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view Port.py @ 161:0803fb42109d
we now have TkCueList, which is really cool. it doesn't provide editing
we now have TkCueList, which is really cool. it doesn't provide editing
yet, but you could almost nearly probably maybe run a show with it.
heck, i hope so.
some of the shifting/drawing problems were probably fixed.
cuelist1 got more bogus data to help populate the TkCueList.
author | dmcc |
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date | Mon, 07 Jul 2003 17:18:26 +0000 |
parents | 8856efb6516c |
children |
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from nodetypes import DiscoType ANY = -1 class Port: def __setattr__(self, key, value): '''Alias for __setitem___''' self[key] = value def __setitem__(self, key, value): pass def __getattr__(self, key): '''Alias for __getitem___''' return self[key] def __getitem__(self, key): pass class InputPort(Port): def __init__(self, allowedtype, required=1, maxpins=ANY): self.pins = [] class OutputPort(Port): def __init__(self): self.pins = [] class Pin: def __init__(self, connection, value=DiscoType): pass ''' Snippet Pi=3: RFC 2: New port semantics # an example of the max node's op def changed(self, inputs): # note how this function does not use stateaccess, as it doesn't use state return max(inputs.values()) # so, how the heck does this work? # we check the function to get the names of kw args in the function. # we always pass self, but everything else is optional # the node asked for inputs, which looks like this: # inputs = {'portname' : PortObj, 'portname2', PortObj} # somehow, the PortObjs are max'ible. # the node has only one output so it can just return the value to set the # output. (maybe) # alteratively, if we decide that you always return a new dict of outputs: # return {'outputportname' : max(inputs.values())} # which isn't horrible, but not great # another example: an adder. the node has ports A and B, and an output C: # C also gets capped at stateaccess[min]. def changed(self, a, b, c, stateaccess): c.set(max(stateaccess['min'], a + b)) return {} # or: def changed(self, a, b, stateaccess): c = max(stateaccess['min'], a + b) return {'c' : c} # which i think is clearer. doing all port changes at the end has some # book-keeping advantages (we can detect easily which ports are changed) # the counter node could work this way: def changed(self, someoutput): return {'someoutput' : someoutput + 1} ''' ''' type 1: a, b, d, e type 2: b, c, d, f conversion maps: a -> [ ] b -> b d -> d e -> f '''