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166 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
166 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
# Tutorials of CallbackList
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<!--toc-->
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## Tutorials
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Note if you are going to try the tutorial code, you'd better test the code under the tests/unittest. The sample code in the document may be out of date and not compilable.
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### CallbackList tutorial 1, basic
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**Code**
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```c++
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// The namespace is eventpp
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// the first parameter is the prototype of the listener.
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eventpp::CallbackList<void ()> callbackList;
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// Add a callback.
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// []() {} is the callback.
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// Lambda is not required, any function or std::function
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// or whatever function object with the required prototype is fine.
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 1." << std::endl;
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});
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 2." << std::endl;
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});
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// Invoke the callback list
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callbackList();
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```
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**Output**
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> Got callback 1.
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> Got callback 2.
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**Remarks**
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First let's define a callback list.
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```c++
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eventpp::CallbackList<void ()> callbackList;
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```
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class CallbackList takes at least one template arguments. It is the *prototype* of the callback.
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The *prototype* is C++ function type, such as `void (int)`, `void (const std::string &, const MyClass &, int, bool)`.
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Now let's add a callback.
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```c++
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 1." << std::endl;
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});
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```
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Function `append` takes one arguments, the *callback*.
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The *callback* can be any callback target -- functions, pointers to functions, , pointers to member functions, lambda expressions, and function objects. It must be able to be called with the *prototype* declared in `callbackList`.
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In the tutorial, we also add another callback.
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Now let's invoke the callbackList.
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```c++
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callbackList();
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```
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During the invoking, all callbacks will be invoked one by one in the order of they were added.
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### CallbackList tutorial 2, callback with parameters
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**Code**
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```c++
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// The callback list prototype has two parameters.
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eventpp::CallbackList<void (const std::string &, const bool)> callbackList;
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callbackList.append([](const std::string & s, const bool b) {
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std::cout << std::boolalpha << "Got callback 1, s is " << s << " b is " << b << std::endl;
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});
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// The callback prototype doesn't need to be exactly same as the callback list.
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// It would be fine as long as the arguments are compatible with the callbacklist.
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callbackList.append([](std::string s, int b) {
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std::cout << std::boolalpha << "Got callback 2, s is " << s << " b is " << b << std::endl;
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});
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// Invoke the callback list
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callbackList("Hello world", true);
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```
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**Output**
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> Got callback 1, s is Hello world b is true
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> Got callback 2, s is Hello world b is 1
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**Remarks**
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Now the callback list prototype takes two parameters, `const std::string &` and `const bool`.
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The callback's prototype is not required to be same as the callback list, it's fine as long as the prototype is compatible with the callback list. See the second callback, `[](std::string s, int b)`, its prototype is not same as the callback list.
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### CallbackList tutorial 3, remove
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**Code**
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```c++
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using CL = eventpp::CallbackList<void ()>;
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CL callbackList;
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CL::Handle handle2;
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// Add some callbacks.
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 1." << std::endl;
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});
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handle2 = callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 2." << std::endl;
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});
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 3." << std::endl;
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});
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callbackList.remove(handle2);
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// Invoke the callback list
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// The "Got callback 2" callback should not be triggered.
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callbackList();
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```
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**Output**
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> Got callback 1.
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> Got callback 3.
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**Remarks**
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### CallbackList tutorial 4, for each
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**Code**
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```c++
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using CL = eventpp::CallbackList<void ()>;
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CL callbackList;
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// Add some callbacks.
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 1." << std::endl;
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});
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 2." << std::endl;
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});
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callbackList.append([]() {
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std::cout << "Got callback 3." << std::endl;
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});
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// Now call forEach to remove the second callback
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// The forEach callback prototype is void(const CallbackList::Handle & handle, const CallbackList::Callback & callback)
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int index = 0;
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callbackList.forEach([&callbackList, &index](const CL::Handle & handle, const CL::Callback & callback) {
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std::cout << "forEach(Handle, Callback), invoked " << index << std::endl;
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if(index == 1) {
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callbackList.remove(handle);
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std::cout << "forEach(Handle, Callback), removed second callback" << std::endl;
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}
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++index;
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});
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// The forEach callback prototype can also be void(const CallbackList::Callback & callback)
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callbackList.forEach([&callbackList, &index](const CL::Callback & callback) {
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std::cout << "forEach(Callback), invoked" << std::endl;
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});
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// Invoke the callback list
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// The "Got callback 2" callback should not be triggered.
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callbackList();
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```
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**Output**
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> Got callback 1.
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> Got callback 3.
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**Remarks**
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