author | Eckhart Koeppen <eckhart.koppen@nokia.com> |
Wed, 21 Apr 2010 20:15:53 +0300 | |
branch | RCL_3 |
changeset 13 | c0432d11811c |
parent 4 | 3b1da2848fc7 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
0 | 1 |
/**************************************************************************** |
2 |
** |
|
4
3b1da2848fc7
Revision: 201003
Dremov Kirill (Nokia-D-MSW/Tampere) <kirill.dremov@nokia.com>
parents:
3
diff
changeset
|
3 |
** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). |
0 | 4 |
** All rights reserved. |
5 |
** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) |
|
6 |
** |
|
7 |
** This file is part of the QtScript module of the Qt Toolkit. |
|
8 |
** |
|
3
41300fa6a67c
Revision: 201003
Dremov Kirill (Nokia-D-MSW/Tampere) <kirill.dremov@nokia.com>
parents:
0
diff
changeset
|
9 |
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL-ONLY$ |
0 | 10 |
** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage |
3
41300fa6a67c
Revision: 201003
Dremov Kirill (Nokia-D-MSW/Tampere) <kirill.dremov@nokia.com>
parents:
0
diff
changeset
|
11 |
** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser |
0 | 12 |
** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software |
13 |
** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the |
|
14 |
** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to |
|
15 |
** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements |
|
16 |
** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. |
|
17 |
** |
|
18 |
** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact |
|
19 |
** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. |
|
20 |
** $QT_END_LICENSE$ |
|
21 |
** |
|
22 |
****************************************************************************/ |
|
23 |
||
24 |
#include "qscriptclass.h" |
|
25 |
#include "qscriptstring.h" |
|
26 |
||
27 |
/*! |
|
28 |
\since 4.4 |
|
29 |
\class QScriptClass |
|
30 |
||
31 |
\brief The QScriptClass class provides an interface for defining custom behavior of (a class of) Qt Script objects. |
|
32 |
||
33 |
\ingroup script |
|
34 |
\mainclass |
|
35 |
||
36 |
The QScriptClass class defines an interface for handling various |
|
37 |
aspects of interaction with the Qt Script objects associated with |
|
38 |
the class. Such objects are created by calling |
|
39 |
QScriptEngine::newObject(), passing a pointer to the QScriptClass as |
|
40 |
argument. |
|
41 |
||
42 |
By subclassing QScriptClass, you can define precisely how access to |
|
43 |
properties of the objects that use your class is handled. This |
|
44 |
enables a fully dynamic handling of properties, e.g. it's more |
|
45 |
powerful than QScriptEngine::newQObject(). For example, you can use |
|
46 |
QScriptClass to implement array-type objects (i.e. objects that |
|
47 |
handle the \c{length} property, and properties whose names are valid |
|
48 |
array indexes, in a special way), or to implement a "live" |
|
49 |
(runtime-defined) proxy to an underlying object. |
|
50 |
||
51 |
If you just need to handle access to a set of properties that are |
|
52 |
known at the time an object is created (i.e. "semi-statically"), you |
|
53 |
might consider using QScriptValue::setProperty() to define |
|
54 |
getter/setter functions for the relevant properties, rather than |
|
55 |
subclassing QScriptClass. |
|
56 |
||
57 |
Reimplement queryProperty() to specify which properties are handled |
|
58 |
in a custom way by your script class (i.e. should be |
|
59 |
\bold{delegated} to the QScriptClass), and which properties should |
|
60 |
be handled just like normal Qt Script object properties. |
|
61 |
||
62 |
Reimplement property() and setProperty() to perform the actual |
|
63 |
access (read or write) to the properties that your class |
|
64 |
handles. Additionally, you can reimplement propertyFlags() to |
|
65 |
specify custom flags for your properties. |
|
66 |
||
67 |
Reimplement newIterator() to provide an iterator for objects of your |
|
68 |
