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124 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
124 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
# Tutorials of EventQueue
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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 The sample code in the document may be out of date and not compilable.
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### Tutorial 1 -- Basic usage
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**Code**
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```c++
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eventpp::EventQueue<int, void (const std::string &, std::unique_ptr<int> &)> queue;
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queue.appendListener(3, [](const std::string & s, std::unique_ptr<int> & n) {
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std::cout << "Got event 3, s is " << s << " n is " << *n << std::endl;
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});
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// The listener prototype doesn't need to be exactly same as the dispatcher.
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// It would be find as long as the arguments is compatible with the dispatcher.
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queue.appendListener(5, [](std::string s, const std::unique_ptr<int> & n) {
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std::cout << "Got event 5, s is " << s << " n is " << *n << std::endl;
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});
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queue.appendListener(5, [](const std::string & s, std::unique_ptr<int> & n) {
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std::cout << "Got another event 5, s is " << s << " n is " << *n << std::endl;
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});
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// Enqueue the events, the first argument is always the event type.
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// The listeners are not triggered during enqueue.
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queue.enqueue(3, "Hello", std::unique_ptr<int>(new int(38)));
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queue.enqueue(5, "World", std::unique_ptr<int>(new int(58)));
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// Process the event queue, dispatch all queued events.
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queue.process();
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```
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**Output**
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> Got event 3, s is Hello n is 38
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> Got event 5, s is World n is 58
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> Got another event 5, s is World n is 58
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**Remarks**
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`EventDispatcher<>::dispatch()` invokes the listeners synchronously. Sometimes an asynchronous event queue is more useful (think about Windows message queue, or an event queue in a game). EventQueue supports such kind of event queue.
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`EventQueue<>::enqueue()` puts an event to the queue. Its parameters are exactly same as `dispatch`.
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`EventQueue<>::process()` must be called to dispatch the queued events.
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A typical use case is in a GUI application, each components call `EventQueue<>::enqueue()` to post the events, then the main event loop calls `EventQueue<>::process()` to dispatch the events.
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`EventQueue` supports non-copyable object as the event arguments, such as the unique pointer in the tutorial.
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### Tutorial 2 -- multiple threading
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**Code**
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```c++
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using EQ = eventpp::EventQueue<int, void (int)>;
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EQ queue;
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constexpr int stopEvent = 1;
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constexpr int otherEvent = 2;
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// Start a thread to process the event queue.
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// All listeners are invoked in that thread.
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std::thread thread([stopEvent, otherEvent, &queue]() {
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volatile bool shouldStop = false;
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queue.appendListener(stopEvent, [&shouldStop](int) {
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shouldStop = true;
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});
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queue.appendListener(otherEvent, [](const int index) {
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std::cout << "Got event, index is " << index << std::endl;
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});
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while(! shouldStop) {
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queue.wait();
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queue.process();
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}
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});
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// Enqueue an event from the main thread. After sleeping for 10 milliseconds,
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// the event should have be processed by the other thread.
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queue.enqueue(otherEvent, 1);
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std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
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std::cout << "Should have triggered event with index = 1" << std::endl;
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queue.enqueue(otherEvent, 2);
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std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
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std::cout << "Should have triggered event with index = 2" << std::endl;
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{
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// EventQueue::DisableQueueNotify is a RAII class that
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// disables waking up any waiting threads.
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// So no events should be triggered in this code block.
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// DisableQueueNotify is useful when adding lots of events at the same time
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// and only want to wake up the waiting threads after all events are added.
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EQ::DisableQueueNotify disableNotify(&queue);
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queue.enqueue(otherEvent, 10);
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std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
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std::cout << "Should NOT trigger event with index = 10" << std::endl;
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queue.enqueue(otherEvent, 11);
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std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
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std::cout << "Should NOT trigger event with index = 11" << std::endl;
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}
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// The DisableQueueNotify object is destroyed here, and has resumed
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// waking up waiting threads. So the events should be triggered.
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std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10));
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std::cout << "Should have triggered events with index = 10 and 11" << std::endl;
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queue.enqueue(stopEvent, 1);
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thread.join();
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```
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**Output**
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> Got event, index is 1
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> Should have triggered event with index = 1
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> Got event, index is 2
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> Should have triggered event with index = 2
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> Should NOT trigger event with index = 10
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> Should NOT trigger event with index = 11
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> Got event, index is 10
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> Got event, index is 11
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> Should have triggered events with index = 10 and 11
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**Remarks**
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