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Tcl_Method(3)		    TclOO Library Functions		 Tcl_Method(3)

______________________________________________________________________________

NAME
       Tcl_ClassSetConstructor,	   Tcl_ClassSetDestructor,   Tcl_MethodDeclar-
       erClass,	 Tcl_MethodDeclarerObject,  Tcl_MethodIsPublic,	 Tcl_MethodIs-
       Type, Tcl_MethodName, Tcl_NewInstanceMethod, Tcl_NewMethod, Tcl_Object-
       ContextInvokeNext,     Tcl_ObjectContextIsFiltering,	Tcl_ObjectCon-
       textMethod, Tcl_ObjectContextObject, Tcl_ObjectContextSkippedArgs - ma-
       nipulate	methods	and method-call	contexts

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<tclOO.h>

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

       Tcl_Method
       Tcl_NewInstanceMethod(interp, object, nameObj, isPublic,
			     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
       Tcl_MethodIsPublic(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)

       int
       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 isPublic (in)		   A flag saying what  the  visibility
					   of  the  method  is.	 The only sup-
					   ported public values	of  this  flag
					   are	0  for	a non-exported method,
					   and 1 for an	exported method.

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

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

       ClientData *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 con-
					   text. Note that  client  code  must
					   not	retain	a  reference to	a con-
					   text.

       int 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.

       int 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 at-
       tached 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 and whether the
       method  is  exported  is	retrieved with Tcl_MethodIsPublic. The type of
       the method can also be introspected upon	to a limited degree; the func-
       tion 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
       isPublic	 argument  states  whether  the	method should be exported ini-
       tially, 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	imple-
       mentation 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.   Construc-
       tors  should  be	 installed into	their class using the Tcl_ClassSetCon-
       structor	function, and destructors (which must not  require  any	 argu-
       ments)  should  be installed into their class using the Tcl_ClassSetDe-
       structor	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 in-
       ternal 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  an-
       other 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  cur-
       rent method implementation. This	(the core of the next command) is done
       using Tcl_ObjectContextInvokeNext. Note that this function does not ma-
       nipulate	 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 func-
       tion  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 particu-
       lar 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 in-
       dicate that the clientData can just be copied directly.

   TCL_METHODCALLPROC FUNCTION SIGNATURE
       Functions matching this signature are called when  the  method  is  in-
       voked.

	      typedef int Tcl_MethodCallProc(
		      ClientData 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 discov-
       ered  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(
		      ClientData 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,
		      ClientData oldClientData,
		      ClientData *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	proce-
       dure  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.

SEE ALSO
       Class(3), oo::class(n), oo::define(n), oo::object(n)

KEYWORDS
       constructor, method, object

TclOO				      0.1			 Tcl_Method(3)

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