1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632
|
'\"
'\" Generated from file 'hook\&.man' by tcllib/doctools with format 'nroff'
'\" Copyright (c) 2010, by William H\&. Duquette
'\"
.TH "hook" n 0\&.3 tcllib "Hooks"
.\" The -*- nroff -*- definitions below are for supplemental macros used
.\" in Tcl/Tk manual entries.
.\"
.\" .AP type name in/out ?indent?
.\" Start paragraph describing an argument to a library procedure.
.\" type is type of argument (int, etc.), in/out is either "in", "out",
.\" or "in/out" to describe whether procedure reads or modifies arg,
.\" and indent is equivalent to second arg of .IP (shouldn't ever be
.\" needed; use .AS below instead)
.\"
.\" .AS ?type? ?name?
.\" Give maximum sizes of arguments for setting tab stops. Type and
.\" name are examples of largest possible arguments that will be passed
.\" to .AP later. If args are omitted, default tab stops are used.
.\"
.\" .BS
.\" Start box enclosure. From here until next .BE, everything will be
.\" enclosed in one large box.
.\"
.\" .BE
.\" End of box enclosure.
.\"
.\" .CS
.\" Begin code excerpt.
.\"
.\" .CE
.\" End code excerpt.
.\"
.\" .VS ?version? ?br?
.\" Begin vertical sidebar, for use in marking newly-changed parts
.\" of man pages. The first argument is ignored and used for recording
.\" the version when the .VS was added, so that the sidebars can be
.\" found and removed when they reach a certain age. If another argument
.\" is present, then a line break is forced before starting the sidebar.
.\"
.\" .VE
.\" End of vertical sidebar.
.\"
.\" .DS
.\" Begin an indented unfilled display.
.\"
.\" .DE
.\" End of indented unfilled display.
.\"
.\" .SO ?manpage?
.\" Start of list of standard options for a Tk widget. The manpage
.\" argument defines where to look up the standard options; if
.\" omitted, defaults to "options". The options follow on successive
.\" lines, in three columns separated by tabs.
.\"
.\" .SE
.\" End of list of standard options for a Tk widget.
.\"
.\" .OP cmdName dbName dbClass
.\" Start of description of a specific option. cmdName gives the
.\" option's name as specified in the class command, dbName gives
.\" the option's name in the option database, and dbClass gives
.\" the option's class in the option database.
.\"
.\" .UL arg1 arg2
.\" Print arg1 underlined, then print arg2 normally.
.\"
.\" .QW arg1 ?arg2?
.\" Print arg1 in quotes, then arg2 normally (for trailing punctuation).
.\"
.\" .PQ arg1 ?arg2?
.\" Print an open parenthesis, arg1 in quotes, then arg2 normally
.\" (for trailing punctuation) and then a closing parenthesis.
.\"
.\" # Set up traps and other miscellaneous stuff for Tcl/Tk man pages.
.if t .wh -1.3i ^B
.nr ^l \n(.l
.ad b
.\" # Start an argument description
.de AP
.ie !"\\$4"" .TP \\$4
.el \{\
. ie !"\\$2"" .TP \\n()Cu
. el .TP 15
.\}
.ta \\n()Au \\n()Bu
.ie !"\\$3"" \{\
\&\\$1 \\fI\\$2\\fP (\\$3)
.\".b
.\}
.el \{\
.br
.ie !"\\$2"" \{\
\&\\$1 \\fI\\$2\\fP
.\}
.el \{\
\&\\fI\\$1\\fP
.\}
.\}
..
.\" # define tabbing values for .AP
.de AS
.nr )A 10n
.if !"\\$1"" .nr )A \\w'\\$1'u+3n
.nr )B \\n()Au+15n
.\"
.if !"\\$2"" .nr )B \\w'\\$2'u+\\n()Au+3n
.nr )C \\n()Bu+\\w'(in/out)'u+2n
..
.AS Tcl_Interp Tcl_CreateInterp in/out
.\" # BS - start boxed text
.\" # ^y = starting y location
.\" # ^b = 1
.de BS
.br
.mk ^y
.nr ^b 1u
.if n .nf
.if n .ti 0
.if n \l'\\n(.lu\(ul'
.if n .fi
..
