Glib::Object::IntrospeUsernContributed Perl DocuGlib::Object::Introspection(3)NAMEGlib::Object::Introspection - Dynamically create Perl language bindings
SYNOPSIS
use Glib::Object::Introspection;
Glib::Object::Introspection->setup(
basename => 'Gtk',
version => '3.0',
package => 'Gtk3');
# now GtkWindow, to mention just one example, is available as
# Gtk3::Window, and you can call gtk_window_new as Gtk3::Window->new
ABSTRACTGlib::Object::Introspection uses the gobject-introspection and libffi
projects to dynamically create Perl bindings for a wide variety of
libraries. Examples include gtk+, webkit, libsoup and many more.
DESCRIPTION
"Glib::Object::Introspection->setup"
To allow Glib::Object::Introspection to create bindings for a library,
it must have installed a typelib file, for example
"$prefix/lib/girepository-1.0/Gtk-3.0.typelib". In your code you then
simply call "Glib::Object::Introspection->setup" to set everything up.
This method takes a couple of key-value pairs as arguments. These
three are mandatory:
basename => $basename
The basename of the library that should be wrapped. If your
typelib is called "Gtk-3.0.typelib", then the basename is 'Gtk'.
version => $version
The particular version of the library that should be wrapped, in
string form. For "Gtk-3.0.typelib", it is '3.0'.
package => $package
The name of the Perl package where every class and method of the
library should be rooted. If a library with basename 'Gtk'
contains an object 'GtkWindow', and you pick as the package 'Gtk3',
then that object will be available as 'Gtk3::Window'.
The rest are optional:
search_path => $search_path
A path that should be used when looking for typelibs. If you use
typelibs from system directories, or if your environment is set up
correctly, then this should not be necessary.
name_corrections => { auto_name => new_name, ... }
A hash ref that is used to rename functions and methods. Use this
if you don't like the automatically generated mapping for a
function or method. For example, if "g_file_hash" is automatically
represented as "Glib::IO::file_hash" but you want
"Glib::IO::File::hash" then pass
name_corrections => {
'Glib::IO::file_hash' => 'Glib::IO::File::hash'
}
class_static_methods => [ function1, ... ]
An array ref of function names that you want to be treated as
class-static methods. That is, if you want be able to call
"Gtk3::Window::list_toplevels" as "Gtk3::Window->list_toplevels",
then pass
class_static_methods => [
'Gtk3::Window::list_toplevels'
]
The function names refer to those after name corrections.
flatten_array_ref_return_for => [ function1, ... ]
An array ref of function names that return an array ref that you
want to be flattened so that they return plain lists. For example
flatten_array_ref_return_for => [
'Gtk3::Window::list_toplevels'
]
The function names refer to those after name corrections.
Functions occuring in "flatten_array_ref_return_for" may also occur
in "class_static_methods".
handle_sentinel_boolean_for => [ function1, ... ]
An array ref of function names that return multiple values, the
first of which is to be interpreted as indicating whether the rest
of the returned values are valid. This frequently occurs with
functions that have out arguments; the boolean then indicates
whether the out arguments have been written. With
"handle_sentinel_boolean_for", the first return value is taken to
be the sentinel boolean. If it is true, the rest of the original
return values will be returned, and otherwise an empty list will be
returned.
handle_sentinel_boolean_for => [
'Gtk3::TreeSelection::get_selected'
]
The function names refer to those after name corrections.
Functions occuring in "handle_sentinel_boolean_for" may also occur
in "class_static_methods".
use_generic_signal_marshaller_for => [ [package1, signal1,
[arg_converter1]], ... ]
Use an introspection-based generic signal marshaller for the signal
"signal1" of type "package1". If given, use the code reference
"arg_converter1" to convert the arguments that are passed to the
signal handler. In contrast to Glib's normal signal marshaller,
the generic signal marshaller supports, among other things, pointer
arrays and out arguments.
reblessers => { package => \&reblesser, ... }
Tells G:O:I to invoke reblesser whenever a Perl object is created
for an object of type package. Currently, this only applies to
boxed unions. The reblesser gets passed the pre-created Perl
object and needs to return the modified Perl object. For example:
sub Gtk3::Gdk::Event::_rebless {
my ($event) = @_;
return bless $event, lookup_real_package_for ($event);
}
"Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke"
To invoke specific functions manually, you can use the low-level
"Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke".
Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke(
$basename, $namespace, $function, @args)
· $basename is the basename of a library, like 'Gtk'.
· $namespace refers to a namespace inside that library, like
'Window'. Use undef here if you want to call a library-global
function.
· $function is the name of the function you want to invoke. It can
also refer to the name of a constant.
· @args are the arguments that should be passed to the function. For
a method, this should include the invocant. For a constructor,
this should include the package name.
"Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke" returns whatever the function
being invoked returns.
Overrides
To override the behavior of a specific function or method, create an
appropriately named sub in the correct package and have it call
"Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke". Say you want to override
"Gtk3::Window::list_toplevels", then do this:
sub Gtk3::Window::list_toplevels {
# ...do something...
my $ref = Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke (
'Gtk', 'Window', 'list_toplevels',
@_);
# ...do something...
return wantarray ? @$ref : $ref->[$#$ref];
}
The sub's name and package must be those after name corrections.
Converting a Perl variable to a GValue
If you need to marshal into a GValue, then Glib::Object::Introspection
cannot do this automatically because the type information is missing.
If you do have this information in your module, however, you can use
Glib::Object::Introspection::GValueWrapper to do the conversion. In
the wrapper for a function that expects a GValue, do this:
...
my $type = ...; # somehow get the package name that
# corresponds to the correct GType
my $real_value =
Glib::Object::Introspection::GValueWrapper->new ($type, $value);
# now use Glib::Object::Introspection->invoke and
# substitute $real_value where you'd use $value
...
Handling extendable enumerations
If you need to handle extendable enumerations for which more than the
pre-defined values might be valid, then use
"Glib::Object::Introspection->convert_enum_to_sv" and
"Glib::Object::Introspection->convert_sv_to_enum". They will raise an
exception on unknown values; catching it then allows you to implement
fallback behavior.
Glib::Object::Introspection->convert_enum_to_sv (package, enum_value)
Glib::Object::Introspection->convert_sv_to_enum (package, sv)
SEE ALSO
gobject-introspection: <http://live.gnome.org/GObjectIntrospection>
libffi: <http://sourceware.org/libffi/>
AUTHORS
Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi at linux intel com>
muppet <scott asofyet org>
Torsten Schoenfeld <kaffeetisch at gmx de>
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the Lesser General Public License (LGPL). For more
information, see http://www.fsf.org/licenses/lgpl.txt
perl v5.18.1 2013-12-31 Glib::Object::Introspection(3)