nil
, a menu, or the name of a slot containing a menu in the application interface.
nil
, a menu, or a function designator.
application-interface-message-callback
application-interface-application-menu
application-interface-dock-menu
The class cocoa-default-application-interface
supports the application menu, application messages and other functionality for a Cocoa application.
All Cocoa applications in LispWorks for Macintosh have an application interface, which is a hidden interface that provides the following:
If you wish to override the defaults, then you should first define a subclass of cocoa-default-application-interface
with your changes. Then set a single instance of this subclass as the application interface by calling set-application-interface before any CAPI functions that make the screen object (such as convert-to-screen and display).
Do not call display with a subclass of cocoa-default-application-interface
- the application interface does not have a window on the screen and should be created in addition to the visible interfaces in your application.
When non-nil, message-callback should be a function with signature
message-callback will be called for various application messages. The interface argument will be the application interface and the message argument will be a keyword. The message argument will be one of the following:
This message is invoked when the user double-clicks on a document associated with the application or drags a document into the application icon. The args contain the name of the file to open.
This message is invoked just after the user has started the application and all other initialization has been done (including any :open-file
message if applicable). You can use it to open a default document for example. There are no
args
.
application-menu
controls the application's main menu. If this is nil
, then a minimal application menu will be made using the title of the application interface, otherwise it should be a menu containing the usual items or the name of a slot containing such a menu in the application interface. Note that the
Quit
item in the
application-menu
needs to call destroy on the interface, rather than call lw:quit
.
dock-menu
provides a menu for use by the Mac OS X Dock icon. If the value is nil
(the default), then the standard menu is used. If
dock-menu
is a function designator, it is called with the application interface as its argument when the menu is popped up and should return a menu. Otherwise
dock-menu
should be a menu, which is used directly. The Dock will add the standard items such as
Quit
to the end of the menu you supply.
interface initargs are interpreted as follows:
All of these callbacks execute in the thread that runs the Cocoa event loop, so they can call CAPI and GP functions.
The application interface also allows you to control aspects of the application. In particular:
:hidden
if the whole application is hidden and will return :normal
otherwise.(setf top-level-interface-display-state)
can be used to perform some operations typically found on the application menu. The display-state value can one of:
Show the application and activate it
Show the application again without activating it
Hide
Show All
cocoa-default-application-interface
is implemented only in LispWorks for Macintosh with the Cocoa IDE.
(example-edit-file "capi/applications/cocoa-application")
(example-edit-file "capi/applications/cocoa-application-single-window")
(example-edit-file "delivery/macos/multiple-window-application")
(example-edit-file "delivery/macos/single-window-application")
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Unix version) - 25 Feb 2015