GOB - The GTK+ Object Builder
GTK+ Object Builder is a simple preprocessor for easily creating GTK+ objects. It does not parse any C code and ignores any C errors. It is in spirit similar to things like lex or yacc.
Because we need to parse out different parts of the typename, sometimes you need to specify the typename with some special syntax. Types are specified in capitalized form and words are separated by ':'. The first word of the type (which can be empty) is the "namespace". This fact is for example used for the type checking macro and the type macro. For "Gtk:New:Button", the macros will be GTK_IS_NEW_BUTTON and GTK_TYPE_NEW_BUTTON. This colon separated format of typenames is used in the class declaration header and for method argument types.
The filenames are created from the typename. The words are separated by '-' and all in lower case. For example for an object named "Gtk:New:Button", the files are gtk-new-button.c and gtk-new-button.h. If you are using C++ mode, the output .c file will in fact be a .cc file. If you have any private data members, a private header file will also be created, called <basename>-private.h (for the example above it would be gtk-new-button-private.h). The public header file is created to be human readable and to be used as a reference to the object. The .c source file is not created as a human readable source and is littered with #line statements, which make the compiler attempt to point you to the right line in your .gob file in case of parsing errors. The output should not be edited by hand, and you should only edit the .gob file.
To include some code directly in the output C file begin with '%{' on an empty line and end the code with a '%}' on an empty line. These sections will appear in the output files in the order they are given. There are several other sections to which you can put code. You can put it in the 'header' section (which can be abbreviated 'h') and it will go into the public header file. You can also put it in the 'privateheader' section (abbreviated 'ph') which will make the code go into the private header file. Sometimes you want some code (other includes) to appear before the extern "C" and the protecting define. To do this you can put them into the 'headertop' (or 'ht') section. You may wish to include code or comments in all the files, which you can do by putting them into the 'all' (or 'a') section. Similarly, code you wish to appear at the top of all files go in the 'alltop' (or 'at') section. For example:
%alltop{ /* this will be on top of all output files */ %} %headertop{ /* this will be on top of the public header */ %} %privateheader{ /* this will go into the private header file */ %} %h{ /* will be included in the header */ void somefunc(int i); %} %a{ /* will be included in all files */ %} %{ /* will be included in the C file */ void somefunc(int i) { /* some code */ } %}
Gob will automatically include the class header file at the top of the .c source file. If you wish to include it somewhere else, put the include into some %{ %} section above the class definition, and gob will not include it automatically. This way you can avoid circular includes and control where in the file do you want to include the header.
If you made any data members private, gob will also create a source file that will be called <basename>-private.h. Same rule as above applies for this just as it does for the regular header file. If you do explicitly include the regular header file, you should always include this private header file below it. That is, if you use any private data members. If you don't, the private header file automatically includes the public header file, and thus the public header file will be indirectly included at the very top of the file.
The class header:
There can be only one class per input file. Defining a class is sort of like in Java, you define the class and write inline code directly into the class definition. To define a class you need to specify the new object name and the name of the object from which it is derived from, such as this "class <new type> from <parent type> { <class code> }". For example:
class Gtk:New:Button from Gtk:Button { <class code> }
Data members:
There are five types of data members. Three of them are normal data numbers, one is class wide (global) in scope and one is a virtual one, usually linked to a normal data member or a class wide data member. The three normal data members are public, protected and private. Public and protected are basically just entries in the object structure, while private has it's own dynamically allocated private structure. Protected members are always put after the public one in the structure and are marked protected in the header file. There is only one identifier allowed per typename unlike in normal C. Example:
public int i; private GtkWidget *h; protected long k;
Public and protected data members are accessed normally as members of the object struct. Example where 'i' is as above a public data member:
object->i = 1;
The private data members are defined in a structure which is only available inside the .c file, or by including a private header file. You must access them using the structure _priv. Example where 'h' is the private data member (as in the above example):
object->_priv->h = NULL;The _priv structure is defined in the <basename>-private.h. This file is automatically included if you don't include it yourself. You should always explicitly include it in your .gob file if you explicitly also include the main header file. The reason it is a separate header file is that you can also include it in other places that need to access this objects private data, such as if you have the majority of functionality of an object in a separate .c file. Or if a derived object needs to access the protected methods.
