Provided by: nsf_2.0.0-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       nx::Class - API reference of the base-metaclass of the NX objectsystem

SYNOPSIS

       nx::Class  create  cls  ?-superclasses superClassNames? ?-mixins mixinSpec? ?-filters filterSpec? ?option
       value ...? ?initBlock?

       nx::Class new ?-superclasses superClassNames? ?-mixins mixinSpec? ?-filters filterSpec? ?initBlock?

       cls ?public | private | protected?  alias methodName ?-returns valueChecker?  ?-frame  object  |  method?
       cmdName

       cls create instanceName ?option value option value ...?

       cls delete feature arg

       cls  filters submethod ?arg ...?

       cls  ?public  |  protected  | private?  forward methodName ?-prefix prefixName? ?-frame object? ?-returns
       valueChecker? ?-verbose? ?target? ?arg ...?

       cls info heritage ?pattern?

       cls info instances ?-closure? ?pattern?

       cls info mixinof ?-closure? ?-scope option? ?pattern?

       cls info subclasses ?-closure? ?-dependent? ?pattern?

       cls info superclasses ?-closure? ?pattern?

       cls info info ?-asList?

       cls info  filters ?-guards? ?pattern?

       cls info  method option methodName

       cls info  methods ?-callprotection level? ?-type methodType? ?-path? ?namePattern?

       cls info  mixins ?-guards? ?pattern?

       cls info  slots ?-type className? ?pattern?

       cls info  variables ?pattern?

       cls ?public | protected | private?  method name parameters ?-checkalways? ?-returns valueChecker? body

       cls  mixins submethod ?arg ...?

       cls new ?-childof parentName? ?option value option value ...?

       cls property ?-accessor public | protected | private? ?-configurable  trueFalse?  ?-incremental?  ?-class
       className? spec ?initBlock?

       cls require ?public | protected | private?  method methodName

       cls  variable  ?-accessor  public | protected | private? ?-incremental? ?-class className? ?-configurable
       trueFalse? ?-initblock script? spec ?defaultValue?

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       nx::Class is the base metaclass of the NX object system. All classes (e.g. cls) are (direct or  indirect)
       instances  of  nx::Class.  Therefore,  the  methods provided by nx::Class are available to all classes. A
       class cls which does not have nx::Class as its direct  or  indirect  superclass  is  referred  to  as  an
       application  class.  By default, when instantiating a new class from nx::Class, it becomes an application
       class with nx::Object being set as its superclass. A class cls which is explicitly declared as a  (direct
       or  indirect)  subclass  of  nx::Class  is referred to as a metaclass, that is, its instances will become
       classes as well. In other words, a metaclass instantiates and subclasses nx::Class at the same time.
              +---------+
              | ::nx::* |
              +---------+--------------------------------------Y
              |                                                |
              |  instance of                                   |
              |   .-------.                                    |
              |  +--------'+     instance of     +----------+  |
              |  |         |<....................|          |  |
              |  |  Class  |                     |  Object  |  |
              |  |         |....................>|          |  |
              |  +---------+     subclass of     +-----+----+  |
              |   ^   ^                                ^       |
              \...|...|................................|......./
              |   |                                |
              |   |subclass.....(xor)......subclass|
              |   |of       +-----------+        of|
              |   |.........|           |..........|
              | (metaclass) |   /cls/   | (application class)
              |.............|           |
              instance of   +-----------+
       Classes can be created in the following ways:

       nx::Class create cls ?-superclasses superClassNames? ?-mixins mixinSpec? ?-filters filterSpec? ?option
       value ...? ?initBlock?
              To create a class having the explicit name cls, use create.

       nx::Class new ?-superclasses superClassNames? ?-mixins mixinSpec? ?-filters filterSpec? ?initBlock?
              To create a class having an automatically assigned, implicit name, use new.

       The configuration options for direct and indirect instances  of  nx::Class,  which  can  be  passed  when
       calling create and new, are documented in the subsequent section.

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS FOR INSTANCES OF NX::CLASS

       Configuration options can be used for configuring objects during their creation by passing the options as
       non-positional  arguments into calls of new and create (see nx::Class). An existing object can be queried
       for its current configuration using cget and it can be re-configured using configure.

       -superclasses ?superClassNames?
              If superClassNames is not specified, returns the superclasses of the class. If provided, the class
              becomes the subclass of superClassNames.

       -filters ?filterSpecs?
              Retrieves the list of filter methods currently active on instances of the class, if filterSpecs is
              not set. Otherwise, activates a list of filter methods for the instances of the class. Filters are
              returned or set in terms of a list of filter specifications.