.\" # BE - end boxed text (draw box now)
.de BE
.nf
.ti 0
.mk ^t
.ie n \l'\\n(^lu\(ul'
.el \{\
.\" Draw four-sided box normally, but don't draw top of
.\" box if the box started on an earlier page.
.ie !\\n(^b-1 \{\
\h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\l'\\n(^lu+3n\(ul'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\l'|0u-1.5n\(ul'
.\}
.el \}\
\h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\h'\\n(^lu+3n'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\l'|0u-1.5n\(ul'
.\}
.\}
.fi
.br
.nr ^b 0
..
.\" # VS - start vertical sidebar
.\" # ^Y = starting y location
.\" # ^v = 1 (for troff; for nroff this doesn't matter)
.de VS
.if !"\\$2"" .br
.mk ^Y
.ie n 'mc \s12\(br\s0
.el .nr ^v 1u
..
.\" # VE - end of vertical sidebar
.de VE
.ie n 'mc
.el \{\
.ev 2
.nf
.ti 0
.mk ^t
\h'|\\n(^lu+3n'\L'|\\n(^Yu-1v\(bv'\v'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^Yu'\h'-|\\n(^lu+3n'
.sp -1
.fi
.ev
.\}
.nr ^v 0
..
.\" # Special macro to handle page bottom: finish off current
.\" # box/sidebar if in box/sidebar mode, then invoked standard
.\" # page bottom macro.
.de ^B
.ev 2
'ti 0
'nf
.mk ^t
.if \\n(^b \{\
.\" Draw three-sided box if this is the box's first page,
.\" draw two sides but no top otherwise.
.ie !\\n(^b-1 \h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\l'\\n(^lu+3n\(ul'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\h'|0u'\c
.el \h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\h'\\n(^lu+3n'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\h'|0u'\c
.\}
.if \\n(^v \{\
.nr ^x \\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^Yu
\kx\h'-\\nxu'\h'|\\n(^lu+3n'\ky\L'-\\n(^xu'\v'\\n(^xu'\h'|0u'\c
.\}
.bp
'fi
.ev
.if \\n(^b \{\
.mk ^y
.nr ^b 2
.\}
.if \\n(^v \{\
.mk ^Y
.\}
..
.\" # DS - begin display
.de DS
.RS
.nf
.sp
..
.\" # DE - end display
.de DE
.fi
.RE
.sp
..
.\" # SO - start of list of standard options
.de SO
'ie '\\$1'' .ds So \\fBoptions\\fR
'el .ds So \\fB\\$1\\fR
.SH "STANDARD OPTIONS"
.LP
.nf
.ta 5.5c 11c
.ft B
..
.\" # SE - end of list of standard options
.de SE
.fi
.ft R
.LP
See the \\*(So manual entry for details on the standard options.
..
.\" # OP - start of full description for a single option
.de OP
.LP
.nf
.ta 4c
Command-Line Name: \\fB\\$1\\fR
Database Name: \\fB\\$2\\fR
Database Class: \\fB\\$3\\fR
.fi
.IP
..
.\" # CS - begin code excerpt
.de CS
.RS
.nf
.ta .25i .5i .75i 1i
..
.\" # CE - end code excerpt
.de CE
.fi
.RE
..
.\" # UL - underline word
.de UL
\\$1\l'|0\(ul'\\$2
..
.\" # QW - apply quotation marks to word
.de QW
.ie '\\*(lq'"' ``\\$1''\\$2
.\"" fix emacs highlighting
.el \\*(lq\\$1\\*(rq\\$2
..
.\" # PQ - apply parens and quotation marks to word
.de PQ
.ie '\\*(lq'"' (``\\$1''\\$2)\\$3
.\"" fix emacs highlighting
.el (\\*(lq\\$1\\*(rq\\$2)\\$3
..
.\" # QR - quoted range
.de QR
.ie '\\*(lq'"' ``\\$1''\\-``\\$2''\\$3
.\"" fix emacs highlighting
.el \\*(lq\\$1\\*(rq\\-\\*(lq\\$2\\*(rq\\$3
..
.\" # MT - "empty" string
.de MT
.QW ""
..
.BS
.SH NAME
hook \- Hooks
.SH SYNOPSIS
package require \fBTcl 8\&.5 9\fR
.sp
package require \fBhook ?0\&.3?\fR
.sp
\fBhook\fR \fBbind\fR ?\fIsubject\fR? ?\fIhook\fR? ?\fIobserver\fR? ?\fIcmdPrefix\fR?
