Provided by: tcl9.0-doc_9.0.1+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       Tcl_ClassSetConstructor,   Tcl_ClassSetDestructor,   Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass,   Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject,
       Tcl_MethodIsPublic,   Tcl_MethodIsPrivate,   Tcl_MethodIsType,   Tcl_MethodName,   Tcl_NewInstanceMethod,
       Tcl_NewMethod,    Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext,   Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering,   Tcl_ObjectContextMethod,
       Tcl_ObjectContextObject, Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs - manipulate methods and method-call contexts

SYNOPSIS

       #include <tclOO.h>

       Tcl_Method
       Tcl_NewMethod(interp, class, nameObj, flags, methodTypePtr,
                     clientData)

       Tcl_Method
       Tcl_NewInstanceMethod(interp, object, nameObj, flags, methodTypePtr,
                             clientData)

       Tcl_ClassSetConstructor(interp, class, method)

       Tcl_ClassSetDestructor(interp, class, method)

       Tcl_Class
       Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass(method)

       Tcl_Object
       Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject(method)

       Tcl_Obj *
       Tcl_MethodName(method)

       int                                                                                                       2
       Tcl_MethodIsPublic(method)                                                                                2

       int
       Tcl_MethodIsPrivate(method)

       int
       Tcl_MethodIsType(method, methodTypePtr, clientDataPtr)

       int
       Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext(interp, context, objc, objv, skip)

       int
       Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering(context)

       Tcl_Method
       Tcl_ObjectContextMethod(context)

       Tcl_Object
       Tcl_ObjectContextObject(context)

       Tcl_Size
       Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs(context)

ARGUMENTS

       Tcl_Interp *interp (in/out)    The interpreter holding the object or class to create or update  a  method
                                      in.

       Tcl_Object object (in)         The object to create the method in.

       Tcl_Class class (in)           The class to create the method in.

       Tcl_Obj *nameObj (in)          The  name  of  the  method  to  create. Should not be NULL unless creating
                                      constructors or destructors.

       int flags (in)                 A flag saying (currently) what  the  visibility  of  the  method  is.  The
                                      supported  public  values  of this flag are TCL_OO_METHOD_PUBLIC (which is
                                      fixed  at  1  for  backward  compatibility)  for   an   exported   method,
                                      TCL_OO_METHOD_UNEXPORTED  (which is fixed at 0 for backward compatibility)
                                      for a non-exported method, and TCL_OO_METHOD_PRIVATE for a private method. 2

       Tcl_MethodType *methodTypePtr (in)
                                      A description of the type of the method to create, or the type  of  method
                                      to compare against.

       void *clientData (in)          A piece of data that is passed to the implementation of the method without
                                      interpretation.

       void **clientDataPtr (out)     A  pointer  to  a variable in which to write the clientData value supplied
                                      when the method was created. If NULL, the clientData  value  will  not  be
                                      retrieved.

       Tcl_Method method (in)         A reference to a method to query.

       Tcl_ObjectContext context (in) A  reference  to  a  method-call  context.  Note that client code must not
                                      retain a reference to a context.

       Tcl_Size objc (in)             The number of arguments to pass to the method implementation.

       Tcl_Obj *const *objv (in)      An array of arguments to pass to the method implementation.

       Tcl_Size skip (in)             The number of arguments passed to the method implementation  that  do  not
                                      represent "real" arguments.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       A  method  is an operation carried out on an object that is associated with the object. Every method must
       be attached to either an object or a class; methods attached to a class are associated with all instances
       (direct and indirect) of that class.

       Given a method, the entity that declared it can be found using Tcl_MethodDeclarerClass which returns  the
       class  that  the  method  is  attached  to  (or  NULL  if  the  method  is not attached to any class) and
       Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject which returns the object that the method is attached to (or NULL if  the  method
       is  not  attached to an object). The name of the method can be retrieved with Tcl_MethodName, whether the
       method is exported is retrieved with Tcl_MethodIsPublic, and whether the method is private  is  retrieved 2
       with  Tcl_MethodIsPrivate.  The type of the method can also be introspected upon to a limited degree; the
       function Tcl_MethodIsType returns whether a method is of a  particular  type,  assigning  the  per-method
       clientData to the variable pointed to by clientDataPtr if (that is non-NULL) if the type is matched.

   METHOD CREATION
       Methods are created by Tcl_NewMethod and Tcl_NewInstanceMethod, which create a method attached to a class
       or  an  object  respectively. In both cases, the nameObj argument gives the name of the method to create,
       the flags argument states whether the method should be exported initially  or  be  marked  as  a  private 2
       method,  the  methodTypePtr  argument  describes  the  implementation of the method (see the METHOD TYPES
       section below) and the clientData argument gives some implementation-specific data that is passed  on  to
       the implementation of the method when it is called.

       When  the  nameObj  argument  to  Tcl_NewMethod  is NULL, an unnamed method is created, which is used for
       constructors  and  destructors.   Constructors  should  be  installed  into   their   class   using   the
       Tcl_ClassSetConstructor  function,  and  destructors  (which  must  not  require any arguments) should be
       installed into their class using the Tcl_ClassSetDestructor function. Unnamed methods should not be  used
       for  any  other purpose, and named methods should not be used as either constructors or destructors. Also
       note that a NULL methodTypePtr is used to provide internal signaling, and should not be  used  in  client
       code.