       -mixins ?mixinSpecs?
              Returns the list of mixin classes currently active on instances of the class, if mixinSpecs is not
              specified. Otherwise, the class is extended by the list of mixin classes provided  by  mixinSpecs.
              mixin classes are returned or set in terms of a list of mixin specifications.

       The  configuration  options provided by nx::Object are equally available because an application class cls
       is an indirect instance of nx::Object.

METHODS FOR INSTANCES OF NX::CLASS

       alias

              cls ?public | private | protected?  alias methodName ?-returns valueChecker? ?-frame object |
              method? cmdName
                     Define an alias method for the given class. The resulting method registers  a  pre-existing
                     Tcl  command cmdName under the (alias) name methodName with the class. If cmdName refers to
                     another method, the corresponding argument should be  a  valid  method  handle.  If  a  Tcl
                     command  (e.g.,  a  proc),  the  argument  should be a fully qualified Tcl command name. If
                     aliasing a subcommand (e.g., array exists) of  a  Tcl  namespace  ensemble  (e.g.,  array),
                     cmdName  must  hold  the  fully qualified subcommand name (and not the ensemble name of the
                     subcommand).

                     As for a regular class method, -returns allows for setting a value checker  on  the  values
                     returned by the aliased command cmdName.

                     When  creating an alias method for a C-implemented Tcl command (i.e., command defined using
                     the Tcl/NX C-API), -frame sets the scope  for  variable  references  used  in  the  aliased
                     command.  If the provided value is object, then variable references will be resolved in the
                     context of the called object, i.e., the object upon which the alias method is  invoked,  as
                     if  they  were  object  variables. There is no need for using the colon-prefix notation for
                     identifying object variables. If the value is method, then  the  aliased  command  will  be
                     executed as a regular method call. The command is aware of its called-object context; i.e.,
                     it  can  resolve  ::nx::self.  In  addition, the alias method has access to the method-call
                     context (e.g., nx::next). If -frame is omitted, and by  default,  the  variable  references
                     will resolve in the context of the caller of the alias method.

       __class_configureparameter

              cls __class_configureparameter
                     Computes  and returns the configuration options available for cls instances, to be consumed
                     as method-parameter specification by configure.

       create

              cls create instanceName ?option value option value ...?
                     This factory method creates an instance instanceName of cls and returns instanceName.
                     % nx::Class create AClass {
                     :method init args {
                     next
                     }; # initialization method for instances of 'AClass'
                     }; # defines a class 'AClass' being an instance of 'nx::Class'
                     ::AClass
                     % ::AClass create anInstance; # defines an object 'anInstance' being an instance of 'AClass'
                     ::anInstance
                     % ::anInstance info class
                     ::AClass
                     % ::AClass info class
                     ::nx::Class

                     create accepts the configuration options option available for this instance, such as  those
                     defined by properties of cls (see property).

                     Note that create is called internally when defining an instance of cls using new.

                     By  calling  create on nx::Class itself, the created instance will become a new application
                     class instanceName on which create can also be applied (i.e., it can be  instantiated).  If
                     the  so-created  class  has  ::nx::Class its direct or indirect superclass, instanceName is
                     referred to as a metaclass; that is, a class whose instances are again classes.

       delete

              cls delete feature arg
                     This method serves as the equivalent to Tcl's rename for removing  structural  (properties,
                     variables) and behavioral features (methods) of the class:

              cls delete  property propertyName

              cls delete  variable variableName

              cls delete  method methodName
                     Removes   a   property   propertyName,   variable   variableName,  and  method  methodName,
                     respectively, previously defined for the scope of the class.

                     delete  method can be equally used for removing regular methods  (see   method),  an  alias
                     method (see  alias), and a forwarder method (see  forward).

       filters

              cls  filters submethod ?arg ...?
                     Accesses  and modifies the list of methods which are registered as filters with cls using a
                     specific setter or getter submethod:

                     cls  filters add spec ?index?
                            Inserts a single filter into the current list of filters  of  cls.  Using  index,  a
                            position in the existing list of filters for inserting the new filter can be set. If
                            omitted, index defaults to the list head (0).

                     cls  filters clear
                            Removes  all  filters  from cls and returns the list of removed filters. Clearing is
                            equivalent to passing an empty list for filterSpecList to class filter set.

                     cls  filters delete ?-nocomplain? specPattern
                            Removes a single filter from the current list of filters of cls whose  spec  matches
                            specPattern.  specPattern  can  contain  special  matching chars (see string match).
                            class filters delete will throw an error if there  is  no  matching  filter,  unless
                            -nocomplain is set.

                     cls  filters get
                            Returns the list of current filter specifications registered for cls.

                     cls  filters guard methodName ?expr?
                            If  expr  is  specified, registers a guard expression expr with a filter methodName.
                            This requires that the filter methodName has been previously set using  filters  set
                            or added using
                             filters  add.  expr  must be a valid Tcl expression (see expr). An empty string for
                            expr will clear the currently registered guard expression for filter methodName.