.sp
\fBhook\fR \fBcall\fR \fIsubject\fR \fIhook\fR ?\fIargs\fR\&.\&.\&.?
.sp
\fBhook\fR \fBforget\fR \fIobject\fR
.sp
\fBhook\fR \fBcget\fR \fIoption\fR
.sp
\fBhook\fR \fBconfigure\fR \fBoption\fR \fIvalue\fR \&.\&.\&.
.sp
.BE
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
This package provides the \fBhook\fR ensemble command, which
implements the Subject/Observer pattern\&. It allows \fIsubjects\fR,
which may be \fImodules\fR, \fIobjects\fR, \fIwidgets\fR, and so
forth, to synchronously call \fIhooks\fR which may be bound to an
arbitrary number of subscribers, called \fIobservers\fR\&. A subject
may call any number of distinct hooks, and any number of observers can
bind callbacks to a particular hook called by a particular
subject\&. Hook bindings can be queried and deleted\&.
.PP
This man page is intended to be a reference only\&.
.SH CONCEPTS
.SS INTRODUCTION
Tcl modules usually send notifications to other modules in two ways:
via Tk events, and via callback options like the text widget's
\fB-yscrollcommand\fR option\&. Tk events are available only in Tk,
and callback options require tight coupling between the modules
sending and receiving the notification\&.
.PP
Loose coupling between sender and receiver is often desirable,
however\&. In Model/View/Controller terms, a View can send a command
(stemming from user input) to the Controller, which updates the
Model\&. The Model can then call a hook \fIto which all relevant
Views subscribe\&.\fR The Model is decoupled from the Views, and indeed
need not know whether any Views actually exist\&.
At present, Tcl/Tk has no standard mechanism for implementing loose
coupling of this kind\&. This package defines a new command, \fBhook\fR,
which implements just such a mechanism\&.
.SS BINDINGS
The \fBhook\fR command manages a collection of hook bindings\&. A hook
binding has four elements:
.IP [1]
A \fIsubject\fR: the name of the entity that will be calling the
hook\&.
.IP [2]
The \fIhook\fR itself\&. A hook usually reflects some occurrence in the
life of the \fIsubject\fR that other entities might care to know
about\&. A \fIhook\fR has a name, and may also have arguments\&. Hook
names are arbitrary strings\&. Each \fIsubject\fR must document the
names and arguments of the hooks it can call\&.
.IP [3]
The name of the \fIobserver\fR that wishes to receive the \fIhook\fR
from the \fIsubject\fR\&.
.IP [4]
A command prefix to which the \fIhook\fR arguments will be appended
when the binding is executed\&.
.PP
.SS "SUBJECTS AND OBSERVERS"
For convenience, this document collectively refers to subjects and
observers as \fIobjects\fR, while placing no requirements on how
these \fIobjects\fR are actually implemented\&. An object can be a
\fBTclOO\fR or \fBSnit\fR or \fBXOTcl\fR object, a Tcl
command, a namespace, a module, a pseudo-object managed by some other
object (as tags are managed by the Tk text widget) or simply a
well-known name\&.
.PP
Subject and observer names are arbitrary strings; however, as
\fBhook\fR might be used at the package level, it's necessary to have
conventions that avoid name collisions between packages written by
different people\&.
.PP
Therefore, any subject or observer name used in core or package level
code should look like a Tcl command name, and should be defined in a
namespace owned by the package\&. Consider, for example, an ensemble
command \fB::foo\fR that creates a set of pseudo-objects and uses
\fBhook\fR to send notifications\&. The pseudo-objects have names
that are not commands and exist in their own namespace, rather like
file handles do\&. To avoid name collisions with subjects defined by
other packages, users of \fBhook\fR, these \fB::foo\fR handles
should have names like \fB::foo::1\fR, \fB::foo::2\fR, and so on\&.
.PP
Because object names are arbitrary strings, application code can use
whatever additional conventions are dictated by the needs of the
application\&.
.SH REFERENCE
Hook provides the following commands:
.TP
\fBhook\fR \fBbind\fR ?\fIsubject\fR? ?\fIhook\fR? ?\fIobserver\fR? ?\fIcmdPrefix\fR?
