Handlers
Identifier:
org.eclipse.ui.handlers
Since:
3.1
Description:
The handlers extension point is an elaboration of the experimental handlerSubmission
element defined in Eclipse 3.0. A handler is the behaviour of a command at a particular point in time. A command can have zero or more handlers associated with it. At any one point in time, however, a command will either have no active handler or one active handler. The active handler is the one which is currently responsible for carrying out the behaviour of the command. This is very similar to the concept of an action handler and a retargettable action.
The handlers extension point allows a plug-in developer to specify a handler that should become active and/or enabled under certain conditions. If a handler is inactive, then no command will delegate its behaviour to the handler. If a handler is disabled, then the handler will not be asked to execute; execution of the handler is blocked. The conditions are defined using the expression language facility added during 3.0. They are expressed using activeWhen
and enabledWhen
clauses.
The workbench provides some variables that these expressions can rely on. Variables that are valid in activeWhen and enabledWhen expressions can be found in org.eclipse.ui.ISources
. The types of the variables are determined by the org.eclipse.ui.ISourceProvider
that provides them.
A handler that specifies no conditions is a default handler. A default handler is only active if no other handler has all of its conditions satisfied. If two handlers still have conditions that are satisfied, then the conditions are compared. The idea is to select a handler whose condition is more specific or more local. To do this, the variables referred to by the condition are looked at. The condition that refers to the most specific variable "wins". The order of specificity (from least specific to most specific) is suggested in org.eclipse.ui.ISources
.
If this still doesn't resolve the conflict, then no handler is active. If a particular tracing option is turned on, then this leads to a message in the log. A conflict can also occur if there are two default handlers. It is the responsibility of the plug-in developers and integration testers to ensure that this does not happen.
These conditions are used to avoid unnecessary plug-in loading. These handler definitions are wrapped in a proxy. For a proxy to load its underlying handler, two things must happen: the conditions for the proxy must be met so that it becomes active, and the command must be asked to do something which it must delegate (e.g., execute(), isEnabled()).
Configuration Markup:
<!ELEMENT extension (
handler*)>
<!ATTLIST extension
point CDATA #REQUIRED
id CDATA #IMPLIED
name CDATA #IMPLIED
>
<!ELEMENT handler (
activeWhen? ,
class? ,
enabledWhen?)>
<!ATTLIST handler
commandId IDREF #REQUIRED
class CDATA #IMPLIED
helpContextId CDATA #IMPLIED
>
Associated a command with a handler implementation.
-
commandId -
The id of the command to associate with this handler implementation.
-
class -
The handler class that imlements org.eclipse.core.commands.IHandler
or extends org.eclipse.core.commands.AbstractHandler
.
-
helpContextId -
The identifier of the help context that relates to this specific handler. While a command can provide a general description of a command's behaviour, it is sometimes appropriate for a handler to provide help more specific to their implementation.
Since: 3.2
<!ELEMENT activeWhen (
not |
and |
or |
instanceof |
test |
systemTest |
equals |
count |
with |
resolve |
adapt |
iterate |
reference)>
Contains a core expression used by the IHandlerService
to determine when this handler is active.
<!ELEMENT enabledWhen (
not |
and |
or |
instanceof |
test |
systemTest |
equals |
count |
with |
resolve |
adapt |
iterate |
reference)>
Contains a core expression used by the workbench handler proxy to determine when this handler is enabled without loading it.
<!ELEMENT class (
parameter*)>
<!ATTLIST class
class CDATA #IMPLIED
>
Used when creating an IExecutableExtension
with a named parameter, or more than one.
<!ELEMENT parameter EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST parameter
name CDATA #REQUIRED
value CDATA #REQUIRED
>
A parameter for an IExecutableExtension
.
-
name -
The parameter name.
-
value -
The parameter value.
<!ELEMENT enablement (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
A generic root element. The element can be used inside an extension point to define its enablement expression.
The children of an enablement expression are combined using the and operator.
<!ELEMENT not (
not |
and |
or |
instanceof |
test |
systemTest |
equals |
count |
with |
resolve |
adapt |
iterate |
reference)>
This element represent a NOT operation on the result of evaluating it's sub-element expression.
