Glib::Object - Bindings for GObject
GObject is the base object class provided by the gobject library. It provides object properties with a notification system, and emittable signals.
Glib::Object is the corresponding Perl object class. Glib::Objects are represented by blessed hash references, with a magical connection to the underlying C object.
Some subclasses of Glib::Object
override
get
and set
with methods more useful to the
subclass, for example Gtk2::TreeModel
getting and setting
row contents.
This is usually done when the subclass has no object properties. Any
object properties it or a further subclass does have can always be
accessed with get_property
and set_property
(together with find_property
and
list_properties
to enquire about them).
Generic code for any object subclass can use the names
get_property
and set_property
to be sure of
getting the object properties as such.
Glib::Object
... (list) key/value pairs, property values to set on creation
Instantiate a Glib::Object of type $class
. Any
key/value pairs in ... are used to set properties on the new
object; see set
. This is designed to be inherited by
Perl-derived subclasses (see Glib::Object::Subclass), but you can
actually use it to create any GObject-derived type.
$pointer
(unsigned) a C pointer value as an
integer.
$noinc
(boolean) if true, do not increase the
GObject's reference count when creating the Perl wrapper. this typically
means that when the Perl wrapper will own the object. in general you
don't want to do that, so the default is false.
Create a Perl Glib::Object reference for the C object pointed to by
$pointer
. You should need this very
rarely; it's intended to support foreign objects.
NOTE: the cast from arbitrary integer to GObject may result in a core dump without warning, because the type-checking macro G_OBJECT() attempts to dereference the pointer to find a GTypeClass structure, and there is no portable way to validate the pointer.
$key
(string)
Fetch the integer stored under the object data key
$key
. These values do not have types; type
conversions must be done manually. See set_data
.
$key
(string)
$data
(scalar)
GObject provides an arbitrary data mechanism that assigns unsigned integers to key names. Functionality overlaps with the hash used as the Perl object instance, so we strongly recommend you use hash keys for your data storage. The GObject data values cannot store type information, so they are not safe to use for anything but integer values, and you really should use this method only if you know what you are doing.
$name
(string)
Find the definition of object property $name
for $object_or_class_name
. Return
undef
if no such property. For the returned data see
Glib::Object::list_properties.
Stops emission of notify signals on $object
.
The signals are queued until thaw_notify
is called on
$object
.
... (list) list of property names
Alias for get_property
(see get and set above).
... (list) key/value pairs
Alias for set_property
(see get and set above).
List all the object properties for
$object_or_class_name
; returns them as a list of
hashes, containing these keys:
The name of the property
The type of the property
The type that owns the property
The description of the property
The Glib::ParamFlags of the property
$property_name
(string)
Emits a notify signal for the property
$property
on $object
.
Complement of new_from_pointer
.
Fetch and return the values for the object properties named in ....
Set object properties.
$detailed_signal
(string) of the form
signal-name::detail
$hook_func
(subroutine)
$hook_data
(scalar)
Add an emission hook for a signal. The hook will be called for any
emission of that signal, independent of the instance. This is possible
only for signals which don't have the G_SIGNAL_NO_HOOKS
flag set.
The $hook_func
should be reference to a
subroutine that looks something like this:
sub emission_hook { my ($invocation_hint, $parameters, $hook_data) = @_; # $parameters is a reference to the @_ to be passed to # signal handlers, including the instance as $parameters->[0]. return $stay_connected; # boolean }
This function returns an id that can be used with
remove_emission_hook
.
Since 1.100.
... (list)
Chain up to an overridden class closure; it is only valid to call this from a class closure override.
Translation: because of various details in how GObjects are
implemented, the way to override a virtual method on a GObject is to
provide a new class closure, or default handler for a signal. This
happens when a class is registered with the type system (see
Glib::Type::register and Glib::Object::Subclass). When called from
inside such an override, this method runs the overridden class closure.
This is equivalent to calling $self
->SUPER::$method (@_)
in normal Perl objects.
$detailed_signal
(string)
$callback
(subroutine)
$data
(scalar) arbitrary data to be passed to each
invocation of callback
Register callback to be called on each emission of
$detailed_signal
. Returns an identifier that may
be used to remove this handler with
$object->signal_handler_disconnect
.
$detailed_signal
(string)
$callback
(scalar)
$data
(scalar)
Like signal_connect
, except that
$callback
will be run after the default
handler.
$detailed_signal
(string)
$callback
(scalar)
$data
(scalar)
Like signal_connect
, except that
$data
and $object
will be
swapped on invocation of $callback
.
$name
(string) the name of the signal
... (list) any arguments to pass to handlers.
Emit the signal name on $object
. The
number and types of additional arguments in ... are determined
by the signal; similarly, the presence and type of return value depends
on the signal being emitted.
Get a reference to a hash describing the innermost signal currently
active on $instance
. Returns undef if no signal emission is
active. This invocation hint is the same object passed to signal
emission hooks, and contains these keys:
The name of the signal being emitted.
The detail passed on for this emission. For example, a
notify
signal will have the property name as the
detail.
The current stage of signal emission, one of run-first, run-last, or run-cleanup.
$handler_id
(unsigned)
$handler_id
(unsigned)
$handler_id
(unsigned)
$handler_id
(unsigned)
$func
(subroutine) function to block
$data
(scalar) data to match, ignored if
undef
$func
(subroutine) function to block
$data
(scalar) data to match, ignored if
undef
$func
(subroutine) function to block
$data
(scalar) data to match, ignored if
undef
$name
(string)
Look up information about the signal $name
on
the instance type $object_or_class_name
, which may
be either a Glib::Object or a package name.
See also Glib::Type::list_signals
, which returns the
same kind of hash refs as this does.
Since 1.080.
$signal_name
(string)
$hook_id
(unsigned)
Remove a hook that was installed by
add_emission_hook
.
Since 1.100.
$detailed_signal
(string)
Reverts the effect of a previous call to freeze_notify
.
This causes all queued notify signals on $object
to be emitted.
$threadsafe
(boolean)
Enables/disables threadsafe gobject tracking. Returns whether or not tracking will be successful and thus whether using perl ithreads will be possible.
$all
(boolean) if FALSE (or omitted) tie only
properties for this object's class, if TRUE tie the properties of this
and all parent classes.
A special method available to Glib::Object derivatives, it uses perl's tie facilities to associate hash keys with the properties of the object. For example:
$button->tie_properties; # equivilent to $button->set (label => Hello World); $button->{label} = Hello World; print "the label is: ".$button->{label}."\n";
Attempts to write to read-only properties will croak, reading a write-only property will return '[write-only]'.
Care must be taken when using tie_properties with objects of types created with Glib::Object::Subclass as there may be clashes with existing hash keys that could cause infinite loops. The solution is to use custom property get/set functions to alter the storage locations of the properties.
Glib
Copyright (C) 2003-2011 by the gtk2-perl team.
This software is licensed under the LGPL. See Glib for a full notice.