Re: Event firing from changing EOs
Re: Event firing from changing EOs
- Subject: Re: Event firing from changing EOs
- From: Chuck Hill <email@hidden>
- Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2008 12:19:36 -0800
What about the EOObjectsChangedInEditingContextNotification?
This notification is broadcast whenever changes are made in an
EOEditingContext. It's similar to
ObjectsChangedInStoreNotification, except that it contains objects
rather than globalIDs.
...
Interface layer EODisplayGroups (not WebObjects WODisplayGroups)
listen for this notification to redisplay their contents
That sounds like it may do what you want and send fewer
notifications. IIRC, it is called at the end of the RR loop in a WO
app, not sure about JC. I think this is part of what the
processRecentChanges() or _processRecentChanges() method does.
Chuck
On Jan 7, 2008, at 7:55 AM, Florijan Stamenkovic wrote:
Guido,
Thanks for the reply. I do not need this for logging. Where I need
it in are Java Client applications. I am just finishing up a
library that will make it quite easy to build WO + Swing
applications. The library is totally event driven, all the GUI
controllers and all that stuff has been made to respond to events
fired by EOs that have changed. So, the end purpose is keeping the
GUI in synch with the current state of EOs.
So, if the changes in the end get saved to the database or not is
not relevant in my scenario.
That being said, what do you think? Till now my solution was to use
EOGenerator to define setters that take care of event firing, when
needed. This works, but I always wanted to do this more elegantly,
and overriding the mentioned methods seems just about right. I am
just wondering if EOF can at any time for any reason bypass them.
Reading the API makes me think it can not, but I wanted to check...
Flor
On Jan 06, 2008, at 19:03, Guido Neitzer wrote:
On 06.01.2008, at 15:53, Florijan Stamenkovic wrote:
I am trying to make an EOGenericRecord subclass that will
automatically fire events when new values are set. It is
imperative that the event firing is absolute, nothing can be
allowed to slip by, if a property changes in any way, an event
has to be fired.
Hmm. Do you want to log the change in the EO or the change in the
database? Because if you log changes to the EO, you might end up
with logged stuff that was never saved and therfor does not exist
outside the scope of where the change happened (and was reverted).
What I did for logging changes to EOs was checkin in
"willUpdate" (using Wonder) by getting the changes from the
snapshot. I also have some code to check whether relationships
change but that is not really thought out completely.
cug
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