In case you use the --no-private-header option, no private header file is created and you can only access the _priv pointer below the class definition in the .gob file.
Also note that this structure is dynamically allocated, and is freed in the finalize handler. If you override the finalized handler, your code will be run first and only then will the _priv structure be freed.
Classwide data members:
Sometimes you want a datamember to be shared by all objects. You then need the "classwide" scope keyword. So for example the following adds a global member foo:
classwide int foo;To access the member you do the standard voodoo of getting the class from the object and casting it to your class pointer. Thus the following would work:
SELF_CLASS(GTK_OBJECT(object)->klass)->foo = 20;
Automatic Initialization (0.93.0 and higher only):
You can automatically initialize the public private and protected data members without having to add an init method. The advantage here is that initialization is kept close to the definition of the data member and thus it's easier to check. To do this, just add a '=' followed by a number or a token. It is also possible to include arbitrary C code for more elaborate initializations by putting it all in curly braces. Note that the curly braces will not be printed into the output, but since gob does not C parsing it needs them to figure out where the C code ends. The code will be inserted into the init method, above the user defined body. So for example the following will initialize an integer to -1 and a string with a newly allocated string of "hello".
public int foo = -1; private char *bar = {g_strdup("hello")};
Automatic Destruction (0.93.0 and higher only):
Most data stored as pointers needs to have a function called when the object is destroyed, to either free it or give up a reference. Gob will let you define a function to be called on the data the object is destroyed. This is achieved by putting 'destroywith' followed by a function name after the variable definition. It is only called if the data you defined this on is not NULL, so you cans specify functions which do not handle NULL. It is very much like the GDestroyNotify function used in GTK+ and glib in many places. Unlike many other places, gob will not enforce any kind of type safety here so be a little bit more careful. Any function you give it will be called as a "void function(void *)". It will in fact be cast into such a form before called. This is to avoid spurious warnings for gtk calls to subclass methods. The function needs not be of that form exactly, it just has to take one argument which is the pointer to the data. You should also not define this on any non-pointer data as the results may be undefined. Example:
public Gtk:Widget *window = NULL destroywith gtk_widget_destroy; public char *foo = {g_strdup("bar")} destroywith g_free;Note that the function name you give must be a real function and not macro. Also note that this is always called in the "destroy" method of GtkObject. It is always called after any user defined body of the destroy handler.
Sometimes you may want to run arbitrary code on destruction. While this can be perfectly well done in the destroy handler. Depending on the style you may want to include all destruction/initialization code together with the definition of the data member. Thus you may want to put arbitrary code which will then be inserted into the "destroy" method of GtkObject. This can be done with the "destroy" keyword followed by arbitrary code in curly braces. Inside this code a macro called VAR will be define which refers to your variable. So for example destroying a GString can be either done with a helper routine or the following code:
public GString *string = {g_string_new(NULL)} destroy { if(VAR) g_string_free(VAR, TRUE); };The thing to remember with these is that there are many ways to do this and you'd better be consistent in your code in how you use the above things. Also defining a helper routine that will do the destruction will be a nicer thing to do if that's a possibility. The "destroy" keyword with code does take up more space in the file and it may become more cluttered.
The data is zeroed out after being destroyed. This is to make debugging easier in case your code might try to access an already destroyed object. In case you have overridden the destroy method, your code will be run first and only then will the destructors be called. You should not however make any assumptions about the order at which the destructors are called. If you have interdependencies between destructors for different data members, you will have to do this in your own destroy override function.
GTK+ Arguments:
The fourth type of a data member an argument type. It is a named data member which is one of the features of the GTK+ object system. You need to define a get and a set handler. They are fragments of C code that will be used to get the value or set the value of the argument. Inside them you can use the define ARG to which you assign the data or get the data. You can also use the identifier "self" as pointer to the object instance. The type is defined as one of the gtk type enums, but without the GTK_TYPE_ prefix. For example:
public int height; argument INT height set { self->height = ARG; } get { ARG = self->height; };
If you don't define a set or a get handler it will be a read-only or a write-only argument. If you want to add extra argument flags, add them into parenthesis after the argument keyword, separated by '|' and without the GTK_ARG_ prefix. For example:
public int height; argument (CONSTRUCT) INT height get { ARG = self->height; };This makes the argument settable even before the object is constructed, so that people can pass it to gtk_object_new function. Useful is also CONSTRUCT_ONLY flag which makes the argument only available during construction of the object.
