Defines subclasses of interface.
The macro define-interface
is used to define subclasses of interface, which when created with make-instance
has the specified panes, layouts and menus created automatically. The slots and superclasses are used to describe the slots and superclasses of
name
as in the defclass
macro, except that if
superclasses
is non-nil it must include interface or a subclass of it.
define-interface
accepts the same options as defclass
, plus the following extra options:
Descriptions of the interface's panes.
Descriptions of the interface's layouts.
Descriptions of the interface's menus.
A list of menus for the interface's menu bar.
Options to alter define-interface
.
The class options :panes
, :layouts
and :menus
add extra slots to the class that will contain the CAPI object described in their description. Within the scope of the extra options, the slots themselves are available by referencing the name of the slot, and the interface itself is available with the variable capi:interface
. Each of the slots can be made to have readers, writers, accessors or documentation by passing the appropriate defclass
keyword as one of the optional arguments in the description. Therefore, if you need to find a pane within an interface instance, you can provide an accessor, or simply use with-slots
.
The option :panes
is a list of pane descriptions of the following form
(:panes
(slot-name pane-class initargs )
...
(slot-name pane-class initargs )
)
where slot-name is a name for the slot, pane-class is the class of the pane being included in the interface, and initargs are the initialization arguments for the pane - the allowed forms are described below.
The option :layouts
is a list of layout descriptions of the following form
(:layouts
(slot-name layout-class children initargs )
...
(slot-name layout-class children initargs )
)
where
slot-name
is a name for the slot,
layout-class
specifies the type of layout,
children
is a list of children for the layout, and
initargs
are the initialization arguments for the layout - the allowed forms are described below. The primary layout for the interface defaults to the first layout described, but can be specified as the :layout
initarg to the interface. If no layouts are specified, then the CAPI will place all of the defined panes into a column layout and make that the primary layout.
The option :menus
is a list of menu and menu component descriptions of the following form
(:menus
(slot-name title descriptions initargs )
...
(slot-name title descriptions initargs )
)
slot-name is the slot name for each menu or menu component.
title
is the menu's title, the keyword :menu
, or the keyword :component
. For an example showing how you can specify mnemonics for menu titles, see Mnemonics in menus.
descriptions
is a list of menu item descriptions. Each menu item description is either a title, a slot name for a menu, or a list of items containing a title, descriptions, and a list of initialization arguments for the menu item.
descriptions
should nil
if you specify the :items-function
initarg.
initargs are the initialization arguments for the menu.
The values given in
initargs
under :panes
, :layouts
and :menus
can be lists of the form
(:initarg keyword-name )
(:initarg key-spec )
(:initarg key-spec initarg-value )
key-spec := var | (var ) | (var initform ) | ((keyword-name var )) | ((keyword-name var ) initform )
keyword-name := any keyword
key-spec
is interpreted as in the &key
symbol of ordinary Common Lisp lambda lists. When this form of value is used, the specified
keyword-name
is added as an extra initarg to the class defined by the define-interface
form.
If key-spec is followed by initarg-value , then its value is used as the initarg of the pane. Otherwise the value from key-spec is used.
Additionally
initargs
may contain the keyword argument :make-instance-extra-apply-args
which is useful when you want to supply initargs to the pane
slot-name
when the interface is initialized. The value
make-instance-extra-apply-args
should be a keyword which becomes an extra initarg to the interface class
name
. The value of that initarg should be a list of pane initargs and values which is passed when the pane is initialized. For an example, see:
(example-edit-file "capi/applications/argument-passing")
The option :menu-bar
is a list of slot names, where each slot referred to contains a menu that should appear on the menu bar.
The option :definition
is a property list of arguments which define-interface
uses to change the way that it behaves. Currently there is only one definition option:
Allows you to specify the name of a variable which (lexically within the define-interface
form) refers to the interface instance. By default this variable is capi:interface
. See the example below.
Firstly, a couple of pane examples:
(capi:define-interface test1 ()
()
(:panes
(text capi:text-input-pane))
(:default-initargs :title "Test1"))
(capi:display (make-instance 'test1))
(capi:define-interface test2 ()
()
(:panes
(text capi:text-input-pane)
(buttons capi:button-panel :items '(1 2 3)
:reader test2-buttons))
(:layouts
(main-layout capi:column-layout '(text buttons)))
(:default-initargs :title "Test2"))
(test2-buttons
(capi:display (make-instance 'test2)))
Here are a couple of menu examples:
(capi:define-interface test3 ()
()
(:menus
(color-menu "Colors" (:red :green :blue)
:print-function 'string-capitalize))
(:menu-bar color-menu)
(:default-initargs :title "Test3"))
(capi:display (make-instance 'test3))
(capi:define-interface test4 ()
()
(:menus
(colors-menu "Colors"
((:component
(:red :green :blue)
:interaction :single-selection
:print-function
'string-capitalize)
more-colors-menu))
(more-colors-menu "More Colors"
(:pink :yellow :cyan)
:print-function
'string-capitalize))
(:menu-bar colors-menu)
(:default-initargs :title "Test4"))
(capi:display (make-instance 'test4))
This example demonstrates inheritance amongst subclasses of interface
:
(capi:define-interface test5 (test4 test1)
()
(:default-initargs :title "Test5"))
(capi:display (make-instance 'test5))
The next three examples illustrate the use of :initarg
in initarg specifications for :panes
.
Here we initialize the :selected-items
initarg of the pane foo
to the value passed by :select
when making the interface object, or nil
otherwise:
(capi:define-interface init1 () ()
(:panes
(foo
capi:list-panel
:items '(0 1 2 3 4)
:visible-min-height '(:character 5)
:interaction :multiple-selection
:selected-items (:initarg select))))
(capi:contain (make-instance 'init1
:select '(1 3)))
(capi:contain (make-instance 'init1))
Here we initialize the :selected-items
initarg of pane foo
to the value passed by :select
initarg when making the interface object, or (1 3)
otherwise:
(capi:define-interface init2 () ()
(:panes
(foo
capi:list-panel
:items '(0 1 2 3 4)
:visible-min-height '(:character 5)
:interaction :multiple-selection
:selected-items
(:initarg (select '(1 3))))))
(capi:contain (make-instance 'init2))
Here we increment the indices passed in the interface's :select
initarg before passing them in the :selected-items
initarg of pane foo
:
(capi:define-interface init3 () ()
(:panes
(foo
capi:list-panel
:items '(0 1 2 3 4)
:visible-min-height '(:character 5)
:interaction :multiple-selection
:selected-items
(:initarg select
(mapcar '1+ select)))))
(capi:contain (make-instance 'init3
:select '(1 3)))
This example illustrates the use of :interface-variable
. Both menu commands act on the interface itself, but they receive this argument in different ways:
(capi:define-interface foo () ()
(:menus
(menu "Run"
(("Interface Variable"
:callback (lambda () (test xxx))
:callback-type :none)
(":callback-type :interface"
:callback 'test
:callback-type :interface))))
(:menu-bar menu)
(:definition :interface-variable xxx))
(defmethod test ((foo foo))
(capi:display-message "foo"))
(capi:display (make-instance 'foo))
There are many more examples in the LispWorks installation directory under examples/capi/
.
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Windows version) - 3 Aug 2017