- NAME
- Tcl_ClassSetConstructor, Tcl_ClassSetDestructor,
Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass, Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject,
Tcl_MethodIsPublic, Tcl_MethodIsType, Tcl_MethodName,
Tcl_NewInstanceMethod, Tcl_NewMethod, Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext,
Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering, Tcl_ObjectContextMethod,
Tcl_ObjectContextObject, Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs — manipulate
methods and method-call contexts
- SYNOPSIS
- #include <tclOO.h>
- Tcl_Method
- Tcl_NewMethod(interp, class, nameObj,
isPublic,
- methodTypePtr, clientData)
- Tcl_Method
- Tcl_NewInstanceMethod(interp, object, nameObj,
isPublic,
- methodTypePtr, clientData)
- Tcl_ClassSetConstructor(interp, class,
method)
- Tcl_ClassSetDestructor(interp, class,
method)
- Tcl_Class
- Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass(method)
- Tcl_Object
- Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject(method)
- Tcl_Obj *
- Tcl_MethodName(method)
- int
- Tcl_MethodIsPublic(method)
- int
- Tcl_MethodIsType(method, methodTypePtr,
clientDataPtr)
- int
- Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext(interp, context, objc,
objv, skip)
- int
- Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering(context)
- Tcl_Method
- Tcl_ObjectContextMethod(context)
- Tcl_Object
- Tcl_ObjectContextObject(context)
- int
- Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs(context)
- ARGUMENTS
- DESCRIPTION
- METHOD
CREATION
- METHOD CALL
CONTEXTS
- METHOD
TYPES
- TCL_METHODCALLPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
- TCL_METHODDELETEPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
- TCL_CLONEPROC
FUNCTION SIGNATURE
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
Tcl_ClassSetConstructor, Tcl_ClassSetDestructor,
Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass, Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject,
Tcl_MethodIsPublic, Tcl_MethodIsType, Tcl_MethodName,
Tcl_NewInstanceMethod, Tcl_NewMethod, Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext,
Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering, Tcl_ObjectContextMethod,
Tcl_ObjectContextObject, Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs — manipulate
methods and method-call contexts
#include <tclOO.h>
Tcl_Method
Tcl_NewMethod(interp, class, nameObj, isPublic,
methodTypePtr,
clientData)
Tcl_Method
Tcl_NewInstanceMethod(interp, object, nameObj,
isPublic,
methodTypePtr,
clientData)
Tcl_ClassSetConstructor(interp, class, method)
Tcl_ClassSetDestructor(interp, class, method)
Tcl_Class
Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass(method)
Tcl_Object
Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject(method)
Tcl_Obj *
Tcl_MethodName(method)
int
Tcl_MethodIsPublic(method)
int
Tcl_MethodIsType(method, methodTypePtr,
clientDataPtr)
int
Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext(interp, context, objc, objv,
skip)
int
Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering(context)
Tcl_Method
Tcl_ObjectContextMethod(context)
Tcl_Object
Tcl_ObjectContextObject(context)
int
Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs(context)
- Tcl_Interp *interp
(in/out)
- The interpreter holding the object or class to create or update
a method in.
- Tcl_Object object
(in)
- The object to create the method in.
- Tcl_Class class
(in)
- The class to create the method in.
- Tcl_Obj *nameObj
(in)
- The name of the method to create. Should not be NULL unless
creating constructors or destructors.
- int isPublic (in)
- A flag saying what the visibility of the method is. The only
supported public values of this flag are 0 for a non-exported
method, and 1 for an exported method.
- Tcl_MethodType *methodTypePtr (in)
- A description of the type of the method to create, or the type
of method to compare against.
- ClientData clientData (in)
- A piece of data that is passed to the implementation of the
method without interpretation.
- ClientData *clientDataPtr (out)
- A pointer to a variable in which to write the clientData
value supplied when the method was created. If NULL, the
clientData value will not be retrieved.
- Tcl_Method method (in)
- A reference to a method to query.
- Tcl_ObjectContext context (in)
- A reference to a method-call context. Note that client code
must not retain a reference to a context.
- int objc (in)
- The number of arguments to pass to the method
implementation.
- Tcl_Obj *const *objv
(in)
- An array of arguments to pass to the method
implementation.
- int skip (in)
- The number of arguments passed to the method implementation
that do not represent "real" arguments.
A method is an operation carried out on an object that is
associated with the object. Every method must be attached to either
an object or a class; methods attached to a class are associated
with all instances (direct and indirect) of that class.
Given a method, the entity that declared it can be found using
Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass which returns the class that the
method is attached to (or NULL if the method is not attached to any
class) and Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject which returns the object
that the method is attached to (or NULL if the method is not
attached to an object). The name of the method can be retrieved
with Tcl_MethodName and whether the method is exported is
retrieved with Tcl_MethodIsPublic. The type of the method
can also be introspected upon to a limited degree; the function
Tcl_MethodIsType returns whether a method is of a particular
type, assigning the per-method clientData to the variable
pointed to by clientDataPtr if (that is non-NULL) if the
type is matched.