                            If expr is omitted, returns the  guard  expression  set  on  the  filter  methodName
                            defined for cls. If none is available, an empty string will be returned.

                     cls  filters methods ?pattern?
                            If  pattern  is  omitted,  returns  all  filter  names  which are defined by cls. By
                            specifying pattern, the returned filters can be limited to those whose  names  match
                            patterns (see string match).

                     cls  filters set filterSpecList
                            filterSpecList  takes  a  list of filter specs, with each spec being itself either a
                            one-element  or  a  two-element  list:  methodName  ?-guard  guardExpr?.  methodName
                            identifies an existing method of cls which becomes registered as a filter. If having
                            three  elements, the third element guardExpr will be stored as a guard expression of
                            the filter. This guard expression must be a valid Tcl expression (see expr). expr is
                            evaluated when cls receives  a  message  to  determine  whether  the  filter  should
                            intercept  the  message.  Guard expressions allow for realizing context-dependent or
                            conditional filter composition.

                     Every methodName in a spec must resolve to an existing method in the scope of the class. To
                     access and to manipulate the list of filters of cls, cget|configure -filters  can  also  be
                     used.

       forward

              cls ?public | protected | private?  forward methodName ?-prefix prefixName? ?-frame object?
              ?-returns valueChecker? ?-verbose? ?target? ?arg ...?
                     Define a forward method for the given class. The definition of a forward method registers a
                     predefined,  but  changeable  list  of  forwarder  arguments  under  the  (forwarder)  name
                     methodName. Upon calling the forward method, the forwarder arguments are evaluated as a Tcl
                     command call. That is, if present, target is interpreted as a Tcl command (e.g., a Tcl proc
                     or an object) and the remainder of the forwarder arguments arg  as  arguments  passed  into
                     this  command.  The  actual method arguments to the invocation of the forward method itself
                     are appended to the list of forwarder arguments.   If  target  is  omitted,  the  value  of
                     methodName is implicitly set and used as target. This way, when providing a fully-qualified
                     Tcl  command name as methodName without target, the unqualified methodName (namespace tail)
                     is used as the forwarder name; while the fully-qualified one serves as the target.

                     As for a regular  method, -returns allows  for  setting  a  value  checker  on  the  values
                     returned  by  the  resulting Tcl command call. When passing object to -frame, the resulting
                     Tcl command is evaluated in the context of the object receiving the  forward  method  call.
                     This  way,  variable  names used in the resulting execution of a command become resolved as
                     object variables.

                     The list of forwarder arguments arg can contain as its elements a mix of literal values and
                     placeholders. Placeholders are prefixed with a  percent  symbol  (%)  and  substituted  for
                     concrete  values upon calling the forward method. These placeholders allow for constructing
                     and for manipulating the arguments to be passed into the resulting command call on the fly:

                     •      %method becomes substituted for the name of the forward method, i.e. methodName.

                     •      %self becomes substituted for the name of the  object  receiving  the  call  of  the
                            forward method.

                     •      %1  becomes  substituted for the first method argument passed to the call of forward
                            method. This requires, in turn, that at least one argument is passed along with  the
                            method call.

                            Alternatively,  %1  accepts  an optional argument defaults: {%1 defaults}.  defaults
                            must be a valid Tcl list of two elements. For the first element, %1  is  substituted
                            when  there  is  no  first  method  argument which can be consumed by %1. The second
                            element is inserted upon availability of a first method argument with  the  consumed
                            argument  being  appended  right  after the second list element. This placeholder is
                            typically used to define a pair of getter/setter methods.

                     •      {%@index value} becomes substituted for the specified value at position index in the
                            forwarder-arguments list, with index being either a  positive  integer,  a  negative
                            integer,  or  the  literal  value  end  (such as in Tcl's lindex). Positive integers
                            specify a list position relative to the list head, negative integers give a position
                            relative to the list tail. Indexes for positioning placeholders in the definition of
                            a forward method are evaluated from left to right and should be  used  in  ascending
                            order.

                            Note  that value can be a literal or any of the placeholders (e.g., %method, %self).
                            Position prefixes are exempted, they are evaluated as %cmdName-placeholders in  this
                            context.

                     •      {%argclindex  list}  becomes  substituted for the nth element of the provided list ,
                            with n corresponding to the number of method arguments passed to the forward  method
                            call.

                     •      %% is substituted for a single, literal percent symbol (%).

