per widget if it should
render invisible or insensitive in that case. Refer to
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Widget for details.
aggregated_by = "object.attr" [optional]
If this object has a parent object set this option to the fully
qualified attribute holding the object reference, using the
object dot attribute notation:
object.attr
where object is the name of the parent object used to register
it to this Context, and attr the attribute holding the
reference to the object currently added to the Context.
Once this attribute resp. the parent object change, the Context
will be updated automatically, including all widgets depending
on this widget.
This way you can define your full object aggregation hierarchy
and Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory takes care of all resulting
dependencies on the GUI.
get_prefix = SCALAR [optional]
With this parameter you can override the default_get_prefix
setting of this Context for this object.
set_prefix = SCALAR [optional]
With this parameter you can override the default_set_prefix
setting of this Context for this object.
accessor = CODEREF(object,attr[,value]) [optional]
If accessor is set this code reference is used as a generic
accessor callback for all attributes. It handles getting and
setting as well.
Called with two arguments the passed attribute is to be read,
with three arguments, the third argument is the value which is
to be assigned to the attribute.
This overrides attr_accessors_href described beyond.
attr_accessors_href = HASHREF [optional]
Often your application object attribute values doesn't fit the
data type a particular Widget expects, e.g. in case of the
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::List widget, which expects a two
dimensional array for its content.
Since you need this conversion only for a particular GUI task
it makes sense to implement the conversion routine in the
Context instead of adding such GUI specific methods to your
underlying classes, which should be as much GUI independent as
possible.
That's why you can override arbitrary accessors (read and
write) using the attr_accessors_href parameter. Key is the name
of method to be overriden and constant scalar value or a code
reference, which is called instead of the real method.
The code reference gets your application object as the first
parameter, as usual for object methods, and additionally the
new value in case of write access.
A short example. Here we override the accessors get_tracks and
set_tracks of an imagnary disc object, which represents an
audio CD. The track title is stored as a simple array and needs
to be converted to a two dimensional array as expected by
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::List. Additionally an constant accessor
is defined for a Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Popup showing a bunch
of music genres:
$context->add_object (
name => "disc",
attr_accessors_href => {
get_tracks => sub {
my $disc = shift;
#-- Convert the one dimensional array of disc
#-- tracks to the two dimensional array expected
#-- by Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::List. Also the number
#-- of the track is added to the first column here
my @list;
my $nr = 1;
foreach my $track ( @{$disc->get_tracks} ) {
push @list, [ $nr++, $track ];
}
return\@list;
},
set_tracks => sub {
my $disc = shift;
my ($list_ref) = @_;
#-- Convert the array back (the List is editable in
#-- our example, so values can be changed).
my @list;
foreach my $row ( @{$list_ref} ) {
push @list, $row->[1];
}
$disc->set_tracks(\@list);
return \@list;
},
genre_list => {
"rock" => "Rock",
"pop" => "Pop",
"elec" => "Electronic",
"jazz" => "Jazz",
},
},
);
attr_activity_href = HASHREF [OPTIONAL]
As mentioned earlier activity of Widgets is controlled by the
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory framework. E.g. if the an object becomes
undef, all associated widgets render inactive.
With the attr_activity_href setting you can handle activity on
attribute level, not only on object level.
The key of the hash is the attribute name and value is a code
reference, which returns TRUE or FALSE and control the activity
this way.
Again an example: imagine a text entry which usually is set
with a default value controlled by your application. But if
the user wants to override the entry he first has to press a
correpondent checkbox to activate this.
$context->add_object (
name => "person",
attr_activity_href => {
ident_number => sub {
my $person = shift;
return $person->get_may_override_ident_number;
},
},
attr_depends_href => {
ident_number => "person.may_override_ident_number",
},
);
For details about the attr_depends_href option read on.
attr_depends_href = HASHREF [OPTIONAL]
This hash defines dependencies between attributes. If you look
at the example above you see why this is necessary. The
ident_number of a person may be overriden only if the
may_override_ident_number attribute of this person is set.