Since 0.92.1, gob creates macros which can be used for type safe access to gtk arguments. The macros are called <type>_ARG_<argument name>(x) and <type>_GET_ARG_<argument name>(x). They define both the string and the value part of the argument. So for setting an argument of height, one would use (for object type My:Object):
gtk_object_set (GTK_OBJECT (object), MY_OBJECT_ARG_HEIGHT (7), NULL);And for getting, you would use:
int height; gtk_object_get (GTK_OBJECT (object), MY_OBJECT_GET_ARG_HEIGHT (&height), NULL);Note however that the type safety only works completely on GNU C compilers. The code will compile on other compilers but with minimal type safety.
To get good type safety on POINTER types however, you should specify an optional C type that gob should use. For other then POINTER types this is redundant but possible. To do this, place '(type <c type>)' right after the GTK+ type. Example:
argument POINTER (type char *) foo set { /* foo */ } get { /* bar */ };
Sometimes it can become tiresome to type in the set and get handlers if they are trivial. So gob since version 0.93.0 provides automatic argument linking to data members. There are three different cases it handles, direct link (keyword 'link'), string linking (keyword 'stringlink') and object linking (keyword 'objectlink'). You just place the keyword after the argument name instead of the get/set handlers. It will link to a data member of the same name that was defined earlier in the input file. Best is to see examples:
public int foo; argument INT foo link;is just like
public int foo; argument INT (type int) foo get { ARG = self->foo; } set { self->foo = ARG; };Similarly,
private char * foo; argument POINTER foo stringlink;is just like
private char * foo; argument POINTER (type char *) foo get { ARG = g_strdup(self->_priv->foo); } set { g_free(self->_priv->foo); self->_priv->foo = g_strdup(ARG); }And for the objectlink we would have:
public Gtk:Object * foo; argument POINTER foo objectlink;is just like
protected Gtk:Object * foo; argument POINTER (type Gtk:Object *) foo get { ARG = self->foo; } set { if(ARG != NULL) gtk_object_ref(ARG); if(self->foo != NULL) gtk_object_unref(self->foo); self->foo = ARG; }
As you see it will handle NULLs correctly (for the string, g_free and g_strdup handle NULLs). And it will also handle private, protected and public members. For objectlink, just a pointer is returned on get, if you wish to keep it around, you should call gtk_object_ref on it. For stringlink, get makes a copy of the string which you should free after use. This is the behaviour since 1.0.2.
You can also automatically export get and set methods for each of the arguments by appending '(export)' flag before the get and set statements. For example:
public int foo; argument INT (type int) foo (export) get { ARG = self->foo; } set { self->foo = ARG; };Will export public methods get_foo(self) and set_foo(self, int foo) for you automatically. Note that this behaviour is new in 1.0.10.
Methods:
There is a whole array of possible methods. The three normal, "familiar" method types are private, protected and public. Public are defined as normal functions with a prototype in the header file. Protected methods are defined as normal methods (which you can call from other files), but their prototype is placed in the private header file. Private methods are defined as static functions with prototypes at the top of the .c file. Then there are signal, virtual and override methods. More on those later. You can also define init and class_init methods with a special definition if you want to add code to the constructors or you can just leave them out. You can also not define a body for a method, by just using ';' instead of a body. This will define an empty function. You can't do this for non-void regular public, private or protected methods, however it is acceptable for non-void virtual, signal and override methods.