                     •      %cmdName  is  substituted  for  the  value  returned  from executing the Tcl command
                            cmdName. To pass arguments to cmdName, the placeholder should be wrapped into a  Tcl
                            list: {%cmdName ?arg ...?}.

                            Consider  using fully-qualified Tcl command names for cmdName to avoid possible name
                            conflicts with the predefined placeholders, e.g., %self vs. %::nx::self.

              To disambiguate the names of subcommands or methods, which potentially become called by a  forward
              method,  a  prefix  prefixName can be set using -prefix. This prefix is prepended automatically to
              the argument following target (i.e., a second argument), if present. If missing,  -prefix  has  no
              effect on the forward method call.

              To  inspect  and  to debug the conversions performed by the above placeholders, setting the switch
              -verbose will have the command list to  be  executed  (i.e.,  after  substitution)  printed  using
              ::nsf::log (debugging level: notice) upon calling the forward method.

       info   A  collection of introspection submethods on the structural features (e.g.  configuration options,
              superclasses) and the behavioral  features  (e.g.   methods,  filters)  provided  by  cls  to  its
              instances.

              cls info heritage ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is  omitted,  returns  the list of object names of all the direct and indirect
                     superclasses and per-class mixin classes of cls, in their order of  precedence,  which  are
                     active  for  instances of cls. If pattern is specified, only superclasses and mixin classes
                     whose names match pattern will be listed (see string match).

              cls info instances ?-closure? ?pattern?
                     If pattern is not specified, returns a list of the object names of all the direct instances
                     of cls. If the switch -closure is set, indirect  instances  are  also  returned.  A  direct
                     instance  is created by using create or new on cls, an indirect instance was created from a
                     direct or indirect subclass of cls. If pattern is specified,  only  instances  whose  names
                     match pattern will be listed (see string match).

              cls info mixinof ?-closure? ?-scope option? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is  not  specified,  returns a list of the object names of all the objects for
                     which cls is active as a direct mixin class. If the switch -closure is set,  objects  which
                     have  cls  as  an  indirect  mixin  class  are also returned. If pattern is specified, only
                     objects whose names match pattern will be listed (see string match). Valid values of option
                     are all, object, and class. Passing object will have only objects returned which  have  cls
                     as  per-object mixin class. Passing class will have only classes returned which have cls as
                     per-class mixin class. all (the default) will have contained both in the returned list.

              cls info subclasses ?-closure? ?-dependent? ?pattern?
                     If pattern is not specified, returns a list of the object names of the direct subclasses of
                     cls. If the switch -closure is set, indirect subclasses are also returned.  If  the  switch
                     -dependent  is on, indirect subclasses introduced by mixin class relations of subclasses of
                     cls are also reported. -closure and  -dependent  are  mutually  exclusive.  If  pattern  is
                     specified, only subclasses whose names match pattern will be listed (see string match).

              cls info superclasses ?-closure? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern is not specified, returns a list of the object names of all direct superclasses
                     of cls. If the switch -closure is set, indirect superclasses  will  also  be  returned.  If
                     pattern  is  specified,  only  superclasses  whose  names match pattern will be listed (see
                     string match).

              cls info info ?-asList?
                     Returns the available submethods of the info method ensemble for cls, either as  a  pretty-
                     printed string or as a Tcl list (if the switch -asList is set) for further processing.

              cls info  filters ?-guards? ?pattern?
                     If pattern is omitted, returns all filter names which are defined by cls. By turning on the
                     switch  -guards,  the corresponding guard expressions, if any, are also reported along with
                     each filter as a three-element list: filterName -guard guardExpr.  By  specifying  pattern,
                     the returned filters can be limited to those whose names match patterns (see string match).

              cls info  method option methodName
                     This  introspection submethod provides access to the details of methodName provided by cls.
                     Permitted values for option are:

                     •      args returns a list containing the parameter names of methodName, in  order  of  the
                            method-parameter specification.

                     •      body returns the body script of methodName.

                     •      definition returns a canonical command list which allows for (re-)define methodName.

                     •      definitionhandle returns the method handle for a submethod in a method ensemble from
                            the perspective of cls as method provider. methodName must contain a complete method
                            path.

                     •      exists returns 1 if there is a methodName provided by cls, returns 0 otherwise.

                     •      handle returns the method handle for methodName.

                     •      origin  returns  the  aliased  command if methodName is an alias method, or an empty
                            string otherwise.

                     •      parameters returns the parameter specification of methodName as a list of  parameter
                            names and type specifications.

                     •      registrationhandle  returns  the  method handle for a submethod in a method ensemble
                            from the perspective of the method caller. methodName must contain a complete method
                            path.

                     •      returns gives the type specification defined for the return value of methodName.

