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    Tool <> WebDialog <> Observers relationship

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    • thomthomT Offline
      thomthom
      last edited by

      @dan rathbun said:

      Warning! Most of the Google Ruby examples, have very poor Ruby programming practices. (One of the things on my to-do list is to edit these examples, so newbies see the proper Ruby way of scripting. Just need to find the time is all.)

      Yes - I have some to realise this. Bit of a shame as one easily use the documentation as guideline when learning a language.

      Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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      • Dan RathbunD Offline
        Dan Rathbun
        last edited by

        @adamb said:

        Well Dan is sensible guy who says smart stuff. But I'm not quite sure why you want to keep a reference to the Tool around rather than release it back to the system.
        Depends... if it's a base drawing or editing tool, that will be used often.. keep it around. If it's say a import, export or report tool, that will be used only on occasion, then yes create it when it's used, and release the reference to it when it's no longer needed. (Hoping GC will dispose on it.)

        @adamb said:

        The specific reason I generally keep dialogs as class variables is to avoid the weird GC behaviour I wrote about earlier.
        So is there a difference when the WebDialog instance, is created inside Object (at the console,) as opposed to within a custom namespace (Class or Module.) ?? It's always dangerous to create objects in the ObjectSpace, because all other objects may inherit them in some way (especially true of methods.) Local variables, Class variables and Instance variables defined in Object (at the console,) act strangly like Global variables when they're inherited by all the other objects.

        @adamb said:

        The exception is sometimes performance when you pre-create Pools of objects to use/share. But this isn't one of those cases.
        Well I have no idea what kind of tool he's talking about. If it's an occasional tool, then you are correct AB. If it will be used often, he will want to, keep the instance alive.

        I'm not here much anymore.

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        • Dan RathbunD Offline
          Dan Rathbun
          last edited by

          @adamb said:

          But the rule of thumb in OO systems, is you create stuff, use it and explicit/implicit release stuff.

          Agreed.. however, it would nice to have direct control over "my" objects. When I want to get rid of an object, I'd like to call a dispose method. Perhaps also a release method that would release ALL references (vars) to the object. And finally, I'd like the undef function/keyword to act upon references (of all kinds,) so when I'm done with a reference, it can be removed from the module/class reference hash-table. (There is cheat to this. Use vars that begin with a capital letter so Ruby sees them as Constants, then you can use the remove_const to remove the definition.)

          Anyhow... these wishes need to be voiced over at
          http://redmine.ruby-lang.org/projects/ruby/issues

          I'm not here much anymore.

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          • T Offline
            tomasz
            last edited by

            @dan rathbun said:

            The next time the user clicks a toolbar button (or menu item,) for your tool, Sketchup will call the Tool's activate method. This means that the Tool class object is still defined and should remain defined.

            I have noticed that 'activate' method of my tool is never called. I create a object=MyTool.new, it launches initialize().

            @dan rathbun said:

            Warning! Most of the Google Ruby examples, have very poor Ruby programming practices. (One of the things on my to-do list is to edit these examples, so newbies see the proper Ruby way of scripting. Just need to find the time is all.)

            Could we create a simple structure of a properly programmed tool?
            I have written something for a start. I think it is bugged because set_on_close is fired up twice.

            
            require "sketchup.rb"
            
            module ProperTool
            
            	#Observer
            	class ProperTool;;ViewObserver < Sketchup;;ViewObserver
            		def onViewChanged(view)
            			puts "View changed; #{view}"
            		end
            	end
            
            	#Create observer
            	version="ProperTool_001"
            	unless file_loaded?(version)
            		ProperTool;;VERSION=version
            		@@view_observer=ProperTool;;ViewObserver.new
            	end
            
            	#Define reader method for the observer
            	def ProperTool;;get_view_observer
            		return @@view_observer
            	end
            
            	#Tool
            	class ProperTool;;TestTool
            		def initialize(web_dialog)
            			@ip = Sketchup;;InputPoint.new
            			@web_dialog=web_dialog
            		end
            
            		def onCancel(reason,view)
            			@web_dialog.close
            		end
            
            		def deactivate(view)
            			@web_dialog.close
            		end
            	end
            
            	#Web Dialog controls the rest
            	class ProperTool;;MainDialog
            
            		def initialize
            
            			@dlg=UI;;WebDialog.new("ProperTool")
            
            			@dlg.set_html("<html><body>
            				<form>
            				<input type=\"button\" value=\"Close Me\" onclick=\"window.location.href='skp;close_me'\" />
            				</form></body><html>"
            			)
            