<!ELEMENT and (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
This element represent an AND operation on the result of evaluating all it's sub-elements expressions.
<!ELEMENT or (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
This element represent an OR operation on the result of evaluating all it's sub-element expressions.
<!ELEMENT instanceof EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST instanceof
value CDATA #REQUIRED
>
This element is used to perform an instanceof check of the object in focus. The expression returns
EvaluationResult.TRUE if the object's type is a sub type of the type specified by the attribute value.
Otherwise EvaluationResult.FALSE is returned.
-
value - a fully qualified name of a class or interface.
<!ELEMENT test EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST test
property CDATA #REQUIRED
args CDATA #IMPLIED
value CDATA #IMPLIED
forcePluginActivation (true | false)
>
This element is used to evaluate the property state of the object in focus. The set of
testable properties can be extended using the propery tester extension point. The test
expression returns EvaluationResult.NOT_LOADED if the property tester doing the actual
testing isn't loaded yet and the attribute forcePluginActivation is set to false.
If forcePluginActivation is set to true and the evaluation context used to evaluate
this expression support plug-in activation then evaluating the property will result in
activating the plug-in defining the tester.
-
property - the name of an object's property to test.
-
args - additional arguments passed to the property tester. Multiple arguments are separated
by commas. Each individual argument is converted into a Java base type using the same
rules as defined for the value attribute of the test expression.
-
value - the expected value of the property. Can be omitted if the property
is a boolean property. The test expression is supposed to return
EvaluationResult.TRUE if the property matches the value and EvaluationResult.FALSE
otherwise. The value attribute is converted into a Java base type using the following
rules:
- the string "true" is converted into Boolean.TRUE
- the string "false" is converted into Boolean.FALSE
- if the string contains a dot then the interpreter tries to convert
the value into a Float object. If this fails the string is treated as a
java.lang.String
- if the string only consists of numbers then the interpreter
converts the value in an Integer object.
- in all other cases the string is treated as a java.lang.String
- the conversion of the string into a Boolean, Float, or Integer can
be suppressed by surrounding the string with single quotes. For
example, the attribute value="'true'" is converted into the
string "true"
-
forcePluginActivation - a flag indicating whether the plug-in contributing the property tester
should be loaded if necessary. As such, this flag should be used judiciously,
in order to avoid unnecessary plug-in activations. Most clients should avoid
setting this flag to true. This flag is only honored if the evaluation context
used to evaluate this expression allows plug-in activation. Otherwise the flag
is ignored and no plug-in loading takes place.
<!ELEMENT systemTest EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST systemTest
property CDATA #REQUIRED
value CDATA #REQUIRED
>
Tests a system property by calling the System.getProperty method and compares the result
with the value specified through the value attribute.
-
property - the name of an system property to test.
-
value - the expected value of the property. The value is interpreted as a string value.
<!ELEMENT equals EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST equals
value CDATA #REQUIRED
>
This element is used to perform an equals check of the object in focus. The expression returns
EvaluationResult.TRUE if the object is equal to the value provided by the attribute value. Otherwise
EvaluationResult.FALSE is returned.
-
value - the expected value. The value provided as a string is converted into
a Java base type using the same rules as for the value attribute of the test expression.
<!ELEMENT count EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST count
value CDATA #REQUIRED
>
This element is used to test the number of elements in a collection.
-
value - an expression to specify the number of elements in a list. Following wildcard
characters can be used:
- *
- any number of elements
- ?
- no elements or one element
- +
- one or more elements
- !
- no elements
- -N)
- less than N elements
- (N-
- greater than N elements
- integer value
- the list must contain the exact number of elements
<!ELEMENT with (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
<!ATTLIST with
variable CDATA #REQUIRED
>
This element changes the object to be inspected for all its child element to the object
referenced by the given variable. If the variable can not be resolved then the expression
will throw an ExpressionException when evaluating it. The children of a with expression
are combined using the and operator.
-
variable - the name of the variable to be used for further inspection. It is up to the evaluator
of an extension point to provide the variable in the variable pool.
