view dwt/widgets/Listener.d @ 126:38807a925e24

Fixed compile errors, support for SWT language files
author Jacob Carlborg <doob@me.com>
date Fri, 16 Jan 2009 23:35:40 +0100
parents d8635bb48c7c
children
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/*******************************************************************************
 * Copyright (c) 2000, 2005 IBM Corporation and others.
 * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
 * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0
 * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at
 * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html
 *
 * Contributors:
 *     IBM Corporation - initial API and implementation
 *     
 * Port to the D programming language:
 *     Jacob Carlborg <doob@me.com>
 *     Frank Benoit <benoit@tionex.de>
 *******************************************************************************/
module dwt.widgets.Listener;


import dwt.widgets.Event;

import tango.core.Traits;
import tango.core.Tuple;

/**
 * Implementers of <code>Listener</code> provide a simple 
 * <code>handleEvent()</code> method that is used internally 
 * by DWT to dispatch events.
 * <p>
 * After creating an instance of a class that implements this interface
 * it can be added to a widget using the 
 * <code>addListener(int eventType, Listener handler)</code> method and
 * removed using the 
 * <code>removeListener (int eventType, Listener handler)</code> method. 
 * When the specified event occurs, <code>handleEvent(...)</code> will
 * be sent to the instance.
 * </p>
 * <p>
 * Classes which implement this interface are described within DWT as
 * providing the <em>untyped listener</em> API. Typically, widgets will
 * also provide a higher-level <em>typed listener</em> API, that is based
 * on the standard <code>java.util.EventListener</code> pattern.
 * </p> 
 * <p>
 * Note that, since all internal DWT event dispatching is based on untyped
 * listeners, it is simple to build subsets of DWT for use on memory 
 * constrained, small footprint devices, by removing the classes and
 * methods which implement the typed listener API.
 * </p>
 *
 * @see Widget#addListener
 * @see java.util.EventListener
 * @see dwt.events
 */
public interface Listener {

/**
 * Sent when an event that the receiver has registered for occurs.
 *
 * @param event the event which occurred
 */
void handleEvent (Event event);
}

/// Helper class for the dgListener template function
private class _DgListenerT(Dg,T...) : Listener {
    
    alias ParameterTupleOf!(Dg) DgArgs;
    static assert( is(DgArgs == Tuple!(Event,T)),
                  "Delegate args not correct: delegate args: ("~DgArgs.stringof~") vs. passed args: ("~Tuple!(Event,T).stringof~")" );
    
    Dg dg;
    T  t;
    
    private this( Dg dg, T t ){
        this.dg = dg;
        static if( T.length > 0 ){
            this.t = t;
        }
    }
    
    void handleEvent( Event e ){
        dg(e,t);
    }
}

/++
+ dgListener creates a class implementing the Listener interface and delegating the call to
+ handleEvent to the users delegate. This template function will store also additional parameters.
+
+ Examle of usage:
+ ---
+ void handleTextEvent (Event e, int inset ) {
    +     // ...
+ }
+ text.addListener (DWT.FocusOut, dgListener( &handleTextEvent, inset ));
+ ---
+/
Listener dgListener( Dg, T... )( Dg dg, T args ){
    return new _DgListenerT!( Dg, T )( dg, args );
}