custom class. This is only necessary if objects of your class can |
|
69 |
have custom properties that you want to be reported when an object |
|
70 |
is used together with the QScriptValueIterator class, or when an |
|
71 |
object is used in a for-in enumeration statement in a script. |
|
72 |
||
73 |
When implementing custom classes of objects, you typically use |
|
74 |
QScriptValue::setData() to store instance-specific data as part of |
|
75 |
object initialization; the data won't be accessible from scripts |
|
76 |
directly, but you can access it in e.g. your reimplementations of |
|
77 |
property() and setProperty() (by calling QScriptValue::data()) to |
|
78 |
perform custom processing. |
|
79 |
||
80 |
Reimplement prototype() to provide a custom prototype object for |
|
81 |
your script class. |
|
82 |
||
83 |
Reimplement supportsExtension() and extension() if your custom |
|
84 |
script class supports one or more of the extensions specified by the |
|
85 |
Extension enum. |
|
86 |
||
87 |
\sa QScriptClassPropertyIterator, QScriptEngine::newObject(), {Custom Script Class Example} |
|
88 |
*/ |
|
89 |
||
90 |
/*! |
|
91 |
\enum QScriptClass::Extension |
|
92 |
||
93 |
This enum specifies the possible extensions to a QScriptClass. |
|
94 |
||
95 |
\value Callable Instances of this class can be called as functions. |
|
96 |
||
97 |
\value HasInstance Instances of this class implement [[HasInstance]]. |
|
98 |
||
99 |
\sa extension() |
|
100 |
*/ |
|
101 |
||
102 |
/*! |
|
103 |
\enum QScriptClass::QueryFlag |
|
104 |
||
105 |
This enum describes flags that are used to query a QScriptClass |
|
106 |
regarding how access to a property should be handled. |
|
107 |
||
108 |
\value HandlesReadAccess The QScriptClass handles read access to this property. |
|
109 |
\value HandlesWriteAccess The QScriptClass handles write access to this property. |
|
110 |
||
111 |
\sa queryProperty() |
|
112 |
*/ |
|
113 |
||
114 |
QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE |
|
115 |
||
116 |
class QScriptClassPrivate |
|
117 |
{ |
|
118 |
Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC(QScriptClass) |
|
119 |
public: |
|
120 |
QScriptClassPrivate() {} |
|
121 |
virtual ~QScriptClassPrivate() {} |
|
122 |
||
123 |
QScriptEngine *engine; |
|
124 |
||
125 |
QScriptClass *q_ptr; |
|
126 |
}; |
|
127 |
||
128 |
/*! |
|
129 |
Constructs a QScriptClass object to be used in the given \a engine. |
|
130 |
||
131 |
The engine does not take ownership of the QScriptClass object. |
|
132 |
*/ |
|
133 |
QScriptClass::QScriptClass(QScriptEngine *engine) |
|
134 |
: d_ptr(new QScriptClassPrivate) |
|
135 |
{ |
|
136 |
d_ptr->q_ptr = this; |
|
137 |
d_ptr->engine = engine; |
|
138 |
} |
|
139 |
||
140 |
/*! |
|
141 |
\internal |
|
142 |
*/ |
|
143 |
QScriptClass::QScriptClass(QScriptEngine *engine, QScriptClassPrivate &dd) |
|
144 |
: d_ptr(&dd) |
|
145 |
{ |
|
146 |
d_ptr->q_ptr = this; |
|
147 |
d_ptr->engine = engine; |
|
148 |
} |
|
149 |
||
150 |
/*! |
|
151 |
Destroys the QScriptClass object. |
|
152 |
||
153 |
If a QScriptClass object is deleted before the associated engine(), |
|
154 |
any Qt Script objects using the QScriptClass will be "demoted" to |
|
155 |
normal Qt Script objects. |
|
156 |
*/ |
|
157 |
QScriptClass::~QScriptClass() |
|
158 |
{ |
|
159 |
} |
|
160 |
||
161 |
/*! |
|
162 |
Returns the engine that this QScriptClass is associated with. |
|
163 |
*/ |
|
164 |
QScriptEngine *QScriptClass::engine() const |
|
165 |
{ |
|
166 |
Q_D(const QScriptClass); |
|
167 |
return d->engine; |
|
168 |
} |
|
169 |
||
170 |
/*! |
|
171 |
Returns the object to be used as the prototype of new instances |
|
172 |
of this class (created with QScriptEngine::newObject()). |
|
173 |
||
174 |
The default implementation returns an invalid QScriptValue, meaning |
|
175 |
that the standard Object prototype will be used. Reimplement this |
|
176 |
function to provide your own custom prototype. |
|
177 |
||
178 |
