Difference between revisions of "SCL Registry"
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=== Finding values === | === Finding values === | ||
− | Values are found using <code> | + | Values are found using <code>ReflectionUtils.getValue</code>. The method requires a type binding scheme, the URI of the value and the expected type of the value. This method does not cache the values. |
=== Contributing values === | === Contributing values === |
Revision as of 06:42, 2 August 2011
This pages documents a mechanism for finding and contributing SCL types and values in Simantics platform. All interfaces and classes mentioned are defined in the plugins org.simantics.scl.types, org.simantics.scl.reflection or org.simantics.scl.runtime.
Both types and values are identified by URIs. The last part of the URI is the name of the type or value and the prefix before the name is the namespace.
Contents
Types
Grammar and representation
SCL types are written according to the following grammar:
t ::= C // Type constructor | a // Type variable | t1 t2 // Type application | forall a. t // Universal quantification | P t1 ... tn => t // Qualified type
Type constructor is either one capitalized identifier or concatenation of multiple identifiers with period (.). In the former case, the last identifier does not have to be capitalized. Type variable is always a one identifier that is not capitalized.
Types are represented in Java using the following subtypes of Type
(org.simantics.scl.types)
TCon(String module, String name) TVar() TApply(Type function, Type parameter) TForAll(TVar var, Type type) TPred(TFuncApply predicate, Type type)
Some type constructors have special syntax:
a -> b = TApply(TApply(TCon(Types.BUILTIN, "->"), a), b) [a] = TApply(TCon(Types.BUILTIN, "[]"), a) () = TCon(Types.BUILTIN, "()") (a,b) = TApply(TApply(TCon(Types.BUILTIN, "(,)"), a), b) (a,b,c) = TApply(TApply(TApply(TCon(Types.BUILTIN, "(,,)"), a), b), c) ...
A type is converted from a String to Type using Types.parseType.
Converting types to classes
In order to get a Java class from a type, TypeBindingScheme
(org.simantics.scl.reflection) is needed. It describes which Java class each type constructor corresponds to. With a scheme s
types are converted to classes with the following rules implemented in ReflectionUtils.getClass
c(C) --> s(C) c(a) --> Object c(t1 t2) --> c(t1) c(forall a.t) --> c(t) c(P t1 ... tn => t) --> Function
A singleton MinimalTypeBindingScheme
implements TypeBindingScheme
that uses extensions to find bindings from type constructors to classes. It must be extended elsewhere in order to get for example the types defined in the database.
The following bindings are defined even when no extensions are defined:
(->) --> Function [] --> List () --> Tuple0 (,) --> Tuple2 (,,) --> Tuple3 ... Boolean --> Boolean Byte --> Byte ... Long --> Long String --> String
Contributing type constructors
Type constructors are contributed using the extension point described in the next section.
Values
The type conversion rules in the previous section already dictate the Java class of the values of a certain SCL type. Depending on the type constructor, there are additional constraints. For example, values of type [a]
must implement interface java.util.List
and additionally elements of the list must be compatible with a. Values of type a -> b
must implement the interface Function
and additionally when method apply
is called with a parameter compatible with type a
the method must return a value compatible with type b
.
Finding values
Values are found using ReflectionUtils.getValue
. The method requires a type binding scheme, the URI of the value and the expected type of the value. This method does not cache the values.
Contributing values
Values are contributing using the extension point org.simantics.scl.reflection.binding
. Instance method, class methods, constructors and static fields can be contributed.
When a method or constructor is contributed, it is made available as a Function.
- library
-
attributes: path
possible children: library, package, class
Represents a library or type in semantic graph. If the element is the root of the extension, path is an absolute uri of the resource. Otherwise it is relative path from its parent element. - package
-
attributes: name
Binds a Java package with given name to the parent library. The constructors of all classes in the package are made available as values. - class
-
attributes: name
Binds a Java class with given name to the parent library. Public fields and methods of the class are made available as values.
TODO: how SCL types are contributed