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Diffstat (limited to 'third_party/git/git-gui/lib/chord.tcl')
-rw-r--r-- | third_party/git/git-gui/lib/chord.tcl | 158 |
1 files changed, 158 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/third_party/git/git-gui/lib/chord.tcl b/third_party/git/git-gui/lib/chord.tcl new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..e21e7d3d0b79 --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/git/git-gui/lib/chord.tcl @@ -0,0 +1,158 @@ +# Simple Chord for Tcl +# +# A "chord" is a method with more than one entrypoint and only one body, such +# that the body runs only once all the entrypoints have been called by +# different asynchronous tasks. In this implementation, the chord is defined +# dynamically for each invocation. A SimpleChord object is created, supplying +# body script to be run when the chord is completed, and then one or more notes +# are added to the chord. Each note can be called like a proc, and returns +# immediately if the chord isn't yet complete. When the last remaining note is +# called, the body runs before the note returns. +# +# The SimpleChord class has a constructor that takes the body script, and a +# method add_note that returns a note object. Since the body script does not +# run in the context of the procedure that defined it, a mechanism is provided +# for injecting variables into the chord for use by the body script. The +# activation of a note is idempotent; multiple calls have the same effect as +# a simple call. +# +# If you are invoking asynchronous operations with chord notes as completion +# callbacks, and there is a possibility that earlier operations could complete +# before later ones are started, it is a good practice to create a "common" +# note on the chord that prevents it from being complete until you're certain +# you've added all the notes you need. +# +# Example: +# +# # Turn off the UI while running a couple of async operations. +# lock_ui +# +# set chord [SimpleChord::new { +# unlock_ui +# # Note: $notice here is not referenced in the calling scope +# if {$notice} { info_popup $notice } +# } +# +# # Configure a note to keep the chord from completing until +# # all operations have been initiated. +# set common_note [$chord add_note] +# +# # Activate notes in 'after' callbacks to other operations +# set newnote [$chord add_note] +# async_operation $args [list $newnote activate] +# +# # Communicate with the chord body +# if {$condition} { +# # This sets $notice in the same context that the chord body runs in. +# $chord eval { set notice "Something interesting" } +# } +# +# # Activate the common note, making the chord eligible to complete +# $common_note activate +# +# At this point, the chord will complete at some unknown point in the future. +# The common note might have been the first note activated, or the async +# operations might have completed synchronously and the common note is the +# last one, completing the chord before this code finishes, or anything in +# between. The purpose of the chord is to not have to worry about the order. + +# SimpleChord class: +# Represents a procedure that conceptually has multiple entrypoints that must +# all be called before the procedure executes. Each entrypoint is called a +# "note". The chord is only "completed" when all the notes are "activated". +class SimpleChord { + field notes + field body + field is_completed + field eval_ns + + # Constructor: + # set chord [SimpleChord::new {body}] + # Creates a new chord object with the specified body script. The + # body script is evaluated at most once, when a note is activated + # and the chord has no other non-activated notes. + constructor new {i_body} { + set notes [list] + set body $i_body + set is_completed 0 + set eval_ns "[namespace qualifiers $this]::eval" + return $this + } + + # Method: + # $chord eval {script} + # Runs the specified script in the same context (namespace) in which + # the chord body will be evaluated. This can be used to set variable + # values for the chord body to use. + method eval {script} { + namespace eval $eval_ns $script + } + + # Method: + # set note [$chord add_note] + # Adds a new note to the chord, an instance of ChordNote. Raises an + # error if the chord is already completed, otherwise the chord is + # updated so that the new note must also be activated before the + # body is evaluated. + method add_note {} { + if {$is_completed} { error "Cannot add a note to a completed chord" } + + set note [ChordNote::new $this] + + lappend notes $note + + return $note + } + + # This method is for internal use only and is intentionally undocumented. + method notify_note_activation {} { + if {!$is_completed} { + foreach note $notes { + if {![$note is_activated]} { return } + } + + set is_completed 1 + + namespace eval $eval_ns $body + delete_this + } + } +} + +# ChordNote class: +# Represents a note within a chord, providing a way to activate it. When the +# final note of the chord is activated (this can be any note in the chord, +# with all other notes already previously activated in any order), the chord's +# body is evaluated. +class ChordNote { + field chord + field is_activated + + # Constructor: + # Instances of ChordNote are created internally by calling add_note on + # SimpleChord objects. + constructor new {c} { + set chord $c + set is_activated 0 + return $this + } + + # Method: + # [$note is_activated] + # Returns true if this note has already been activated. + method is_activated {} { + return $is_activated + } + + # Method: + # $note activate + # Activates the note, if it has not already been activated, and + # completes the chord if there are no other notes awaiting + # activation. Subsequent calls will have no further effect. + method activate {} { + if {!$is_activated} { + set is_activated 1 + $chord notify_note_activation + } + } +} |