CGAL 4.11 - Kinetic Framework
|
#include <CGAL/Kinetic/Listener.h>
The Listener
class provides the core of the run time notification system used by the kinetic data structures package.
In short, notifications are handled through proxy objects called listeners. In order to listen for notifications from an object, called the notifier, you make define a small class called a listener proxy, which inherits from the Listener interface defined by the notifier. When constructing your listner poxy, you pass a reference counted pointer to the notifier, which is used to register the proxy for notifications. When a notification occurs, the notifier calls the new_notification
method on the proxy, passing the type of the notification. The proxy stores a reference counted pointer to the notifier, ensuring that there are never any dangling pointers in the system.
The class Listener
provides base class for listener proxy objects. A notifier should provide a class which inherits from this base. To use this base class, implement a class, here called Interface
, which defines a type Interface::Notification_type
and a type Interface::Notifier_handle
.
The Notification_type
is generally an enum with one value for each type of notification which can be used.
The Notifier_handle
is the type of a (ref counted) pointer to the object providing the notifications. The ref counter pointer must provide a nested type Pointer
which is the type of a raw pointer.
The Listener
maintains a ref counted pointer to the object performing notifications. It is registered for notifications on construction and unregistered on destruction using the function set_listener(Listener<Interface>*)
on the object providing the notifications. The use of ref counted pointers means that as long as the notification object exists, the object providing the notifications must exist, ensuring that the object providing the notifications is not prematurely destroyed.
These objects cannot be copied since the notifier only support one listener. If copying and more than one listener are desired, the Multi_listener<Interface>
base class should be used instead.
As a side note, Boost provides a similar functionality in the Boost.Signal package. However, it is quite a bit more complex (and flexible). This complexity add significantly to compile time and (although I did not test this directly), I suspect it is much slower at runtime due to the overhead of worrying about signal orders and not supporting single signals. In addition, it does not get on well with Qt due to collisions with the Qt moc keywords.
There is also the TinyTL library which implements signals. As of writing it did not have any easy support for making sure all pointers are valid, so it did not seem to offer significant code saving over writing my own.
Multi_listener<Interface>
Example
Here is a simplier class that provides notifications:
Now the listener:
Types | |
typedef unspecified_type | Notifier_handle |
This type is inherited from the Interface template argument. More... | |
typedef unspecified_type | Notification_type |
The type (usually an enum) used to distinguish different types of notifications. More... | |
Creation | |
Listener (Notifier_handle np) | |
The Listener subscribes to events coming from the notifier and stores a pointer to the notifier. | |
Operations | |
Notifier_handle | notifier () |
Return a pointer to the notifier. | |
virtual void | new_notification (Notification_type) |
This method is pure virtual. More... | |
typedef unspecified_type CGAL::Listener< Interface >::Notification_type |
The type (usually an enum) used to distinguish different types of notifications.
This is inherited from the Interface
template argument.
typedef unspecified_type CGAL::Listener< Interface >::Notifier_handle |
This type is inherited from the Interface
template argument.
It is a reference counted pointer type for the object providing notifications.
|
virtual |
This method is pure virtual.
A class which wishes to receive events must inherit from this class and implement this method. The method will then be called whenever there is a notification.