1 .. _adapterhowto: |
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3 |
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4 How to define an annotations adapter? |
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5 ===================================== |
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6 |
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7 Adapters are important concepts of ZCA and PyAMS framework. If you don't know what are adapters, see :ref:`zca`. |
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8 |
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9 |
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10 What are annotations? |
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11 +++++++++++++++++++++ |
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12 |
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13 When an adapter have to add persistent attributes to a persistent class, it can add these attributes directly into |
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14 persistent instances. But this way can lead to conflicts when several adapters want to use the same attribute name for |
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15 different kinds of information. |
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16 |
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17 Annotations are an elegant way to handle this use case: they are based on a BTree which is stored into a |
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18 specific instance attribute (*__annotations__*). Any adapter can then use this dictionary to store it's own |
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19 informations, using it's own namespace as dictionary key. |
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20 |
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21 ZODB browser allows you to display existing annotations: |
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22 |
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23 .. image:: _static/annotations-1.png |
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24 |
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25 This example displays several annotations, each using it's own namespace: |
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26 |
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27 .. image:: _static/annotations-2.png |
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28 |
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29 |
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30 Designing interfaces |
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31 ++++++++++++++++++++ |
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32 |
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33 The first step with ZCA is to design your interfaces. |
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34 |
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35 The are going to base our example on PyAMS_content 'paragraphs' component: a content class is marked as a |
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36 *paragraphs container target*, a class that can store paragraphs. But the real storage of paragraphs is done by |
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37 another *container* class: |
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38 |
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39 .. code-block:: python |
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40 :linenos: |
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41 |
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42 from zope.annotation.interfaces import IAttributeAnnotatable |
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43 from zope.containers.constraints import containers, contains |
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44 |
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45 |
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46 class IBaseParagraph(Interface): |
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47 """Base paragraph interface""" |
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48 |
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49 containers('.IParagraphContainer') |
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50 |
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51 |
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52 class IParagraphContainer(IOrderedContainer): |
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53 """Paragraphs container""" |
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54 |
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55 contains(IBaseParagraph) |
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56 |
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57 |
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58 class IParagraphContainerTarget(IAttributeAnnotatable): |
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59 """Paragraphs container marker interface""" |
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60 |
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61 |
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62 PARAGRAPH_CONTAINER_KEY = 'pyams_content.paragraph' |
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63 |
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64 |
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65 - line 5 to 8: :class:`IBaseParagraph` is the base interface for all paragraphs; constraint implies that paragraphs |
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66 can only be stored in a container implementing :class:`IParagraphContainer` interface. |
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67 - line 11 to 14: :class:`IParagraphContainer` is the base interface for paragraphs containers; constraint implies that |
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68 such a container can only contain objects implementing :class:`IBaseParagraph` interface. |
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69 - line 17 to 18: :class:`IParagraphContainerTarget` is only a *marker* interface which doesn't provide any method or |
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70 attribute; it only inherits from :class:`IAttributeAnnotatable`, which implies that classes implementing this |
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71 interface allows other classes to add informations as annotations through a dedicated *__annotations__* attribute. |
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72 - line 21: this is the key which will be used to store our annotation. |
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73 |
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74 |
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75 Creating persistent classes |
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76 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
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77 |
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78 The first step is to declare that a given content class can store paragraphs: |
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79 |
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80 .. code-block:: python |
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81 :linenos: |
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82 |
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83 from pyams_content.component.paragraph.interfaces import IParagraphContainerTarget |
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84 from zope.interface import implementer |
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85 |
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86 @implementer(IParagraphContainerTarget) |
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87 class WfNewsEvent(WfSharedContent): |
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88 """News event class""" |
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89 |
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90 Here we just say "Well, I'm a shared content, and I'm OK to store paragraphs!". |
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91 |
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92 So we can design the paragraphs container class. It's this class which will *really* store the paragraphs: |
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93 |
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94 .. code-block:: python |