                     •      submethods returns the names of all submethods of methodName,  if  methodName  is  a
                            method ensemble. Otherwise, an empty string is returned.

                     •      syntax  returns the method parameters of methodName as a concrete-syntax description
                            to be used in human-understandable messages (e.g., errors or warnings, documentation
                            strings).

                     •      type returns whether methodName is a scripted method, an alias method,  a  forwarder
                            method, or a setter method.

              cls info  methods ?-callprotection level? ?-type methodType? ?-path? ?namePattern?
                     Returns  the  names  of  all  methods defined by cls. Methods covered include those defined
                     using  alias and  forward. The returned methods can be limited to those whose  names  match
                     namePattern (see string match).

                     By  setting  -callprotection,  only  methods  of  a  certain call protection level (public,
                     protected, or private) will be returned. Methods of a specific type can be requested  using
                     -type. The recognized values for methodType are:

                     •      scripted denotes methods defined using class method;

                     •      alias denotes alias methods defined using class alias;

                     •      forwarder denotes forwarder methods defined using class forward;

                     •      setter denotes methods defined using ::nsf::setter;

                     •      all returns methods of any type, without restrictions (also the default value);

              cls info  mixins ?-guards? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is  omitted,  returns  the  object names of the mixin classes which extend cls
                     directly. By turning on the switch -guards, the corresponding guard  expressions,  if  any,
                     are  also  reported  along  with  each  mixin  as  a  three-element  list: className -guard
                     guardExpr. The returned mixin classes can be limited to those whose  names  match  patterns
                     (see string match).

              cls info  slots ?-type className? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is not specified, returns the object names of all slot objects defined by cls.
                     The returned slot objects can be limited according to any or a combination of the following
                     criteria: First, slot objects can be filtered based on their command names matching pattern
                     (see string match). Second, -type allows one to select slot objects which are  instantiated
                     from a subclass className of nx::Slot (default: nx::Slot).

              cls info  variables ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is omitted, returns the object names of all slot objects provided by cls which
                     are responsible for managing properties and variables of cls. Otherwise, only slot  objects
                     whose names match pattern are returned.

                     This is equivalent to calling: cls info  slots -type ::nx::VariableSlot pattern.

                     To  extract  details  of  each slot object, use the info submethods available for each slot
                     object.

       method

              cls ?public | protected | private?  method name parameters ?-checkalways? ?-returns valueChecker?
              body
                     Defines a scripted method methodName for the scope of the class. The method becomes part of
                     the class's signature interface. Besides a methodName, the method definition specifies  the
                     method parameters and a method body.

                     parameters  accepts  a  Tcl  list  containing  an  arbitrary  number  of non-positional and
                     positional parameter definitions. Each parameter definition comprises a parameter  name,  a
                     parameter-specific value checker, and parameter options.

                     The  body  contains  the  method implementation as a script block. In this body script, the
                     colon-prefix notation is available to denote  an  object  variable  and  a  self  call.  In
                     addition,  the  context  of the object receiving the method call (i.e., the message) can be
                     accessed (e.g., using nx::self) and  the  call  stack  can  be  introspected  (e.g.,  using
                     nx::current).

                     Optionally,  -returns  allows  for setting a value checker on values returned by the method
                     implementation. By setting the switch -checkalways, value checking on arguments and  return
                     value  is  guaranteed  to be performed, even if value checking is temporarily disabled; see
                     nx::configure).

                     A method closely resembles a Tcl proc, but it differs in some important aspects:  First,  a
                     method  can  define  non-positional parameters and value checkers on arguments. Second, the
                     script implementing the method body can contain object-specific notation and commands  (see
                     above).  Third,  method  calls cannot be intercepted using Tcl trace. Note that an existing
                     Tcl proc can be registered as an alias method with the class (see  alias).

       mixins

              cls  mixins submethod ?arg ...?
                     Accesses and modifies the list of mixin classes of cls using a specific  setter  or  getter
                     submethod:

                     cls  mixins add spec ?index?
                            Inserts  a  single  mixin class into the current list of mixin classes of cls. Using
                            index, a position in the existing list of mixin classes for inserting the new  mixin
                            class can be set. If omitted, index defaults to the list head (0).

                     cls  mixins classes ?pattern?
                            If  pattern  is  omitted, returns the object names of the mixin classes which extend
                            cls directly. By specifying pattern, the returned mixin classes can  be  limited  to
                            those whose names match pattern (see string match).

                     cls  mixins clear
                            Removes  all  mixin  classes from cls and returns the list of removed mixin classes.
                            Clearing is equivalent to passing an empty list for mixinSpecList to
                             mixins set.

