Mercurial > fife-parpg
view engine/python/fife/extensions/pychan/attrs.py @ 697:ecaa4d98f05f tip
Abstracted the GUI code and refactored the GUIChan-specific code into its own module.
* Most of the GUIChan code has been refactored into its own gui/guichan module. However, references to the GuiFont class still persist in the Engine and GuiManager code and these will need further refactoring.
* GuiManager is now an abstract base class which specific implementations (e.g. GUIChan) should subclass.
* The GUIChan GUI code is now a concrete implementation of GuiManager, most of which is in the new GuiChanGuiManager class.
* The GUI code in the Console class has been refactored out of the Console and into the GUIChan module as its own GuiChanConsoleWidget class. The rest of the Console class related to executing commands was left largely unchanged.
* Existing client code may need to downcast the GuiManager pointer received from FIFE::Engine::getGuiManager() to GuiChanGuiManager, since not all functionality is represented in the GuiManager abstract base class. Python client code can use the new GuiChanGuiManager.castTo static method for this purpose.
author | M. George Hansen <technopolitica@gmail.com> |
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date | Sat, 18 Jun 2011 00:28:40 -1000 |
parents | d90526c3918b |
children |
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # #################################################################### # Copyright (C) 2005-2009 by the FIFE team # http://www.fifengine.de # This file is part of FIFE. # # FIFE is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public # License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either # version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU # Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with this library; if not, write to the # Free Software Foundation, Inc., # 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA # #################################################################### """ Simple error checking attributes. This module defines a set of Attribute classes which you can use to define possible values an attribute of an object accepts. Usage:: class SomeObject: nameAttr, posAttr = [ Attr("name"), PointAttr("pos") ] obj = SomeObject() obj.nameAttr.set(obj,"newName") obj.posAttr.set(obj,"89,89") This is most useful for error checking parsing and defining accepted attributes in classes and is used by pychan internally. """ from exceptions import ParserError class Attr(object): """ A simple text attribute. """ def __init__(self,name): self.name = name def set(self,obj,value): """ Parses the given value with the L{parse} method and sets it on the given instance with C{setattr}. """ value = self.parse(value) setattr(obj,self.name,value) def parse(self,value): """ Parses a value and checks for errors. Override with specialiced behaviour. """ return str(value) class UnicodeAttr(Attr): def parse(self,value): """ Parses a value and checks for errors. Override with specialiced behaviour. """ return unicode(value) class PointAttr(Attr): def parse(self,value): try: x,y = tuple(map(int,str(value).split(','))) return x,y except: raise ParserError("Expected a comma separated list of two integers.") class ColorAttr(Attr): def parse(self,value): a = 255 try: try: r,g,b,a = tuple(map(int,str(value).split(','))) for c in (r,g,b,a): if not 0 <= c < 256: raise ParserError("Expected a color (Failed: 0 <= %d <= 255)" %c) except: r,g,b = tuple(map(int,str(value).split(','))) for c in (r,g,b): if not 0 <= c < 256: raise ParserError("Expected a color (Failed: 0 <= %d <= 255)" %c) except: raise ParserError("Expected a color.") return r,g,b,a class IntAttr(Attr): def parse(self,value): try: return int(value) except: raise ParserError("Expected a single integer.") class BoolAttr(Attr): def parse(self,value): try: value = int(value) if value not in (0,1): raise ParserError("Expected a 0 or 1.") return value except: raise ParserError("Expected a 0 or 1.") class FloatAttr(Attr): def parse(self, value): try: return float(value) except: raise ParseError("Expected a float.")