This subcommand is used to create, update, delete, and query hook
bindings\&.
.sp
Called with no arguments it returns a list of the subjects with
hooks to which observers are currently bound\&.
.sp
Called with one argument, a \fIsubject\fR, it returns a list of
the subject's hooks to which observers are currently bound\&.
.sp
Called with two arguments, a \fIsubject\fR and a \fIhook\fR, it
returns a list of the observers which are currently bound to this
\fIsubject\fR and \fIhook\fR\&.
.sp
Called with three arguments, a \fIsubject\fR, a \fIhook\fR, and
an \fIobserver\fR, it returns the binding proper, the command prefix
to be called when the hook is called, or the empty string if there is
no such binding\&.
.sp
Called with four arguments, it creates, updates, or deletes a
binding\&. If \fIcmdPrefix\fR is the empty string, it deletes any
existing binding for the \fIsubject\fR, \fIhook\fR, and
\fIobserver\fR; nothing is returned\&. Otherwise, \fIcmdPrefix\fR must
be a command prefix taking as many additional arguments as are
documented for the \fIsubject\fR and \fIhook\fR\&. The binding is added
or updated, and the observer is returned\&.
.sp
If the \fIobserver\fR is the empty string, "", it will create a
new binding using an automatically generated observer name of the form
\fB::hook::ob\fR<\fBnumber\fR>\&. The automatically generated name
will be returned, and can be used to query, update, and delete the
binding as usual\&. If automated observer names are always used, the
observer name effectively becomes a unique binding ID\&.
.sp
It is possible to call \fBhook bind\fR to create or delete a
binding to a \fIsubject\fR and \fIhook\fR while in an observer binding
for that same \fIsubject\fR and \fIhook\fR\&. The following rules
determine what happens when
.CS
hook bind $s $h $o $binding
.CE
.IP
is called during the execution of
.CS
hook call $s $h
.CE
.RS
.IP [1]
No binding is ever called after it is deleted\&.
.IP [2]
When a binding is called, the most recently given command prefix is
always used\&.
.IP [3]
The set of observers whose bindings are to be called is determined
when this method begins to execute, and does not change thereafter,
except that deleted bindings are not called\&.
.RE
.IP
In particular:
.RS
.IP [1]
If \fB$o\fRs binding to \fB$s\fR and \fB$h\fR is deleted, and
\fB$o\fRs binding has not yet been called during this execution of
.CS
hook call $s $h
.CE
.IP
it will not be called\&. (Note that it might already have been called;
and in all likelihood, it is probably deleting itself\&.)
.IP [2]
If \fB$o\fR changes the command prefix that's bound to \fB$s\fR and
\fB$h\fR, and if \fB$o\fRs binding has not yet been called during
this execution of
.CS
hook call $s $h
.CE
.IP
the new binding will be called when the time comes\&. (But again, it is
probably \fB$o\fRs binding that is is making the change\&.)
.IP [3]
If a new observer is bound to \fB$s\fR and \fB$h\fR, its binding will
not be called until the next invocation of
.CS
hook call $s $h
.CE
.RE
.TP
\fBhook\fR \fBcall\fR \fIsubject\fR \fIhook\fR ?\fIargs\fR\&.\&.\&.?
This command is called when the named \fIsubject\fR wishes to call the
named \fIhook\fR\&. All relevant bindings are called with the specified
arguments in the global namespace\&. Note that the bindings are called
synchronously, before the command returns; this allows the \fIargs\fR
to include references to entities that will be cleaned up as soon as
the hook has been called\&.
.sp
The order in which the bindings are called is not guaranteed\&. If
sequence among observers must be preserved, define one observer and
have its bindings call the other callbacks directly in the proper
sequence\&.
.sp
Because the \fBhook\fR mechanism is intended to support loose
coupling, it is presumed that the \fIsubject\fR has no knowledge of
the observers, nor any expectation regarding return values\&. This has a
number of implications:
.RS
.IP [1]
\fBhook call\fR returns the empty string\&.
.IP [2]
Normal return values from observer bindings are ignored\&.