                     cls  mixins delete ?-nocomplain? specPattern
                            Removes a mixin class from a current list of mixin classes of cls whose spec matches
                            specPattern. specPattern can contain special  matching  chars  (see  string  match).
                            class  mixins delete will throw an error if there is no matching mixin class, unless
                            -nocomplain is set.

                     cls  mixins get
                            Returns the list of current mixin specifications.

                     cls  mixins guard className ?expr?
                            If expr is specified, a guard expression expr is registered  with  the  mixin  class
                            className.  This  requires  that  the  corresponding  mixin class className has been
                            previously set using class mixins set or added using  mixins add.  expr  must  be  a
                            valid  Tcl  expression (see expr). An empty string for expr will clear the currently
                            registered guard expression for the mixin class className.

                            If expr is not specified, returns the active guard expression. If none is available,
                            an empty string will be returned.

                     cls  mixins set mixinSpecList
                            mixinSpecList represents a list of mixin class specs, with each  spec  being  itself
                            either  a  one-element  or  a  three-element  list: className ?-guard guardExpr?. If
                            having one element, the element will be considered the className of the mixin class.
                            If having three elements, the third element guardExpr will  be  stored  as  a  guard
                            expression  of  the  mixin class. This guard expression will be evaluated using expr
                            when cls receives a message to determine if the mixin is  to  be  considered  during
                            method  dispatch  or not. Guard expressions allow for realizing context-dependent or
                            conditional mixin composition.

                     At the time of setting the mixin relation, that is, calling   mixins,  every  className  as
                     part  of  a spec must be an existing instance of nx::Class. To access and to manipulate the
                     list of mixin classes of cls, cget|configure -mixins can also be used.

       new

              cls new ?-childof parentName? ?option value option value ...?
                     A factory method to create autonamed instances of cls. It returns the  name  of  the  newly
                     created instance. For example:
                     % nx::Class create AClass; # defines a class 'AClass' being an instance of 'nx::Class'
                     ::AClass
                     % set inst [::AClass new]; # defines an autonamed object being an instance of 'AClass'
                     ::nsf::__#0
                     % $inst info class
                     ::AClass

                     The  factory  method  will provide computed object names of the form, e.g. ::nsf::__#0. The
                     uniqueness of generated object names is  guaranteed  for  the  scope  of  the  current  Tcl
                     interpreter only.

                     It  is  a  frontend to create which will be called by new once the name of the instance has
                     been computed, passing along the arguments option to new as the configuration options  (see
                     create).

                     If  -childof  is provided, the new object will be created as a nested object of parentName.
                     parentName can be the name of either an existing NX object or an existing Tcl namespace. If
                     non-existing, a Tcl namespace parentName will be created on the fly.

       property

              cls property ?-accessor public | protected | private? ?-configurable trueFalse? ?-incremental?
              ?-class className? spec ?initBlock?
                     Defines a property for the scope of the class. The spec provides the property specification
                     as a list holding at least one element or, maximum, two  elements:  propertyName?:typeSpec?
                     ?defaultValue?.  The  propertyName  is  also used as to form the names of the getter/setter
                     methods, if requested  (see  -accessor).  It  is,  optionally,  equipped  with  a  typeSpec
                     following  a  colon  delimiter  which specifies a value checker for the values which become
                     assigned to the property. The  second,  optional  element  sets  a  defaultValue  for  this
                     property.

                     If -accessor is set, a property will provide for a pair of getter and setter methods:

                     obj propertyName set value
                            Sets the property propertyName to value.

                     obj propertyName get
                            Returns the current value of property propertyName.

                     obj propertyName unset
                            Removes the value store of propertyName (e.g., an object variable), if existing.

                     The option value passed along -accessor sets the level of call protection for the generated
                     getter  and setter methods: public, protected, or private. By default, no getter and setter
                     methods are created.

                     Turning on the switch -incremental provides a refined setter interface to the value managed
                     by the property. First, setting -incremental implies requesting -accessor (set to public by
                     default, if not specified explicitly). Second, the managed value will be considered a valid
                     Tcl list. A multiplicity of 1..* is set by default, if not specified explicitly as part  of
                     spec.  Third, to manage this list value element-wise (incrementally), two additional setter
                     methods become available:

                     obj propertyName add element ?index?
                            Adding element to the managed list value, at the list position given  by  index  (by
                            default: 0).

                     obj propertyName delete elementPattern
                            Removing  one  or  multiple  elements  from  the  managed  list  value  which  match
                            elementPattern. elementPattern can contain matching characters (see string match).

              By setting -configurable to true (the default), the property can be accessed and modified  through
              cget and configure, respectively. If false, no configuration option will become available via cget
              and configure.

