GObject Reference Manual |
---|
The signal system which was built in GType is pretty complex and flexible: it is possible for its users to connect at runtime any number of callbacks (implemented in any language for which a binding exists) [15] to any signal and to stop the emission of any signal at any state of the signal emission process. This flexibility makes it possible to use GSignal for much more than just emit events which can be received by numerous clients.
The most basic use of signals is to implement simple event notification: for example, if we have a
MamanFile object, and if this object has a write method, we might wish to be notified whenever someone
uses this method. The code below shows how the user can connect a callback to the write signal. Full code
for this simple example is located in sample/signal/maman-file.{h|c}
and
in sample/signal/test.c
file = g_object_new (MAMAN_FILE_TYPE, NULL); g_signal_connect (G_OBJECT (file), "write", (GCallback)write_event, NULL); maman_file_write (file, buffer, 50);
The MamanFile signal is registered in the class_init function:
klass->write_signal_id = g_signal_newv ("write", G_TYPE_FROM_CLASS (g_class), G_SIGNAL_RUN_LAST | G_SIGNAL_NO_RECURSE | G_SIGNAL_NO_HOOKS, NULL /* class closure */, NULL /* accumulator */, NULL /* accu_data */, g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOID, G_TYPE_NONE /* return_type */, 0 /* n_params */, NULL /* param_types */);
and the signal is emited in maman_file_write
:
void maman_file_write (MamanFile *self, guint8 *buffer, guint32 size) { /* First write data. */ /* Then, notify user of data written. */ g_signal_emit (self, MAMAN_FILE_GET_CLASS (self)->write_signal_id, 0 /* details */, NULL); }
As shown above, you can safely set the details parameter to zero if you do not know what it can be used for. For a discussion of what you could used it for, see the section called “The detail argument”
The signature of the signal handler in the above example is defined as
g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOID
. Its name follows
a simple convention which encodes the function parameter and return value
types in the function name. Specifically, the value infront of the double
underscore is the type of the return value, while the value(s) after the
double underscore denote the parameter types.
The header gobject/gmarshal.h
defines a set of commonly
needed closures that one can use.