unfortunately, this side effect of the constraint system, bypassing events in normal use, is not a side effect but an intended main effect in other runtimes and part of a broader lzx concept i play with, so i'm conceptually bound to support only using attributes for handlers. It is nice to find out they are in use, although i've spoken with many lzx coders that don't know anything about events, only attributes.

"

The constraint system uses a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for sending events --
"

I have solved that problem here via explicit replication for some cases; it doesn't remove the need for laszlo replication but compliments it. so i can't really complain. Of course, anything using laszlo replication may not be portable to other runtimes as-a-pattern, because they may not support the laszlo datapathing as laszlo does it. That's by way of explaining why i care so much.

A while ago when i first found out about this i was unsure what to do, but it is conveniently patched, so life can go on! more soon...


P T Withington wrote:
Attributes _do_ define state in LZX.  LZX has always had attributes/constraints 
_and_ events/handlers.  It has always been the case that you could constrain 
the value of one attribute to an expression that depended on the values of 
other attributes and the constraint system would ensure that the constrained 
value was maintained.  It has always been the case that you could listen for 
and send events.  It _so_happens_ that the constraint system is implemented 
using events to signal when a dependent of a constraint has changed.  As a 
side-effect, you can attach a handler to the implicit event associated with an 
attribute, and you are guaranteed to get invoked any time the value of that 
attribute changes.  You are _not_ guaranteed to get an event if the attribute 
is set to the same value.  By the same token, you are not guaranteed to _not_ 
get an event if the constraint is recalculated and doesn't change.  The 
constraint system uses a necessary, but not sufficient, condition f!
or sending events -- that is, it sends enough events to maintain the 
constraints, but it does not send the minimum possible set of events.  For this 
reason, if you actually want an event to be sent, you should use explicit 
events, not rely on a side-effect of the constraint system.

On 2009-12-21, at 12:30, jamesr wrote:
Ah it makes so much sense now.  For those that are not up with the 
attribute-event-handler debate, it is a semantic discussion about the 
appropriate way to design flexible laszlo components. There are two dominant 
patterns:

One: Attributes define state, and things respond to that state
Two: Events define interest, and things respond to that interest by retrieving 
and using attributes

I'll refer to them as events and attributes below

The two seem almost interchangable but there is a difference in program design. 
The biggest difference is that the attributes model is simpler to teach and 
predict. The idea that there is a second event system which attribute access 
almost covers leads to confusion. Another is that the attribute model is 
simpler to implement in other more powerful languages (python) where setattr 
and getattr remove the need for the .setAttribute syntax altogether; writing 
LZX to the Attributes spec represents a more portable codebase. Events are 
something pulled more from other languages and less from the lzx model to begin 
with, so i would argue. When first learning laszlo I was safely able to forget 
about the event tag, and i've been 100% okay without it (but for one pitfall i 
hacked around using getTime() to change values every time, which i'm okay with, 
for now)

The more-recently introduced condition the cautionary note PT wrote speaks 
about is that there is a case when attributes will fail to send events, 
requiring the use of the event tag, in one edge case. I don't know if everyone 
is following, but this is something we can choose, and it was done for a 
reason. I'm hoping for a flag in future version to allow a pure attribute 
model, as i don't have the event tag in _any_ of production code! And also, 
because that characteristic seems like it would be in a pure LZX implementation 
(i.e. not javascript but something more powerful, like python or ruby)

So, i have a question for the list at large, not PT or Henry who do enough :) For 
anyone reading this, when was the last time a listmember reading this used 
<event> so as to work with handlers, anywhere, in any code base? Has anyone 
considered this perhaps, or like me, never thought of it until it wasn't there?

Kind regards,
  j.

P T Withington wrote:
Just to be clear, the idea proposed in http://jira.openlaszlo.org/jira/browse/LPP-7816

is not yet implemented.  Currently, you can only use <handler> to connect to an event 
that is already declared (either explicitly using <event> or implicitly on an 
attribute).

And one caution:  If you create a handler on the implicit event associated with 
a constrained attribute, the handler will _only_ be invoked when the attribute 
changes value.  Consider this example:

<canvas>
 <view layout="axis: y; spacing: 5">
   <attribute name="set" value="false" />
   <attribute name="followset" value="${this.set}" />
   <handler name="onset" args="newvalue">
     Debug.info("set: %w", newvalue);
   </handler>
   <handler name="onfollowset" args="newvalue">
     Debug.info("followset: %w", newvalue);
   </handler>
   <button onclick="parent.setAttribute('set', true)">setAttribute('set', 
true)</button>
   <button onclick="parent.setAttribute('set', new Date())">setAttribute('set', new 
Date())</button>

   <event name="send"/>
   <handler name="send" args="eventvalue">
     Debug.info("sent: %w", eventvalue);
   </handler>
   <button onclick="parent.send.sendEvent(true)">sendEvent(true)</button>
   <button onclick="parent.send.sendEvent(new Date())">sendEvent(new 
Date())</button>
 </view>
</canvas>

Notice that although the handler "onset" is invoked every time you set the attribute, whether the 
value changes or not, the hander "onfollowset" is _only_ invoked when the value it is constrained to 
changes.  Personally, if I want to send events, I prefer to be explicit about it, as shown in the second half 
of the example, and declare the <event> and <hander> and use `sendEvent`, rather than relying on 
the implicit events sent when attributes change.