              If  neither -accessor nor -configurable are requested, the value managed by the property will have
              to be accessed and modified directly. If the property manages an object variable, its  value  will
              be readable and writable using set and eval.

              A property becomes implemented by a slot object under any of the following conditions:

                     •      -configurable equals true (by default).

                     •      -accessor is one of public, protected, or private.

                     •      -incremental is turned on.

                     •      initBlock is a non-empty string.

                     Assuming default settings, every property is realized by a slot object.

                     Provided  a  slot  object  managing the property is to be created, a custom class className
                     from which this slot object is to be instantiated can be  set  using  -class.  The  default
                     value is ::nx::VariableSlot.

                     The  last  argument  initBlock  accepts  an  optional  Tcl  script which is passed into the
                     initialization procedure (see configure) of the property's slot object. See also  initBlock
                     for create and new.

       require

              cls require ?public | protected | private?  method methodName
                     Attempts  to register a method definition made available using ::nsf::method::provide under
                     the name methodName with  cls  .  The  registered  method  is  subjected  to  default  call
                     protection (protected), if not set explicitly.

       variable

              cls variable ?-accessor public | protected | private? ?-incremental? ?-class className?
              ?-configurable trueFalse? ?-initblock script? spec ?defaultValue?
                     Defines   a  variable  for  the  scope  of  the  class.  The  spec  provides  the  variable
                     specification:  variableName?:typeSpec?.  The  variableName  will  be  used  to  name   the
                     underlying  Tcl variable and the getter/setter methods, if requested (see -accessor).  spec
                     is optionally equipped with a typeSpec following a colon delimiter which specifies a  value
                     checker for the values managed by the variable. Optionally, a defaultValue can be defined.

                     If  -accessor  is  set  explicitly, a variable will provide for a pair of getter and setter
                     methods:

                     obj variableName set varValue
                            Sets variableName to varValue.

                     obj variableName get
                            Returns the current value of variableName.

                     obj variableName unset
                            Removes variableName, if existing, underlying the property.

                     The option value passed along -accessor sets the level of call protection  for  the  getter
                     and setter methods: public, protected, or private. By default, no getter and setter methods
                     are created.

                     Turning on the switch -incremental provides a refined setter interface to the value managed
                     by  the  variable.  First,  setting  -incremental  implies  requesting -accessor (public by
                     default, if not specified explicitly). Second, the managed value will be considered a valid
                     Tcl list. A multiplicity of 1..* is set by default, if not specified explicitly as part  of
                     spec  (see  above).  Third,  to  manage  this  list value element-wise (incrementally), two
                     additional setter operations become available:

                     obj variableName add element ?index?
                            Adding element to the managed list value, at the list position given  by  index  (by
                            default: 0).

                     obj variableName delete elementPattern
                            Removing  one  or  multiple  elements  from  the  managed  list  value  which  match
                            elementPattern. elementPattern can contain matching characters (see string match).

              By setting -configurable to true,  the  variable  can  be  accessed  and  modified  via  cget  and
              configure,  respectively.  If  false (the default), the interface based on cget and configure will
              not become available. In this case, and provided that  -accessor  is  set,  the  variable  can  be
              accessed  and  modified via the getter/setter methods. Alternatively, the underlying Tcl variable,
              which is represented by the variable, can always be accessed and modified  directly,  e.g.,  using
              eval. By default, -configurable is false.

              A variable becomes implemented by a slot object under any of the following conditions:

                     •      -configurable equals true.

                     •      -accessor is one of public, protected, or private.

                     •      -incremental is turned on.

                     •      -initblock is a non-empty string.

                     Provided  a  slot  object  managing the variable is to be created, a custom class className
                     from which this slot object is to be instantiated can be  set  using  -class.  The  default
                     value is ::nx::VariableSlot.

                     Using  -initblock,  an  optional  Tcl  script  can be defined which becomes passed into the
                     initialization procedure (see configure) of the variable's slot object. See also  initBlock
                     for create and new.

OBJECT LIFE CYCLE

       nx::Class  provides  means  to  control  important  stages  through which an NX object passes between and
       including its creation and its destruction: allocation, recreation, deallocation.
              /cls/->create(/instance/)
              ---->|Class::create()|----><>---------------->|Class::__alloc()|-----------><>---->|Object::configure()|
              `---------------'      |      (1)        `----------------'             ^ (3) `---------+---------'
              [true] |                                                |               | (4)
              |  .-------------------.                         |      .------------------.
              `->|Class::__recreate()|-------------------------'      |/instance/->init()|
              (2)   `-------------------'                                `------------------'
              /instance/->destroy()
              ---->|Object::destroy()|---->|Class::__dealloc()|
              `-----------------' (5) `------------------'
       Object creation is controlled by the factory method create, provided by nx::Class to  its  instance  cls.
       create produces a new object instance as an instance of cls in a number of steps.