Function argument lists:
For all but the init and class_init methods, you use the following syntax for arguments. The first argument can be just "self", which gob will translate into a pointer to the object instance. The rest of the arguments are very similar to normal C arguments. If the typename is an object pointer you should use the syntax defined above with the words separated by ':'
<type> <argument id> or <type> <argument id> (check <list of checks>)
The checks are glib type preconditions, and can be the following: "null", which tests pointers for being NULL, "type" which checks GTK+ object pointers for being the right type, "<test> <number>" which tests numeric arguments for being a certain value. The test can be a <,>,<=,>= != or ==. Example:
public int foo(self, int h (check > 0 < 11), Gtk:Widget *w (check null type))
This will be the prototype of a function which has a self pointer as the first argument, an integer argument which will be checked and has to be more then 0 and less then 11, and a pointer to a GtkWidget object instance and it is checked for being null and the type will also be checked.
Error return:
Methods which have a return value, there also has to be something returned if there is an error, such as if a precondition is not met. The default is 0, casted to the type of the method. If you need to return something else then you can specify an "onerror" keyword after the prototype and after that a number, a token (an identifier) or a bit of C code enclosed in braces {}. The braces will not be printed into the output, they just delimit the string. For example:
public void * get_something(self, int i (check >= 0)) onerror NULL { ... }The onerror value is also used in overrides that have a return value, in case there isn't a parent method, PARENT_HANDLER will return it. More about this later.
Default return:
Some signal and virtual methods have a return type. But what happens if there is no default handler and no one connects to a signal. GOB will normally have the wrappers return whatever you specify with onerror or '0' if you haven't specified anything. But since 0.93.2 you can specify a default return value with the keyword 'defreturn'. It's use is identical to the use of onerror, and you can in fact use both at the same time. Example
virtual int get_some_int(self) onerror -1 defreturn 10 ;That is an empty virtual method (in C++ terms a pure virtual). If you never specify any handler for it in the derived children it will just return 10.
Constructor methods:
There are two methods that handle the construction of an object, init and class_init. You define them by just using the init or class_init keyword with an untyped argument in the argument list. The argument will be usable in your function as a pointer to your object or class depending if it's init or class_init. For example:
init(self) { /* initialize the object here */ self->a = 9; self->b = 9; } class_init(class) { /* initialize the class, this is rarely needed */ class->blah = NULL; }The class_init function is very rarely needed as all standard class initialization is taken care of for you by gob itself. The init function should on the other hand be used whenever you need to construct or initialize anything in the object to put it into a sane state. Sometimes you need some arguments, for this you should either use a construct method and a new function like many GTK+ widgets, and/or a CONSTRUCT or CONSTRUCT_ONLY type of an argument.
Virtual methods:
Virtual methods are basically pointers in the class structure, so that one can override the method in derived methods. They can be empty (if you put ';' instead of the C code). A wrapper will also be defined which makes calling the methods he same as public methods. This type of method is just a little bit "slower" then normal functions, but not as slow as signals. You define them by using "virtual" keyword before the prototype. If you put the keyword "private" right after the "virtual" keyword, the wrapper will not be a public method, but a private one. You can do the same with "protected" to make a protected wrapper.
Signals:
Signals are methods to which the user can bind other handlers and override the default handler. The default handler is basically the method body. This is the most versatile and flexible type of a method and also the slowest. You need to specify a whole bunch of things when you define a signal. One thing is when the default handler will be run, first or last. You specify that by "first" or "last" right after the "signal" keyword. Then you need to define the gtk enum types (again without the GTK_TYPE_ prefix). For that you define the return types and the types of arguments after the "self" pointer (not including the "self" pointer). You put it in the following syntax "<return type> (<list of arguments>)". If the return type is void, the type should be "NONE", the same should be for the argument list. The rest of the prototype is the same as for other method types. The body can also be empty, and also there is a public method wrapper which you can use for calling the signal just like a public method. Example:
signal first INT(POINTER,INT) int do_something(self, Gtk:Widget *w (check null type), int length) { ... }or
signal last NONE(NONE) void foo(self);
If you don't want the wrapper that emits the signal to be public, you can include the keyword "private" after the "signal" keyword. This will make the wrapper a normal private method. You can also make a protected wrapper by using "protected" instead of "private".
If you don't define a "first" or a "last", the default will be taken as "last".
You can also add additional flags. You do this just like with the argument flags, although this is probably very rare. These are the GTK_RUN_* flags, and you can add them without the GTK_RUN_ prefix into a parenthesis, just after the "signal" keyword. By default all public signals are GTK_RUN_ACTION.