On 2009-12-18, at 17:23, cem sonmez wrote:

@P T Withington : I looked at your your solution for creating delegates.
When i need to use the delegates, i m going to use the way that you
mentioned. While looking at the developer documentation of openlaszlo, I
hadnT understand the meaning of delegates and the usage of it. it seemed to
me a bit confused :) Now, i think know more about delegates than before,
thanks

@jamesr : also thank you for the information. I worked out the problem. I
used an attrbiute in the connection.lzx

<attribute name="connectionOK" value="false" type="boolean"/>

and in the case of "NetConnection.Connect.Success", i set it to true.
Then while creating an object of sharedObject, i used like that :

<sharedObjectChat id="soChat">
          <handler name="onconnectionOK" reference="conn">
              Debug.info("connectionOK attribute operation, value
:%w",conn.connectionOK);
              if (conn.connectionOK==true) {
                  //this.setAttribute("createSharedObject",true);
                  this.connect("chat", conn._conn, true);
                  this.so.client=this;
              }
          </handler>
</sharedObjectChat>

So itS ok now. İt is impossible to learn something wihout making mistakes :)

Best regards.

2009/12/18 P T Withington <[email protected]>

I have a proposed "solution" for the LZX programmer having to create
delegates in script in:

http://jira.openlaszlo.org/jira/browse/LPP-7816

Basically, I want you to be able to declare a handler without attaching it
to an event at declaration time (and you would later use script to register
the handler on the event it is to handle).  The main purpose for this change
is that <handler /> will automatically be managed, whereas delegates must be
manually managed (and destroyed) or they can lead to memory leaks.

On 2009-12-18, at 16:03, jamesr wrote:

for the record, the two use cases for making a delegate are

1)  you want to compute what object to latch onto programmatically and
2) you want to latch onto something that is not yet created at the
handler init phase.
don't see any other use, although the two above are obviously important

cem sonmez wrote:
you are exactly right. I want to make some operations when the
netconnection successful event is fired. Actually i m trying to get the
shared object on the server side, so at first i need a netconnection
instance to do that. ThatS why i thought that i should try delegates. I
havenT used delegates before, but i thought that this is the just one
solution to handle the operations depend on the related event.
The method you said, using an attribute in the connection class seems
the better way. Till now, i havenT needed the delegates. I hope using
connection status attribute in the connection class will fix the problem.
I m going to post back the results here of course.
Thanks for the reply J

2009/12/18 jamesr <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]


 I can tackle it. let's see; i'd write the following, after an
 introduction (all code is untested and represents a pattern, adapt
 it as you will)

 Your problem: You want to do is send a "connection successful"
 event that you can catch, signaling that a method is to be called
 to continue using the connection.  You seem to be trying to do it
 by setting up the delegate manually, when i think, looking at your
 code, that you have hooks to fire events on laszlo nodes that can
 communicate this state change.

 Solution: An event is anytime you use x.setAttribute() by the way
 - that's what it does, makes sure that handlers are fired. That
 said, if you declare an attribute of any laszlo node and in your
 code, when you have success on your net connection, you say
 "somenode.setAttribute('success, true);" then in another node you
 can say, <handler name="onfoo" reference="somenode">...</handler>
 and in that code you can then do what ever other steps are
 required to use the connection.

 Further thought if i'm wrong: can you say why it is you decided to
 use manual delegates? it might make things clearer for me, i've
 not used the net connection code you have there but make guesses.

 .j.
 cem sonmez wrote:

     doesnT anyone have any idea. I got stuck here. Waiting for
     someones advices.
     Thanks

     2009/12/18 cem sonmez <[email protected]
     <mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]
     <mailto:[email protected]>>>


        hi
        when i try do use the delegate such like :

        if( typeof this.del == "undefined" )  {
                 this.del = new LzDelegate(this, "connect('chat',
conn,
        true)" );
                 }                   this.del.register(conn,
        "netStatusHandler('NetConnection.Connect.Success')" );
        }

        I m getting the error on the debug like :

        *soChat.connect('chat', conn, true) => (void 0) (must be a
     function)*

        Actually i want to do this :  call the *connect* method on the
        class when the netStatusHandler method of the *conn* object
has
        been completed. I m not sure that am i using the delegate
        correctly (as i m getting the error, of course not :)).

        I have attached the relevant files.
        Can anyone help me what i m missing to do.

        Kind regards.

        --    Cem SONMEZ




     --         Cem SONMEZ




--
Cem SONMEZ
--
Cem SONMEZ



Reply via email to