       [1]    If  instance  does  not  represent  an  existing  object, an internal call to __alloc, provided by
              nx::Class, runs the allocation procedure for a fresh instance of cls.

       [2]    If instance corresponds to an existing object, the recreation procedure is  triggered  by  calling
              __recreate defined by nx::Class.

       [3]    The  newly  allocated  or  recreated  object instance is then configured by dispatching configure,
              provided by nx::Object, which consumes the configuration options passed  into  create.  This  will
              establish  the  instance's  initial  state,  e.g. by setting object variables and object relations
              according to the configuration options and corresponding default values.

       [4]    Finally, the initialization method init is dispatched, if available  for  instance.  init  can  be
              defined by cls on behalf of its instance instance, e.g. to lay out a class-specific initialisation
              behaviour.
              % nx::Class create Foo {:property x}
              % Foo method init {} {set :y [expr {${:x} + 1}]}
              % Foo public method bar {} {return ${:y}}
              % Foo create f1 -x 101
              % f1 cget -x
              101
              % f1 bar
              102

              Alternatively, the object instance may define an per-object init on its own. A per-object init can
              be chained to a class-level init using nx::next, just like a regular method.

              Note  that  the  definition of an init method must contain an empty parameter specification, since
              init is always called with an empty argument list.

       Object destruction, such as triggered by an application-level destroy call (5), is finalized by __dealloc
       offerd by nx::Class.

       In the following, the three built-in procedures --- allocation,  recreation,  and  deallocation  ---  are
       explained:

       •      Allocation:  __alloc  creates a blank object instance as an instance of cls and returns the fully-
              qualified instance. __alloc is primarily used internally  by  create  to  allocate  a  Tcl  memory
              storage for instance and to register instance with the Tcl interpreter as a new command.

       •      Recreation:  Recreation is the NX scheme for resolving naming conflicts between objects: An object
              is requested to be created using create or new while an object of an identical object  name,  e.g.
              instance, already exists:
              % Object create Bar
              ::Bar
              % Object create Bar; # calls Object->__recreate(::Bar, ...)
              ::Bar

              In  such  a  situation, the built-in __recreate first unsets the object state (i.e., Tcl variables
              held by the object) and removes relations of the object under recreation with other objects. Then,
              second, standard object initialization is performed by calling configure and init, if any.

              Alternatively, recreation will be performed as a sequence of  destroy  and  create  calls  in  the
              following recreation scenarios:

              •      An existing class is requested to be recreated as an object.

              •      An existing object is requested to be recreated as a class.
                     % Object create Bar
                     ::Bar
                     % Class create Bar; # calls Bar->destroy() & Class::create(::Bar, ...)

              •      An object of an object system other than NX (e.g. XOTcl2) is asked to be recreated.

       •      Deallocation: __dealloc marks an instance instance of cls for deletion by returning its Tcl memory
              representation  to the Tcl memory pool and by unregistering the corresponding Tcl command with the
              Tcl interpreter.

              Beware that __dealloc does not necessarily cause the object to be deleted  immediately.  Depending
              on  the  lifecycle  of  the  object's environment (e.g. the Tcl interp interpreter, the containing
              namespace) and on  call  references  down  the  callstack,  the  actual  memory  freeing/returning
              operation may occur at a later point.

       The  three  methods  __alloc, __recreate, and __dealloc are internally provided and internally called. By
       default, they are not part of the method interface of cls and cannot be called  directly  by  clients  of
       cls.  In addition, __alloc, __recreate, and __dealloc are protected from redefinition by a script.

       To  extend  or  to  replace  the built-in allocation, recreation, and deallocation procedure, the methods
       __alloc, __recreate, and __dealloc can be refined by providing a custom method implementation:

       •      as a per-object method of cls;

       •      as a method of a per-object mixin class extending cls;

       •      as a method of a per-class mixin class extending nx::Class;

       •      as a method of a subclass specializing nx::Class, from which cls is to be instantiated.

       This custom implementation can redirect to the built-in __alloc, __recreate, and __dealloc, respectively,
       by using nx::next. By providing  such  a  custom  implementation,  __alloc,  __recreate,  and  __dealloc,
       respectively, become available as callable methods of cls:

       cls __alloc instance

       cls __recreate instance ?arg ...?

       cls __dealloc instance

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2014 Stefan Sobernig <stefan.sobernig@wu.ac.at>, Gustaf Neumann <gustaf.neumann@wu.ac.at>; available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Austria license (CC BY 3.0 AT).

Class                                                  2.0                                        nx::Class(3nx)