Typically you initialize your prototype object in the constructor of |
|
179 |
your class, then return it in this function. |
|
180 |
||
181 |
See the "Making Use of Prototype-Based Inheritance" section in the |
|
182 |
QtScript documentation for more information on how prototypes are |
|
183 |
used. |
|
184 |
*/ |
|
185 |
QScriptValue QScriptClass::prototype() const |
|
186 |
{ |
|
187 |
return QScriptValue(); |
|
188 |
} |
|
189 |
||
190 |
/*! |
|
191 |
Returns the name of the script class. |
|
192 |
||
193 |
Qt Script uses this name to generate a default string representation |
|
194 |
of objects in case you do not provide a toString function. |
|
195 |
||
196 |
The default implementation returns a null string. |
|
197 |
*/ |
|
198 |
QString QScriptClass::name() const |
|
199 |
{ |
|
200 |
return QString(); |
|
201 |
} |
|
202 |
||
203 |
/*! |
|
204 |
Queries this script class for how access to the property with the |
|
205 |
given \a name of the given \a object should be handled. The given \a |
|
206 |
flags specify the aspects of interest. This function should return a |
|
207 |
subset of \a flags to indicate which aspects of property access |
|
208 |
should be further handled by the script class. |
|
209 |
||
210 |
For example, if the \a flags contain HandlesReadAccess, and you |
|
211 |
would like your class to handle the reading of the property (through |
|
212 |
the property() function), the returned flags should include |
|
213 |
HandlesReadAccess. If the returned flags do not contain |
|
214 |
HandlesReadAccess, the property will be handled as a normal script |
|
215 |
object property. |
|
216 |
||
217 |
You can optionally use the \a id argument to store a value that will |
|
218 |
subsequently be passed on to functions such as property() and |
|
219 |
setProperty(). |
|
220 |
||
221 |
The default implementation of this function returns 0. |
|
222 |
||
223 |
Note: This function is only called if the given property isn't |
|
224 |
already a normal property of the object. For example, say you |
|
225 |
advertise that you want to handle read access to property \c{foo}, |
|
226 |
but not write access; if \c{foo} is then assigned a value, it will |
|
227 |
become a normal script object property, and subsequently you will no |
|
228 |
longer be queried regarding read access to \c{foo}. |
|
229 |
||
230 |
\sa property() |
|
231 |
*/ |
|
232 |
QScriptClass::QueryFlags QScriptClass::queryProperty( |
|
233 |
const QScriptValue &object, const QScriptString &name, |
|
234 |
QueryFlags flags, uint *id) |
|
235 |
{ |
|
236 |
Q_UNUSED(object); |
|
237 |
Q_UNUSED(name); |
|
238 |
Q_UNUSED(flags); |
|
239 |
Q_UNUSED(id); |
|
240 |
return 0; |
|
241 |
} |
|
242 |
||
243 |
/*! |
|
244 |
Returns the value of the property with the given \a name of the given |
|
245 |
\a object. |
|
246 |
||
247 |
The \a id argument is only useful if you assigned a value to it in |
|
248 |
queryProperty(). |
|
249 |
||
250 |
The default implementation does nothing and returns an invalid QScriptValue. |
|
251 |
||
252 |
\sa setProperty(), propertyFlags() |
|
253 |
*/ |
|
254 |
QScriptValue QScriptClass::property(const QScriptValue &object, |
|
255 |
const QScriptString &name, uint id) |
|
256 |
{ |
|
257 |
Q_UNUSED(object); |
|
258 |
Q_UNUSED(name); |
|
259 |
Q_UNUSED(id); |
|
260 |
return QScriptValue(); |
|
261 |
} |
|
262 |
||
263 |
/*! |
|
264 |
Returns the flags of the property with the given \a name of the given |
|
265 |
\a object. |
|
266 |
||
267 |
The \a id argument is only useful if you assigned a value to it in |
|
268 |
queryProperty(). |
|
269 |
||
270 |
The default implementation returns 0. |
|
271 |
||
272 |
\sa property() |
|
273 |
*/ |
|
274 |
QScriptValue::PropertyFlags QScriptClass::propertyFlags( |
|
275 |
const QScriptValue &object, const QScriptString &name, uint id) |
|
276 |
{ |
|
277 |
Q_UNUSED(object); |
|
278 |
Q_UNUSED(name); |
|
279 |
Q_UNUSED(id); |
|
280 |
return 0; |
|
281 |
} |
|
282 |
||
283 |
/*! |
|
284 |
