wxWidgets/interface/wx/scopeguard.h

155 lines
4.2 KiB
Objective-C

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Name: scopeguard.h
// Purpose: interface of global functions
// Author: wxWidgets team
// RCS-ID: $Id$
// Licence: wxWindows license
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/**
@class wxScopeGuard
Scope guard is an object which allows executing an action on scope exit.
The objects of this class must be constructed using wxMakeGuard() function.
@nolibrary
@category{misc}
*/
class wxScopeGuard
{
public:
/**
Call this method to dismiss the execution of the action on scope exit.
A typical example:
@code
Update1();
// ensure that changes done so far are rolled back if the next
// operation throws
wxScopeGuard guard = wxMakeGuard(RollBack);
Update2();
// it didn't throw so commit the changes, i.e. avoid rolling back
guard.Dismiss();
@endcode
*/
void Dismiss();
};
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_misc */
//@{
/**
Returns a scope guard object which will call the specified function with
the given parameters on scope exit.
This function is overloaded to take several parameters up to some
implementation-defined (but relatively low) limit.
The @a func should be a functor taking parameters of the types P1, ..., PN,
i.e. the expression @c func(p1, ..., pN) should be valid.
*/
template <typename F, typename P1, ..., typename PN>
wxScopeGuard wxMakeGuard(F func, P1 p1, ..., PN pN);
//@}
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_misc */
//@{
/**
Ensure that the global @a function with a few (up to some
implementation-defined limit) is executed on scope exit, whether due to a
normal function return or because an exception has been thrown.
A typical example of its usage:
@code
void *buf = malloc(size);
wxON_BLOCK_EXIT1(free, buf);
@endcode
Please see the original article by Andrei Alexandrescu and Petru Marginean
published in December 2000 issue of C/C++ Users Journal for more details.
@see wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ0()
@header{wx/scopeguard.h}
*/
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT(function, ...)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT0(function)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT1(function, p1)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT2(function, p1, p2)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT3(function, p1, p2, p3)
//@}
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_misc */
//@{
/**
This family of macros is similar to wxON_BLOCK_EXIT(), but calls a method
of the given object instead of a free function.
@header{wx/scopeguard.h}
*/
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ(object, method, ...)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ0(object, method)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ1(object, method, p1)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ2(object, method, p1, p2)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ3(object, method, p1, p2, p3)
//@}
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_misc */
//@{
/**
This family of macros is similar to wxON_BLOCK_OBJ(), but calls a method
of @c this object instead of a method of the specified object.
@header{wx/scopeguard.h}
*/
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_THIS(method, ...)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_THIS0(method)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_THIS1(method, p1)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_THIS2(method, p1, p2)
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_THIS3(method, p1, p2, p3)
//@}
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_misc */
//@{
/**
This macro sets a variable to the specified value on scope exit.
Example of usage:
@code
void foo()
{
bool isDoingSomething = true;
{
wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_SET(isDoingSomething, false);
... do something ...
}
... isDoingSomething is false now ...
}
@endcode
Notice that @a value is copied, i.e. stored by value, so it can be a
temporary object returned by a function call, for example.
@see wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_OBJ0(), wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_NULL()
@header{wx/scopeguard.h}
*/
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_SET(var, value)
/**
This macro sets the pointer passed to it as argument to NULL on scope exit.
It must be used instead of wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_SET() when the value being set
is @c NULL.
@header{wx/scopeguard.h}
*/
#define wxON_BLOCK_EXIT_NULL(ptr)
//@}