Since this dependency is coded inside the code reference,
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory isn't aware of it until you add a
corresponding attr_depends_href entry.
Now the GUI will automatically activate the Widget for the
ident_number attribute once may_override_ident_number is set,
e.g. by a CheckBox the user clicked.
If an attribute depends on more than one other attributes you
can use a list reference:
attr_depends_href => sub {
ident_number => [
"person.may_override_ident_number",
"foo.bar",
],
},
buffered = BOOL [OPTIONAL]
If set to TRUE this activates buffering for this object. Please
refer to the BUFFERED CONTEXT OBJECTS chapter for details.
changes_attr_filter = REGEX [OPTIONAL]
Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory maintains a flag indicating whether an
object was changed. Under special circumstances you want
specific attributes not affecting this "changed" state of an
object. You can specify an regular expression here. Changes of
attributes matching this expression won't touch the changes
state of the object.
To receive or change the object's changed state refer to the
object_changed attribute of Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Proxy.
$context->remove_object ( $name )
Remove the object $name from this context.
$app_object = $context->get_object ( $name )
This returns the application object registered as $name to this
context.
$context->set_object ( $name => $object )
This sets a new object, which was registered as $name to this
context.
$context->get_object_attr ( "$object.$attr" )
Retrieves the attribute named $attr of the object $object.
$context->set_object_attr ( "$object.$attr", $value )
Set the attribute named $attr of the object $object to $value.
Dependent widgets update automatically.
$context->update_object_attr_widgets ( $object_name, $attr_name )
Triggers updates on all GUI widgets which are associated with the
attribute $attr_name of the object registered as $object_name to
this context.
You may omit $attr_name and pass a fully qualified "object.attr"
noted string as the first argument instead.
$context->update_object_widgets ( $object_name )
Triggers updates on all GUI widgets which are associated with the
object registered as $object_name to this context.
$context->update_object_widgets_activity ( $object_name, $activity )
This updates the activity state of all GUI widgets which are
associated with the object registered as $object_name to this
context.
$activity is 'inactive' or 'active'.
$proxy = $context->get_proxy ( $object_name )
This returns the Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Proxy instance which was
created for the object registered as $name to this context. With
the proxy you can do updates on object attributes which trigger the
correspondent GUI updates as well.
BUFFERED CONTEXT OBJECTS
This feature was introduced in version 0.58 and is marked experimental
so please use with care.
If you set buffered => 1 when adding an object to the Context a
buffering Proxy will be used for this object. That means that all GUI
changes in a synchronized FormFactory dialog are buffered in the proxy
object. Normally all changes are commited immediately to the object,
which is Ok in many situations, but makes implementing a Cancel button
difficult resp. you need to care about this yourself by using a copy of
the object or something like that.
A FormFactory gets "buffered" if all its widgets are connected to a
buffered object. In that case Gtk2::Ex::Form::DialogButtons show a
Cancel button automatically, even in a synchronized dialog.
What's this good for?
If your FormFactory doesn't has the sync flag set you get Cancel button
as well, since no changes are applied to the objects until the user hit
the Ok button. All changes are kept in the "GUI". But such a dialog
lacks of all dynamic auto-widget-updating features, e.g. setting
widgets inactive under specific conditions. For very simple dialogs
this is Ok, but if you need these features you need the buffering
facility as well.
But take care when implementing your closures for widget activity
checking: they must not use the original objects! They need to access
the attributes through the Context, because your original object
doesn't see any GUI changes until the FormFactory is applied! All
changes are buffered in the Context. If you access your objects through
the Context anything works as expected.
Buffering is useful as well in other situations e.g. if you're
accessing remote objects over a network (for example with Event::RPC)
where a method call is somewhat expensive.
AUTHORS
JA~Xrn Reder <joern at zyn dot de>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2004-2006 by JA~Xrn Reder.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published
by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307
USA.
perl v5.14.1 2006-07-02 Gtk2::Ex::FormFactory::Context(3)