            			@dlg.set_on_close {
            				puts "Set on close fired."
            				Sketchup.active_model.active_view.remove_observer ProperTool;;get_view_observer
            				Sketchup.active_model.select_tool(nil)
            			}
            
            			@dlg.add_action_callback('close_me'){ |dialog, params| self.close() }
            
            			@tool = Sketchup.active_model.select_tool ProperTool;;TestTool.new(@dlg)
            			Sketchup.active_model.active_view.add_observer ProperTool;;get_view_observer
            			@dlg.show
            
            		end
            
            		def close
            			@dlg.close
            		end
            
            	end
            
            end # Module
            
            unless file_loaded?(ProperTool;;VERSION)
            		main_menu = UI.menu("Plugins")
            		main_menu.add_item("ProperTool") {ProperTool;;MainDialog.new}
            end
            
            file_loaded(ProperTool;;VERSION)
            

            Version 001

            Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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            • thomthomT Offline
              thomthom
              last edited by

              @unknownuser said:

              I have noticed that 'activate' method of my tool is never called. I create a object=MyTool.new, it launches initialize()

              activate and initialize both works - for completely different purposes.

              initialize triggers when you create an instance of your Tools class - as any other class. activate triggers when the tool is being activated - either by Sketchup.active_model.select_tool or Sketchup.active_model.tools.push_tools.

              Are you not seeing that behaviour?

              Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
              List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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              • T Offline
                tomasz
                last edited by

                @thomthom said:

                Are you not seeing that behaviour?

                When I have added the activate method to the posted sample, it does trigger, but the initialize() doesn't.
                For some odd reason activate doesn't fire up in my own tool. I start both tools exactly in the same way:
                @tool = Sketchup.active_model.select_tool ToolName.new


                Version 002 - activate tool method added

                Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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                • thomthomT Offline
                  thomthom
                  last edited by

                  ` > class MyTool; def initialize; puts 'init'; end; def activate; puts 'activate'; end; end;
                  nil

                  t = MyTool.new
                  init
                  #MyTool:0x11752260
                  Sketchup.active_model.select_tool(t)
                  activate
                  #Sketchup::Model:0x11269cf8
                  Sketchup.active_model.select_tool( MyTool.new )
                  init
                  activate
                  #Sketchup::Model:0x11269cf8`

                  Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                  List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                  • thomthomT Offline
                    thomthom
                    last edited by

                    @unknownuser said:

                    @thomthom said:

                    Are you not seeing that behaviour?

                    When I have added the activate method to the posted sample, it does trigger, but the initialize() doesn't.
                    For some odd reason activate doesn't fire up in my own tool. I start both tools exactly in the same way:
                    @tool = Sketchup.active_model.select_tool ToolName.new

                    In your code:

                    
                    def initialize(web_dialog)
                      "Tool created."
                      @web_dialog=web_dialog
                    end
                    
                    

                    You're missing a puts.

                    Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                    List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                    • thomthomT Offline
                      thomthom
                      last edited by

                      
                      def onCancel(reason,view)
                        @web_dialog.close
                      end
                      
                      

                      Do you need to close the webdialog here? It does not stop the Tool.

                      If the tool is a line tool for instance, and the user starts to draw a line:
                      Clicks once to set start point - then the tool enters a state where it expects the user to pick another. but if the user hit Escape this event is triggered with reason == 0 - and the tool should then reset itself. But the tool itself is not killed.

                      Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        @dlg.set_on_close { puts "Set on close fired." Sketchup.active_model.active_view.remove_observer ProperTool::get_view_observer Sketchup.active_model.select_tool(nil) }

                        Regarding Sketchup.active_model.select_tool(nil) - that will activate SU's Select tool. I'd recommend that you instead use Sketchup.active_model.tools's push_tool and pop_tool so that when you deactivate your own tool it return to the previously selected tool (which might very likely not be the Select tool)

                        Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                        • T Offline
                          tomasz
                          last edited by

                          @thomthom said:

                          You're missing a puts.

                          👊

                          @thomthom said:

                          
                          > def onCancel(reason,view)
                          >   @web_dialog.close
                          > end
                          > 
                          

                          Do you need to close the webdialog here? It does not stop the Tool.

                          It is just a single stage tool. If an user presses escape I want to close the webdialog and deactivate.the_tool. Invoking @dlg.set_on_close {Sketchup.active_model.active_view.remove_observer ProperTool::get_view_observer; **Sketchup.active_model.select_tool(nil)**} will close the tool... and will trigger @web_dialog.close again. That is why it fires up twice.

                          Author of [Thea Render for SketchUp](http://www.thearender.com/sketchup)

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