.IP [3]
Errors and other exceptional returns propagate normally by
default\&. This will rarely be what is wanted, because the subjects
usually have no knowledge of the observers and will therefore have no
particular competence at handling their errors\&. That makes it an
application issue, and so applications will usually want to define an
\fB-errorcommand\fR\&.
.RE
.IP
If the \fB-errorcommand\fR configuration option has a non-empty
value, its value will be invoked for all errors and other exceptional
returns in observer bindings\&. See \fBhook configure\fR, below, for
more information on configuration options\&.
.TP
\fBhook\fR \fBforget\fR \fIobject\fR
This command deletes any existing bindings in which the named
\fIobject\fR appears as either the \fIsubject\fR or the
\fIobserver\fR\&.
Bindings deleted by this method will never be called again\&. In
particular,
.RS
.IP [1]
If an observer is forgotten during a call to \fBhook call\fR, any
uncalled binding it might have had to the relevant subject and hook
will \fInot\fR be called subsequently\&.
.IP [2]
If a subject \fB$s\fR is forgotten during a call to
.CS
hook call $s $h
.CE
.IP
then \fBhook call\fR will return as soon as the current binding
returns\&. No further bindings will be called\&.
.RE
.TP
\fBhook\fR \fBcget\fR \fIoption\fR
This command returns the value of one of the \fBhook\fR command's
configuration options\&.
.TP
\fBhook\fR \fBconfigure\fR \fBoption\fR \fIvalue\fR \&.\&.\&.
This command sets the value of one or more of the \fBhook\fR command's
configuration options:
.RS
.TP
\fB-errorcommand\fR \fIcmdPrefix\fR
If the value of this option is the empty string, "", then errors
and other exception returns in binding scripts are propagated
normally\&. Otherwise, it must be a command prefix taking three
additional arguments:
.RS
.IP [1]
a 4-element list {subject hook arglist observer},
.IP [2]
the result string, and
.IP [3]
the return options dictionary\&.
.RE
.IP
Given this information, the \fB-errorcommand\fR can choose to log
the error, call \fBinterp bgerror\fR, delete the errant binding
(thus preventing the error from arising a second time) and so forth\&.
.TP
\fB-tracecommand\fR \fIcmdPrefix\fR
The option's value should be a command prefix taking four
arguments:
.RS
.IP [1]
a \fIsubject\fR,
.IP [2]
a \fIhook\fR,
.IP [3]
a list of the hook's argument values, and
.IP [4]
a list of \fIobjects\fR the hook was called for\&.
.RE
.IP
The command will be called for each hook that is called\&. This allows
the application to trace hook execution for debugging purposes\&.
.RE
.PP
.SH EXAMPLE
The \fB::model\fR module calls the <Update> hook in response to
commands that change the model's data:
.CS
hook call ::model <Update>
.CE
The \fB\&.view\fR megawidget displays the model state, and needs to
know about model updates\&. Consequently, it subscribes to the ::model's
<Update> hook\&.
.CS
hook bind ::model <Update> \&.view [list \&.view ModelUpdate]
.CE
When the \fB::model\fR calls the hook, the \fB\&.view\fRs
ModelUpdate subcommand will be called\&.
.PP
Later the \fB\&.view\fR megawidget is destroyed\&. In its destructor,
it tells the \fIhook\fR that it no longer exists:
.CS
hook forget \&.view
.CE
All bindings involving \fB\&.view\fR are deleted\&.
.SH CREDITS
Hook has been designed and implemented by William H\&. Duquette\&.
.SH "BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK"
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain
bugs and other problems\&.
Please report such in the category \fIhook\fR of the
\fITcllib Trackers\fR [http://core\&.tcl\&.tk/tcllib/reportlist]\&.
Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either
package and/or documentation\&.
.PP
When proposing code changes, please provide \fIunified diffs\fR,
i\&.e the output of \fBdiff -u\fR\&.
.PP
Note further that \fIattachments\fR are strongly preferred over
inlined patches\&. Attachments can be made by going to the \fBEdit\fR
form of the ticket immediately after its creation, and then using the
left-most button in the secondary navigation bar\&.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
uevent(n)
.SH KEYWORDS
callback, event, hook, observer, producer, publisher, subject, subscriber, uevent
.SH CATEGORY
Programming tools
.SH COPYRIGHT
.nf
Copyright (c) 2010, by William H\&. Duquette
.fi
|