Methods are created by Tcl_NewMethod and
Tcl_NewInstanceMethod, which create a method attached to a
class or an object respectively. In both cases, the nameObj
argument gives the name of the method to create, the
isPublic argument states whether the method should be
exported initially, the methodTypePtr argument describes the
implementation of the method (see the METHOD
TYPES section below) and the clientData argument
gives some implementation-specific data that is passed on to the
implementation of the method when it is called.
When the nameObj argument to Tcl_NewMethod is
NULL, an unnamed method is created, which is used for constructors
and destructors. Constructors should be installed into their class
using the Tcl_ClassSetConstructor function, and destructors
(which must not require any arguments) should be installed into
their class using the Tcl_ClassSetDestructor function.
Unnamed methods should not be used for any other purpose, and named
methods should not be used as either constructors or destructors.
Also note that a NULL methodTypePtr is used to provide
internal signaling, and should not be used in client code.
When a method is called, a method-call context reference is passed
in as one of the arguments to the implementation function. This
context can be inspected to provide information about the caller,
but should not be retained beyond the moment when the method call
terminates.
The method that is being called can be retrieved from the
context by using Tcl_ObjectContextMethod, and the object
that caused the method to be invoked can be retrieved with
Tcl_ObjectContextObject. The number of arguments that are to
be skipped (e.g. the object name and method name in a normal method
call) is read with Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs, and the
context can also report whether it is working as a filter for
another method through Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering.
During the execution of a method, the method implementation may
choose to invoke the stages of the method call chain that come
after the current method implementation. This (the core of the
next command) is done using
Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext. Note that this function does
not manipulate the call-frame stack, unlike the next command; if the method
implementation has pushed one or more extra frames on the stack as
part of its implementation, it is also responsible for temporarily
popping those frames from the stack while the
Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext function is executing. Note also
that the method-call context is never deleted during the
execution of this function.
The types of methods are described by a pointer to a Tcl_MethodType
structure, which is defined as:
typedef struct {
int version;
const char *name;
Tcl_MethodCallProc *callProc;
Tcl_MethodDeleteProc *deleteProc;
Tcl_CloneProc *cloneProc;
} Tcl_MethodType;
The version field allows for future expansion of the
structure, and should always be declared equal to
TCL_OO_METHOD_VERSION_CURRENT. The name field provides a
human-readable name for the type, and is the value that is exposed
via the info class methodtype and info object
methodtype Tcl commands.
The callProc field gives a function that is called when
the method is invoked; it must never be NULL.
The deleteProc field gives a function that is used to
delete a particular method, and is called when the method is
replaced or removed; if the field is NULL, it is assumed that the
method's clientData needs no special action to delete.
The cloneProc field is either a function that is used to
copy a method's clientData (as part of Tcl_CopyObjectInstance) or NULL to
indicate that the clientData can just be copied
directly.
Functions matching this signature are called when the method is
invoked.
typedef int Tcl_MethodCallProc(
ClientData clientData,
Tcl_Interp *interp,
Tcl_ObjectContext objectContext,
int objc,
Tcl_Obj *const *objv);
The clientData argument to a Tcl_MethodCallProc is the
value that was given when the method was created, the interp
is a place in which to execute scripts and access variables as well
as being where to put the result of the method, and the objc
and objv fields give the parameter objects to the method.
The calling context of the method can be discovered through the
objectContext argument, and the return value from a
Tcl_MethodCallProc is any Tcl return code (e.g. TCL_OK,
TCL_ERROR).
Functions matching this signature are used when a method is
deleted, whether through a new method being created or because the
object or class is deleted.
typedef void Tcl_MethodDeleteProc(
ClientData clientData);
The clientData argument to a Tcl_MethodDeleteProc will be
the same as the value passed to the clientData argument to
Tcl_NewMethod or Tcl_NewInstanceMethod when the
method was created.
Functions matching this signature are used to copy a method when
the object or class is copied using Tcl_CopyObjectInstance (or
oo::copy).
typedef int Tcl_CloneProc(
Tcl_Interp *interp,
ClientData oldClientData,
ClientData *newClientDataPtr);
The interp argument gives a place to write an error
message when the attempt to clone the object is to fail, in which
case the clone procedure must also return TCL_ERROR; it should
return TCL_OK otherwise. The oldClientData field to a
Tcl_CloneProc gives the value from the method being copied from,
and the newClientDataPtr field will point to a variable in
which to write the value for the method being copied to.
Class, oo::class,
oo::define, oo::object
constructor, method, object
Copyright © 2007 Donal K. Fellows