gi-gtk-4.0.6: Gtk bindings
CopyrightWill Thompson and Iñaki García Etxebarria
LicenseLGPL-2.1
MaintainerIñaki García Etxebarria
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred
LanguageHaskell2010

GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

Description

GtkExpression provides a way to describe references to values.

An important aspect of expressions is that the value can be obtained from a source that is several steps away. For example, an expression may describe ‘the value of property A of object1, which is itself the value of a property of object2’. And object1 may not even exist yet at the time that the expression is created. This is contrast to GObject property bindings, which can only create direct connections between the properties of two objects that must both exist for the duration of the binding.

An expression needs to be "evaluated" to obtain the value that it currently refers to. An evaluation always happens in the context of a current object called this (it mirrors the behavior of object-oriented languages), which may or may not influence the result of the evaluation. Use expressionEvaluate for evaluating an expression.

Various methods for defining expressions exist, from simple constants via ConstantExpression.new() to looking up properties in a GObject (even recursively) via propertyExpressionNew or providing custom functions to transform and combine expressions via closureExpressionNew.

Here is an example of a complex expression:

c code

 color_expr = gtk_property_expression_new (GTK_TYPE_LIST_ITEM,
                                           NULL, "item");
 expression = gtk_property_expression_new (GTK_TYPE_COLOR,
                                           color_expr, "name");

when evaluated with this being a GtkListItem, it will obtain the "item" property from the GtkListItem, and then obtain the "name" property from the resulting object (which is assumed to be of type GTK_TYPE_COLOR).

A more concise way to describe this would be

 this->item->name

The most likely place where you will encounter expressions is in the context of list models and list widgets using them. For example, GtkDropDown is evaluating a GtkExpression to obtain strings from the items in its model that it can then use to match against the contents of its search entry. GtkStringFilter is using a GtkExpression for similar reasons.

By default, expressions are not paying attention to changes and evaluation is just a snapshot of the current state at a given time. To get informed about changes, an expression needs to be "watched" via a [structgtk.ExpressionWatch], which will cause a callback to be called whenever the value of the expression may have changed; expressionWatch starts watching an expression, and expressionWatchUnwatch stops.

Watches can be created for automatically updating the property of an object, similar to GObject's GBinding mechanism, by using expressionBind.

GtkExpression in GObject properties

In order to use a GtkExpression as a GObject property, you must use the paramSpecExpression when creating a GParamSpec to install in the GObject class being defined; for instance:

c code

obj_props[PROP_EXPRESSION] =
  gtk_param_spec_expression ("expression",
                             "Expression",
                             "The expression used by the widget",
                             G_PARAM_READWRITE |
                             G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS |
                             G_PARAM_EXPLICIT_NOTIFY);

When implementing the GObjectClass.set_property and GObjectClass.get_property virtual functions, you must use valueGetExpression, to retrieve the stored GtkExpression from the GValue container, and valueSetExpression, to store the GtkExpression into the GValue; for instance:

c code

 // in set_property()...
 case PROP_EXPRESSION:
   foo_widget_set_expression (foo, gtk_value_get_expression (value));
   break;

 // in get_property()...
 case PROP_EXPRESSION:
   gtk_value_set_expression (value, foo->expression);
   break;

GtkExpression in .ui files

GtkBuilder has support for creating expressions. The syntax here can be used where a GtkExpression object is needed like in a <property> tag for an expression property, or in a <binding name="property"> tag to bind a property to an expression.

To create a property expression, use the <lookup> element. It can have a type attribute to specify the object type, and a name attribute to specify the property to look up. The content of <lookup> can either be an element specfiying the expression to use the object, or a string that specifies the name of the object to use.

Example:

xml code

 <lookup name='search'>string_filter</lookup>

To create a constant expression, use the <constant> element. If the type attribute is specified, the element content is interpreted as a value of that type. Otherwise, it is assumed to be an object. For instance:

xml code

 <constant>string_filter</constant>
 <constant type='gchararray'>Hello, world</constant>

To create a closure expression, use the <closure> element. The type and function attributes specify what function to use for the closure, the content of the element contains the expressions for the parameters. For instance:

xml code

 <closure type='gchararray' function='combine_args_somehow'>
   <constant type='gchararray'>File size:</constant>
   <lookup type='GFile' name='size'>myfile</lookup>
 </closure>
Synopsis

Exported types

newtype Expression Source #

Memory-managed wrapper type.

