Class: Jabber::CallbackList

Inherits:
Object show all
Defined in:
lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb

Overview

This class manages a list of callbacks.

Callbacks management and priority

Callbacks are managed by the class CallbackList. When they are added, a priority (just a number or anything Comparable with other priorities) is specified. The biggest the priority is, the earliest the callback will be considered.

Callbacks are processed for a given set of objects as long as they return false. If you want to stop processing, you must return true. Example :

cbl = CallbackList.new
c1 = false
c2 = false
c3 = false
cbl.add(10) { c1 = true; 1 }
cbl.add(5) { c2 = true; true }
cbl.add(0) { c3 = true }
cbl.process('aa')
puts "#{c1} #{c2} #{c3}"

This example would display “true true false” as callbacks processing was stopped after the second callback returned true.

In XMPP4R, callbacks’ priorities are quite normalized since we want to be able to “cascade” callbacks in a clean way. Here are values your code should take into account :

>= 200

logging & debugging callbacks. Those callbacks should not consume elements.

100-199

Where Helpers register their callbacks. The normal value is 100, and Helpers shouldn’t register something else unless there’s a very good reason to.

< 100

all those numbers are normally available for your application. That’s enough, don’t you think ?

Instance Method Summary collapse

Constructor Details

#initializeCallbackList

Create a new list of callbacks



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# File 'lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb', line 44

def initialize
  @list = []
end

Instance Method Details

#add(prio = 0, ref = nil, proc = nil, &block) ⇒ Object

Add a callback to the list

List will be sorted afterwards

prio
Integer

the callback’s priority, the higher, the sooner.

ref
String

the callback’s reference

block
Block

a block to execute

return
Jabber::CallbackList

The list, for chaining



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# File 'lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb', line 57

def add(prio = 0, ref = nil, proc = nil, &block)
  block = proc if proc
  @list.push(Callback.new(prio, ref, block))
  @list.sort! { |a, b| b.priority <=> a.priority }
  self
end

#delete(ref) ⇒ Object

Delete a callback by reference

ref
String

the reference of the callback to delete

return
CallBackList

The list, for chaining



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# File 'lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb', line 68

def delete(ref)
  @list.delete_if { |item| item.ref == ref }
  self
end

#lengthObject

Number of elements in the list

return
Integer

The number of elements



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# File 'lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb', line 76

def length
  @list.length
end

#process(*e) ⇒ Object

Process an element through all my callbacks. returns e.consumed?

e
Object

The elements to pass to the callback. You can pass

several, but of course, you block must know how to handle them.

return
Boolean

true if the element has been consumed



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# File 'lib/gems/xmpp4r-0.4/lib/xmpp4r/callbacks.rb', line 85

def process(*e)
  # If somebody adds a new callback the list will get modified
  # and sorted(!) while still iterating through it. So we use a
  # local copy of @list. Any freshly added callback will receive
  # the next stanzas, not the current.
  list = @list.dup

  # process through callbacks
  list.each do |item|
    return true if item.block.call(*e) == true
  end
  false
end