Sets the property with the given \a name of the given \a object to |
|
285 |
the given \a value. |
|
286 |
||
287 |
The \a id argument is only useful if you assigned a value to it in |
|
288 |
queryProperty(). |
|
289 |
||
290 |
The default implementation does nothing. |
|
291 |
||
292 |
An invalid \a value represents a request to remove the property. |
|
293 |
||
294 |
\sa property() |
|
295 |
*/ |
|
296 |
void QScriptClass::setProperty(QScriptValue &object, const QScriptString &name, |
|
297 |
uint id, const QScriptValue &value) |
|
298 |
{ |
|
299 |
Q_UNUSED(object); |
|
300 |
Q_UNUSED(name); |
|
301 |
Q_UNUSED(id); |
|
302 |
Q_UNUSED(value); |
|
303 |
} |
|
304 |
||
305 |
/*! |
|
306 |
Returns an iterator for traversing custom properties of the given \a |
|
307 |
object. |
|
308 |
||
309 |
The default implementation returns 0, meaning that there are no |
|
310 |
custom properties to traverse. |
|
311 |
||
312 |
Reimplement this function if objects of your script class can have |
|
313 |
one or more custom properties (e.g. those reported to be handled by |
|
314 |
queryProperty()) that you want to appear when an object's properties |
|
315 |
are enumerated (e.g. by a for-in statement in a script). |
|
316 |
||
317 |
Qt Script takes ownership of the new iterator object. |
|
318 |
||
319 |
\sa QScriptValueIterator |
|
320 |
*/ |
|
321 |
QScriptClassPropertyIterator *QScriptClass::newIterator(const QScriptValue &object) |
|
322 |
{ |
|
323 |
Q_UNUSED(object); |
|
324 |
return 0; |
|
325 |
} |
|
326 |
||
327 |
/*! |
|
328 |
Returns true if the QScriptClass supports the given \a extension; |
|
329 |
otherwise, false is returned. By default, no extensions |
|
330 |
are supported. |
|
331 |
||
332 |
Reimplement this function to indicate which extensions your custom |
|
333 |
class supports. |
|
334 |
||
335 |
\sa extension() |
|
336 |
*/ |
|
337 |
bool QScriptClass::supportsExtension(Extension extension) const |
|
338 |
{ |
|
339 |
Q_UNUSED(extension); |
|
340 |
return false; |
|
341 |
} |
|
342 |
||
343 |
/*! |
|
344 |
This virtual function can be reimplemented in a QScriptClass |
|
345 |
subclass to provide support for extensions. The optional \a argument |
|
346 |
can be provided as input to the \a extension; the result must be |
|
347 |
returned in the form of a QVariant. You can call supportsExtension() |
|
348 |
to check if an extension is supported by the QScriptClass. By |
|
349 |
default, no extensions are supported, and this function returns an |
|
350 |
invalid QVariant. |
|
351 |
||
352 |
If you implement the Callable extension, Qt Script will call this |
|
353 |
function when an instance of your class is called as a function |
|
354 |
(e.g. from a script or using QScriptValue::call()). The \a argument |
|
355 |
will contain a pointer to the QScriptContext that represents the |
|
356 |
function call, and you should return a QVariant that holds the |
|
357 |
result of the function call. In the following example the sum of the |
|
358 |
arguments to the script function are added up and returned: |
|
359 |
||
360 |
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_script_qscriptclass.cpp 0 |
|
361 |
||
362 |
If you implement the HasInstance extension, Qt Script will call this |
|
363 |
function as part of evaluating the \c{instanceof} operator, as |
|
364 |
described in ECMA-262 Section 11.8.6. The \a argument is a |
|
365 |
QScriptValueList containing two items: The first item is the object |
|
366 |
that HasInstance is being applied to (an instance of your class), |
|
367 |
and the second item can be any value. extension() should return true |
|
368 |
if the value delegates behavior to the object, false otherwise. |
|
369 |
||
370 |
\sa supportsExtension() |
|
371 |
*/ |
|
372 |
QVariant QScriptClass::extension(Extension extension, const QVariant &argument) |
|
373 |
{ |
|
374 |
Q_UNUSED(extension); |
|
375 |
Q_UNUSED(argument); |
|
376 |
return QVariant(); |
|
377 |
} |
|
378 |
||
379 |
QT_END_NAMESPACE |