Since 1.0.6, gob creates wrapper signal macros for signal connection typesafety, at least on gnu compilers. These macros are named <type>_SIGNAL_<signal name>(func), where func is the function pointer. This pointer must be of the correct type, or you will get an initialization from wrong pointer type warning. This macro, much like the argument macros, wraps both the name and the function pointer parameters. For example to connect a signal "changed" to a function "foo", you would do:
gtk_signal_connect (GTK_OBJECT (object), MY_OBJECT_SIGNAL_CHANGED (foo), NULL);
Note that if you are compiling with GTK+2, this will not work. You must only use this with gtk_signal_connect_full. Also the above macros don't exist in gob2, where typesafe signals are handled another way.
Override methods:
If you need to override some method (a signal or a virtual method of some class in the parent tree of the new object), you can define and override method. After the "override" keyword, you should put the typename of the class you are overriding a method from. Other then that it is the same as for other methods. The "self" pointer in this case should be the type of the method you are overriding so that you don't get warnings during compilation. Also to call the method of the parent class, you can use the PARENT_HANDLER macro with your arguments. Example:
override (Gtk:Container) void add (Gtk:Container *self (check null type), Gtk:Widget *wid (check null type)) { /* some code here */ PARENT_HANDLER(self, wid); }If the function has a return value, then PARENT_HANDLER is an expression that you can use. It will return whatever the parent handler returned, or the "onerror" expression if there was no parent handler.
Method names:
Inside the code, aliases are set for the methods, so that you don't have to type the class name before each call, just the name of the method. Example:
private int foo(self) { return self->len; } private int bar(self,int i) { return foo(self) + i; }
Underscore removal (0.93.5+):
Sometimes this causes conflicts with other libraries. For example a library might have already used the identifier foo. You can prepend an underscore to the name in the .gob file. This will make the local short alias have an initial underscore, but it will not change the name of the actual name of the function. For example:
class My:Object from Gtk:Object { public void _foo(self) { /* foo body */ } public void bar(self) { /* short calling convention */ _foo(self); /* long calling convention */ my_object_foo(self); } }Thus you see that the "_foo" method still generates the method "my_object_foo" just as "foo" would generate. You can turn off this behavior if you depend on the old (pre 0.93.5) behavior with the --no-kill-underscores option. This also means that if both "_foo" and "foo" are defined, it is treated as a conflict.
This does not apply to override methods. Override methods are special beasts and this is not necessary and would make the code behave in weird ways.
Making new objects:
You should define a new method which should be a normal public method. Inside this method, you can use the GET_NEW macro that is defined for you and that will fetch a new object, so a fairly standard new method would look like:
public GtkObject * new(void) { GtkObject *ret = GET_NEW; return GTK_OBJECT (ret); }
You should not a subtle peculiarity of the GTK+ object system here. If there is any code inside the GTK_OBJECT macro argument, it will get executed multiple times. This means that things such as GTK_OBJECT(GET_NEW) would actually create 4 objects, leaking 3 of them. A good rule is to be careful with all macros.
Self alias casts:
There are some standard casts defined for you. Instead of using the full macros inside the .c file, you can use SELF, IS_SELF and SELF_CLASS. Using these makes it easier to for example change class names around.
Self alias types:
Since 0.93.5, there have also been defined the Self and SelfClass types inside your .c file. These serve the same function as the above, they make it easier to type and easier to change typenames around which can help a lot during prototyping stage. However you should note that the Self type should not be used in function prototypes as one of the arguments or as a return value type. This is because this is a simple C typedef which is only available inside you aliases by passing --no-self-alias to
Defines:
In your generated C file, you can use the defines GOB_VERSION_MAJOR GOB_VERSION_MINOR and GOB_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL if you wish to for example use a feature that is only available in some newer gob version. Note however that you can only use these defines in the C code portions of your .gob file, and #ifdef's cannot span multiple functions. Check the BUGS section for more on using the C preprocessor and gob. Also note that these have only been available since the 0.92.1 version of gob.
