W Wrapl, The Programming Language

Libraries:Gtk:Gio:GAsyncResult

Types

T

Provides a base class for implementing asynchronous function results.

Asynchronous operations are broken up into two separate operations which are chained together by a Gtk.Gio.GAsyncReadyCallback. To begin an asynchronous operation, provide a Gtk.Gio.GAsyncReadyCallback to the asynchronous function. This callback will be triggered when the operation has completed, and will be passed a T instance filled with the details of the operation's success or failure, the object the asynchronous function was started for and any error codes returned. The asynchronous callback function is then expected to call the corresponding "_finish()" function, passing the object the function was called for, the T instance, and (optionally) an error to grab any error conditions that may have occurred.

The "_finish()" function for an operation takes the generic result (of type T) and returns the specific result that the operation in question yields (e.g. a Gtk.Gio.GFileEnumerator.T for a "enumerate children" operation). If the result or error status of the operation is not needed, there is no need to call the "_finish()" function; GIO will take care of cleaning up the result and error information after the Gtk.Gio.GAsyncReadyCallback returns. You can pass NULL for the Gtk.Gio.GAsyncReadyCallback if you don't need to take any action at all after the operation completes. Applications may also take a reference to the T and call "_finish()" later; however, the "_finish()" function may be called at most once.

Example of a typical asynchronous operation flow:

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void _theoretical_frobnitz_async (Theoretical         *t,
                                  GCancellable        *c,
                                  GAsyncReadyCallback *cb,
                                  gpointer             u);

gboolean _theoretical_frobnitz_finish (Theoretical   *t,
                                       GAsyncResult  *res,
                                       GError       **e);

static void
frobnitz_result_func (GObject      *source_object,
         GAsyncResult *res,
         gpointer      user_data)
{
  gboolean success = FALSE;

  success = _theoretical_frobnitz_finish (source_object, res, NULL);

  if (success)
    g_printf ("Hurray!\n");
  else
    g_printf ("Uh oh!\n");

  /* ... */

}

int main (int argc, void *argv[])
{
   /* ... */

   _theoretical_frobnitz_async (theoretical_data,
                                NULL,
                                frobnitz_result_func,
                                NULL);

   /* ... */
}

The callback for an asynchronous operation is called only once, and is always called, even in the case of a cancelled operation. On cancellation the result is a Gtk.Gio.GIOErrorEnum.Cancelled error.

Some asynchronous operations are implemented using synchronous calls. These are run in a separate thread, if Gtk.Glib.GThread.T has been initialized, but otherwise they are sent to the Main Event Loop and processed in an idle function. So, if you truly need asynchronous operations, make sure to initialize Gtk.Glib.GThread.T.



ParentT

Constants

InterfaceInfo : Std.Object.T

Nil : T

Functions

GetType() : Gtk.GObject.Type.T



Methods

:GetSourceObject(self @ T) : Gtk.GObject.Object.T

Gets the source object from a T.

res a T
Returns a new reference to the source object for the res, or NULL if there is none. [transfer full]


:GetSourceObject(_ @ ParentT)

:GetUserData(self @ T) : Std.Address.T

Gets the user data from a T.

res a T.
Returns the user data for res. [transfer full]


:GetUserData(_ @ ParentT)