Constructors

Expression (ManagedPtr Expression) 

Instances

Instances details
Eq Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

BoxedPtr Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

ManagedPtrNewtype Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

Methods

toManagedPtr :: Expression -> ManagedPtr Expression

TypedObject Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

Methods

glibType :: IO GType

HasParentTypes Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

IsGValue (Maybe Expression) Source #

Convert Expression to and from GValue. See toGValue and fromGValue.

Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

Methods

gvalueGType_ :: IO GType

gvalueSet_ :: Ptr GValue -> Maybe Expression -> IO ()

gvalueGet_ :: Ptr GValue -> IO (Maybe Expression)

type ParentTypes Expression Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

type ParentTypes Expression = '[] :: [Type]

class (BoxedPtr o, TypedObject o, IsDescendantOf Expression o) => IsExpression o Source #

Type class for types which can be safely cast to Expression, for instance with toExpression.

Instances

Instances details
(BoxedPtr o, TypedObject o, IsDescendantOf Expression o) => IsExpression o Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GI.Gtk.Objects.Expression

toExpression :: (MonadIO m, IsExpression o) => o -> m Expression Source #

Cast to Expression, for types for which this is known to be safe. For general casts, use castTo.

Methods

Click to display all available methods, including inherited ones

Expand

Methods

bind, evaluate, isStatic, ref, unref, watch.

Getters

getValueType.

Setters

None.

bind

expressionBind Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a, IsObject b, IsObject c) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> b

target: the target object to bind to

-> Text

property: name of the property on target to bind to

-> Maybe c

this_: the this argument for the evaluation of self

-> m ExpressionWatch

Returns: a GtkExpressionWatch

Bind target's property named property to self.

The value that self evaluates to is set via g_object_set() on target. This is repeated whenever self changes to ensure that the object's property stays synchronized with self.

If self's evaluation fails, target's property is not updated. You can ensure that this doesn't happen by using a fallback expression.

Note that this function takes ownership of self. If you want to keep it around, you should expressionRef it beforehand.

evaluate

expressionEvaluate Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a, IsObject b) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> Maybe b

this_: the this argument for the evaluation

-> GValue

value: an empty GValue

-> m Bool

Returns: TRUE if the expression could be evaluated

Evaluates the given expression and on success stores the result in value.

The GType of value will be the type given by expressionGetValueType.

It is possible that expressions cannot be evaluated - for example when the expression references objects that have been destroyed or set to NULL. In that case value will remain empty and FALSE will be returned.

getValueType

expressionGetValueType Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> m GType

Returns: The type returned from expressionEvaluate

Gets the GType that this expression evaluates to.

This type is constant and will not change over the lifetime of this expression.

isStatic

expressionIsStatic Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> m Bool

Returns: TRUE if the expression is static

Checks if the expression is static.

A static expression will never change its result when expressionEvaluate is called on it with the same arguments.

That means a call to expressionWatch is not necessary because it will never trigger a notify.

ref

expressionRef Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> m Expression

Returns: the GtkExpression with an additional reference

Acquires a reference on the given GtkExpression.

unref

expressionUnref Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> m () 

Releases a reference on the given GtkExpression.

If the reference was the last, the resources associated to the self are freed.

watch

expressionWatch Source #

Arguments

:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsExpression a, IsObject b) 
=> a

self: a GtkExpression

-> Maybe b

this_: the this argument to watch

-> ExpressionNotify

notify: callback to invoke when the expression changes

-> m ExpressionWatch

Returns: The newly installed watch. Note that the only reference held to the watch will be released when the watch is unwatched which can happen automatically, and not just via expressionWatchUnwatch. You should call expressionWatchRef if you want to keep the watch around.

Watch the given expression for changes.

The notify function will be called whenever the evaluation of self may have changed.

GTK cannot guarantee that the evaluation did indeed change when the notify gets invoked, but it guarantees the opposite: When it did in fact change, the notify will be invoked.