Minimum version requires:
You can also make your .gob file require at least certain version of gob. You do this by putting 'requires x.y.z' (where x.y.z is the version number) outside of any C block, comment or class, usually you should make this the first line in the file or close to the top. If gob finds this and the version of gob used to compile the code is lower then that listed in the require, gob will generate an error and exit. For example to require that gob version 0.92.1 or higher be used to compile a file, put this at the top of that file:
requires 0.92.1It should be noted however that this feature was not added until 0.92.1, and so if the file gets compiled by a lower version, gob would generate a syntax error. Thus by putting in a requires line, you are implicitly requiring at least 0.92.1.
There is a C++ mode so that gob creates C++ compiler friendly files. You need to use the --for-cpp argument to gob. This will make the generated file have a .cc instead of a .c extension, and several things will be adjusted to make it all work for a C++ compiler. One thing that will be missing is an alias to the new method, as that clashes with C++, so instead you'll have to use the full name of the method inside your code. Also note that gob does not use any C++ features, this option will just make the generated code compile with a C++ compiler.
The get_type is not really a method, but a function which initializes your object. Recently objects appeared which require you to make a custom get_type function (BonoboXObject currently, see next section for direct BonoboXObject support). So in 1.0.7 it is now possible to override this function. To do so, just define a new public method called get_type, with no arguments. Example:
public GtkType get_type (void) { /* code goes here */ return some_type; }
If you want to build a BonoboXObject class gob has direct support for these classes since 1.0.9. Just create a new object that derives from Bonobo:X:Object. Then use a "BonoboX" class flag with the interface name as an argument. The interface name should be as you would type it in C, that is with underscores as namespace separators. Then you add the methods (using exact same names as in the idl file) and prepend those methods with a BonoboX keyword. For example imagine you have an interface GNOME/Foo/SomeInterface, with a method fooBar that takes a single string:
class Foo:Some:Interface from Bonobo:X:Object (BonoboX GNOME_Foo_SomeInterface) { BonoboX private void fooBar (PortableServer_Servant servant, const CORBA_char *string, CORBA_Environment *ev) { Self *self = SELF (bonobo_object_from_servant (servant)); /* your code here */ } /* rest of class */ }Note that the implementation method can be private, in fact that's probably a good idea to do. It won't work to make this a signal, it can however be a virtual. Note that the method prototype must match the one from the interface header file, or you will get a bad assignment warning. You should check the header file generated by orbit-idl and see the epv structure for the correct prototypes if you can't figure them out from the idl itself. Also note that the first argument is not "self", but the servant and you must use bonobo_object_from_servant function to get the actual object pointer.
Gob will need to define some local variables and functions in the generated files, so you need to take some precaution not to conflict with these. The general rule of thumb is that all of these start with three underscores. There is one, "parent_class" which doesn't because it's intended for use in your code. For virtuals or signals, you cannot use the identifier __parent__ which is used for the parent of the object. You should actually never access __parent__ either as it not guaranteed that it will stay named this way. Data members cannot be named __parent__ nor _priv. For methods, you cannot use the identifiers "init" or "class_init" unless you mean the constructor methods. You shouldn't generally use 3 underscores even in override method argument lists and virtual and signal method names as it might confuse the PARENT_HANDLER macro. In fact avoiding all names with three underscores is the best policy when working with gob.
Also note that starting with version 0.93.5, method names that start with a an underscore are equivalent to the names without the initial underscore. This is done to avoid conflicts with the aliases. Thus you can define the method as "_name", if "name" happens to be some standard library function. This is the same as defining it as "name" except that the local alias will be "_name" rather then "name".
There are a couple of defines which you shouldn't be redefining in the code or other headers. These are SELF, IS_SELF, SELF_CLASS, ARG, VAR, PARENT_HANDLER, GET_NEW, GOB_VERSION_MAJOR, GOB_VERSION_MINOR and GOB_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL.
As for types, there are Self and SelfClass types which are only defined in your source files. Their generation (just like the generation of the SELF macros) can be turned off, see command line options.
If you want to use gtk-doc style inline documentation for your objects, you can do one of two things. First, you could include the inline documentation comments in your %{ %} section which will then be put verbatim into the output source file. This is the way you should use for functions you define outside of the class.