<!ELEMENT resolve (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
<!ATTLIST resolve
variable CDATA #REQUIRED
args CDATA #IMPLIED
>
This element changes the object to be inspected for all its child element to the object
referenced by the given variable. If the variable can not be resolved then the expression
will throw an ExpressionException when evaluating it. The children of a resolve expression
are combined using the and operator.
-
variable - the name of the variable to be resolved. This variable is then used as the object in focus
for child element evaluation. It is up to the evaluator of an extension point to provide a
corresponding variable resolver (see IVariableResolver) through the evaluation context passed
to the root expression element when evaluating the expression.
-
args - additional arguments passed to the variable resolver. Multiple arguments are separated
by commas. Each individual argument is converted into a Java base type using the same
rules as defined for the value attribute of the test expression.
<!ELEMENT adapt (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
<!ATTLIST adapt
type CDATA #REQUIRED
>
This element is used to adapt the object in focus to the type specified by the attribute
type. The expression returns not loaded if either the adapter or the type referenced isn't
loaded yet. It throws an ExpressionException during evaluation if the type name doesn't exist
at all. The children of an adapt expression are combined using the and operator.
-
type - the type to which the object in focus is to be adapted.
<!ELEMENT iterate (
not ,
and ,
or ,
instanceof ,
test ,
systemTest ,
equals ,
count ,
with ,
resolve ,
adapt ,
iterate ,
reference)*>
<!ATTLIST iterate
operator (or|and)
ifEmpty (true | false)
>
This element is used to iterate over a variable that is of type java.util.Collection, or a variable that
adapts to org.eclipse.core.expressions.IIterable. If the object in focus is not one of the above then a
CoreException with an ExpressionStatus will be thrown while evaluating the expression.
The child expressions of an iterate expression are combined using the and operator.
-
operator - either "and" or "or". The operator defines how the results of all the child expressions
applied to each child of the Collection or IIterable will be combined and what (if any) short circuit
evaluation will be used. If not specified, "and" will be used.
-
ifEmpty - the value return from the iterate expression if the collection is empty. If
not specified then true is returned when the operator equals "and"
and false is return if the operator equals "or".
<!ELEMENT reference EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST reference
definitionId IDREF #REQUIRED
>
This element is used to reference an expression from the org.eclipse.core.expressions.definitions extension point. The expression definition will be evaluated within the current expression element using the current evaluation context.
-
definitionId - The unique id of an expression from org.eclipse.core.expressions.definitions.
Examples:
Variables that are valid in activeWhen and enabledWhen expressions can be found in org.eclipse.ui.ISources
. The types of the variables are determined by the org.eclipse.ui.ISourceProvider
that provides them.
<extension
point=
"org.eclipse.ui.handlers"
>
<handler
commandId=
"commandId"
class=
"org.eclipse.compare.Command"
>
<activeWhen>
<with variable=
"selection"
>
<count value=
"1"
/>
<iterate operator=
"and"
>
<adapt type=
"org.eclipse.core.resources.IResource"
/>
</iterate>
</with>
</activeWhen>
</handler>
<handler
commandId=
"other.commandId"
class=
"org.eclipse.ui.TalkToMe"
>
<activeWhen>
<with variable=
"activePartId"
>
<equals value=
"org.eclipse.ui.views.SampleView"
/>
</with>
</activeWhen>
</handler>
</extension>
To further avoid plug-in loading, it is possible to specify when the handler is enabled. If the proxy has not yet loaded the handler, then only the expressions syntax is used to decide if the handler is enabled. If the proxy has loaded the handler, then the expressions syntax is consulted first. If the expressions syntax evaluates to true, then the handler is asked if it is enabled. (This is a short-circuit Boolean "and" operation between the expressions syntax and the handler's enabled state.)
<extension
point=
"org.eclipse.ui.handlers"
>
<handler
commandId=
"commandId"
class=
"org.eclipse.Handler"
>
<enabledWhen>
<with variable=
"activeContexts"
>
<iterator operator=
"or"
>
<equals value=
"org.eclipse.ui.contexts.window"
/>
</iterator>
</with>
</enabledWhen>
</handler>
</extension>
Copyright (c) 2005, 2007 IBM Corporation and others.
All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials are made
available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 which accompanies
this distribution, and is available at https://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html