   METHOD CALL CONTEXTS
       When  a  method  is  called,  a method-call context reference is passed in as one of the arguments to the
       implementation function. This context can be inspected to  provide  information  about  the  caller,  but
       should not be retained beyond the moment when the method call terminates.

       The  method  that is being called can be retrieved from the context by using Tcl_ObjectContextMethod, and
       the object that caused the method to be invoked can be retrieved with Tcl_ObjectContextObject. The number
       of arguments that are to be skipped (e.g. the object name and method name in a  normal  method  call)  is
       read with Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs, and the context can also report whether it is working as a filter
       for another method through Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering.

       During the execution of a method, the method implementation may choose to invoke the stages of the method
       call chain that come after the current method implementation. This (the core of the next command) is done
       using  Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext.  Note  that  this  function does not manipulate the call-frame stack,
       unlike the next command; if the method implementation has pushed one or more extra frames on the stack as
       part of its implementation, it is also responsible for temporarily popping those frames  from  the  stack
       while  the  Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext  function is executing. Note also that the method-call context is
       never deleted during the execution of this function.

METHOD TYPES

       The types of methods are described by a pointer to a Tcl_MethodType structure, which is defined as:

              typedef struct {
                  int version;
                  const char *name;
                  Tcl_MethodCallProc *callProc;
                  Tcl_MethodDeleteProc *deleteProc;
                  Tcl_CloneProc *cloneProc;
              } Tcl_MethodType;

       The version field allows for future expansion of the structure, and should always be  declared  equal  to
       TCL_OO_METHOD_VERSION_CURRENT.  The  name  field  provides a human-readable name for the type, and is the
       value that is exposed via the info class methodtype and info object methodtype Tcl commands.

       The callProc field gives a function that is called when the method is invoked; it must never be NULL.

       The deleteProc field gives a function that is used to delete a particular method, and is called when  the
       method  is replaced or removed; if the field is NULL, it is assumed that the method's clientData needs no
       special action to delete.

       The cloneProc field is either a function that  is  used  to  copy  a  method's  clientData  (as  part  of
       Tcl_CopyObjectInstance) or NULL to indicate that the clientData can just be copied directly.

   TCL_METHODCALLPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
       Functions matching this signature are called when the method is invoked.

              typedef int Tcl_MethodCallProc(
                      void *clientData,
                      Tcl_Interp *interp,
                      Tcl_ObjectContext objectContext,
                      int objc,
                      Tcl_Obj *const *objv);

       The  clientData argument to a Tcl_MethodCallProc is the value that was given when the method was created,
       the interp is a place in which to execute scripts and access variables as well as being where to put  the
       result  of the method, and the objc and objv fields give the parameter objects to the method. The calling
       context of the method can be discovered through the objectContext argument, and the return value  from  a
       Tcl_MethodCallProc is any Tcl return code (e.g. TCL_OK, TCL_ERROR).

   TCL_METHODDELETEPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
       Functions  matching  this signature are used when a method is deleted, whether through a new method being
       created or because the object or class is deleted.

              typedef void Tcl_MethodDeleteProc(
                      void *clientData);

       The clientData argument to a Tcl_MethodDeleteProc will be the same as the value passed to the  clientData
       argument to Tcl_NewMethod or Tcl_NewInstanceMethod when the method was created.

   TCL_CLONEPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
       Functions  matching  this  signature  are  used to copy a method when the object or class is copied using
       Tcl_CopyObjectInstance (or oo::copy).

              typedef int Tcl_CloneProc(
                      Tcl_Interp *interp,
                      void *oldClientData,
                      void **newClientDataPtr);

       The interp argument gives a place to write an error message when the attempt to clone the  object  is  to
       fail,  in  which  case the clone procedure must also return TCL_ERROR; it should return TCL_OK otherwise.
       The oldClientData field to a Tcl_CloneProc gives the value from the method being  copied  from,  and  the
       newClientDataPtr  field  will point to a variable in which to write the value for the method being copied
       to.

REFERENCE COUNT MANAGEMENT

       The nameObj argument to Tcl_NewMethod and Tcl_NewInstanceMethod (when non-NULL) will have  its  reference
       count incremented if there is no existing method with that name in that class/object.

       The result of Tcl_MethodName is a value with a reference count of at least one. It should not be modified
       without first duplicating it (with Tcl_DuplicateObj).

       The  values  in  the first objc values of the objv argument to Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext are assumed to
       have a reference count of at least 1; the containing array is assumed to endure  until  the  next  method
       implementation  (see next) returns. Be aware that methods may yield; if any post-call actions are desired
       (e.g., decrementing the reference  count  of  values  passed  in  here),  they  must  be  scheduled  with
       Tcl_NRAddCallback.

       The  callProc  of  the  Tcl_MethodType  structure  takes values of at least reference count 1 in its objv
       argument. It may add its own references, but must not decrement the reference count below that level; the
       caller of the method will decrement the reference  count  once  the  method  returns  properly  (and  the
       reference will be held if the method yields).

SEE ALSO

       Class(3tcl), NRE(3tcl), oo::class(3tcl), oo::define(3tcl), oo::object(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       constructor, method, object

TclOO                                                  0.1                                      Tcl_Method(3tcl)