For class methods, you should use a gtk+ style comment, however it can be indented any number of tabs or spaces and you can use the short method name without the type prefix. Gob will automatically try to extract these and translate to full names and put them in the output source file. An example would be:
class Gtk:Button:Example from Gtk:Button { /** * new: * * Makes a new #GtkButtonExample widget * * Returns: a new widget **/ public GtkWidget * new(void) { return GTK_WIDGET(GET_NEW); } }If the function you are documenting is a signal or a virtual then it will be documenting the wrapper that starts that virtual function or emits that signal.
Sometimes you may need to use an object of type MyObjectA in the MyObjectB class and vice versa. Obviously you can't include headers for both. So you need to just declare the typedef in the header of A for B, and the other way around as well. The headers generated since v0.92.2 include a protecting define before it declares the typedef. This define is the __TYPEDEF_<upper case object name>__. So inside my-object-a.h there will be this:
#ifndef __TYPEDEF_MY_OBJECT_A__ #define __TYPEDEF_MY_OBJECT_A__ typedef struct _MyObjectA MyObjectA; #endifNow instead of including my-object-a.h in the header section of my-object-b.gob, just copy the above code there and you're set for using MyObjectA as a type in the method parameters and public types.
Another way to get out of this problem is if you can use those types only in the private members, in which case they won't be in the generated public header.
If you are using normal makefiles, what you need to do is to add a generic rule for .gob files. So you would include the following in the Makefile and then just use the .c and .h files as usual (make sure the space before the 'gob' is a tab, not spaces):
%.c %.h %-private.h: %.gob gob $<
This is a little bit more involved. Basically the first thing to do is to check for GOB in your configure.in file. You can use the supplied m4 macro which will also check the version of gob. Basically you include this:
GOB_CHECK(0.93.4)This will replace @GOB@ in your makefiles with the full path of gob. Thus when adding the generic rule to your Makefile.am file, it should look like:
%.c %.h %-private.h: %.gob @GOB@ $<
For Makefile.am you have to set up a couple more things. First you have to include the generated .c and .h files into BUILT_SOURCES variable. You have to include both the .gob and the .c and .h files in the SOURCES for your program.
GOB does several things to make debugging the code easier. First it adds preprocessor commands into the output c file that point to the correct places in your .gob input file. However sometimes there might be some bigger confusion and this is just not helpful. In this case you will probably want to have gcc point you directly at the generated files. For this use the --no-lines command line option. You should also note that these commands are not generated for the public header file at all. If there is an error which points you to the public header file, make sure you fix this error in the .gob file, otherwise your changes will not have any effect after gob recompiles the sources again.
Sometimes you might want to know which method you are in for some debugging output. GOB will define __GOB_FUNCTION__ macro, which is just a string constant with a pretty name of the method.
The lexer does not actually parse the C code, so I'm sure that some corner cases or maybe even some not so corner cases of C syntax might confuse gob completely. If you find any, send me the source that makes it go gaga and I'll try to make the lexer try to handle it properly, but no promises.
Another thing is that gob ignores preprocessor macros. Since gob counts braces, the following code won't work:
#ifdef SOME_DEFINE if(foo) { #else if(bar) { #endif blah(); }To make this work, you'd have to do this:
#ifdef SOME_DEFINE if(foo) #else if(bar) #endif { blah(); }There is no real good way we can handle this without parsing C code, so we probably never will. In the future, I might add #if 0 as a comment but that's about as far as I can really take it and even that is problematic. Basically, if you use gob, just don't use the C preprocessor too extensively.
Comments will not get through to the generated files unless inside C code. This is not the case for gtk-doc style comments which are supported.
The short name aliases are actually implemented as pointers to functions. Thus if you want to get the pointer of a function using the short name alias you can't use the '&'. Thus:
void (*foo)(Self *); /* this will NOT work */ foo = &short_name; /* this will work */ foo = short_name; /* Both of these will work */ foo = &my_class_long_name; foo = my_class_long_name;
George Lebl <jirka@5z.com>
Закладки на сайте Проследить за страницей |
Created 1996-2024 by Maxim Chirkov Добавить, Поддержать, Вебмастеру |