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95 :linenos: |
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96 |
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97 @implementer(IParagraphContainer) |
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98 class ParagraphContainer(BTreeOrderedContainer): |
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99 """Paragraphs container""" |
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100 |
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101 The paragraphs container class inherits from a :class:`BTreeOrderedContainer` and implements |
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102 :class:`IParagraphContainer`. |
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103 |
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104 The last operation is to create the adapter, which is the *glue* between the *target* class and the paragraphs |
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105 container: |
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106 |
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107 .. code-block:: python |
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108 :linenos: |
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109 |
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110 from pyams_utils.adapter import adapter_config, get_annotation_adapter |
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111 |
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112 @adapter_config(context=IParagraphContainerTarget, provides=IParagraphContainer) |
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113 def paragraph_container_factory(target): |
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114 """Paragraphs container factory""" |
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115 return get_annotation_adapter(target, |
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116 PARAGRAPH_CONTAINER_KEY, |
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117 ParagraphContainer, |
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118 name='++paras++') |
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119 |
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120 PyAMS provides a shortcut to create an annotation adapter in :func:`pyams_utils.adapter.get_annotation_adapter`. |
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121 It's mandatory arguments are: |
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122 |
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123 - **context** (line 6): the context to which the adapter is applied |
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124 - **key** (line 7): the string key used to access and store context's annotations |
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125 - **factory** (line 8): if the requested annotation is missing, a new one is created using this factory (which can be a class or |
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126 a function) |
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127 |
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128 Optional arguments are: |
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129 |
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130 - **markers** (None by default): if set, should be a list of marker interfaces which will be assigned to object |
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131 created by the factory |
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132 - **notify**: if *True* (default), an :class:`ObjectCreatedEvent` event is notified on object creation |
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133 - **locate**: if *True* (default), context is set as *parent* of created object |
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134 - **parent**: if *locate* is True and if *parent* is set, this is the object to which the new object should be *parented* |
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135 instead of initial context |
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136 - **name** (None by default): some objects need to be traversed, especially when you have to be able to access them through an URL; this |
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137 is the name given to created object. |
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138 |
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139 |
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140 Using your adapter |
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141 ++++++++++++++++++ |
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142 |
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143 Starting from your *content* object, it's then very simple to access to the paragraphs container: |
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144 |
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145 .. code-block:: python |
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146 :linenos: |
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147 |
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148 event = WfNewsEvent() |
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149 paragraphs_container = IParagraphContainer(event, None) |
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150 |
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151 And that's it! From now I can get access to all paragraphs associated with my initial content!! |
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152 |
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153 |
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154 Managing traversal |
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155 ++++++++++++++++++ |
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156 |
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157 As said before, sometimes you have to be able to *traverse* from an initial content to a given sub-content |
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158 managed by an adapter. |
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159 |
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160 PyAMS defines a custom :class:`pyams_utils.traversing.NamespaceTraverser`: when a request traversing subpath is |
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161 starting with '++' characters, it is looking for a named traverser providing :class:`ITraversable` interface |
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162 to the last traversed object. |
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163 |
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164 .. code-block:: python |
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165 :linenos: |
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166 |
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167 @adapter_config(name='paras', context=IParagraphContainerTarget, provides=ITraversable) |
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168 class ParagraphContainerNamespace(ContextAdapter): |
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169 """++paras++ namespace adapter""" |
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170 |
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171 def traverse(self, name, furtherpath=None): |
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172 return IParagraphContainer(self.context) |
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173 |
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174 - line 1: the adapter is named "paras"; this is matching the *++paras++* name which was given to our annotation adapter |
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175 - line 2: the adapter is just a simple context adapter, so inheriting from :class:`pyams_utils.adapter.ContextAdapter` |
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176 - lines 5 to 6: the *traverse* method is used to access the adapted content; if a name like "++ns++value" is given |
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177 to an adapted object, the "value" part is given as *name" argument. |
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178 |
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179 From now, as soon as an URL like "/mycontent/++paras++/" will be used, you will get access to the paragraphs container. |
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180 This is a standard BTree container, so will get access to it's sub-objects by key. |
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