CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2010/ch1 S10 MM: Difference between revisions
(→Better) |
|||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
==== Buttons with closures ==== | ==== Buttons with closures ==== | ||
Sometimes it is desirable to connect multiple buttons to the same exact functions, but to provide that function with slightly different arguments. However, in many toolkits the button's "click" event does not provide any useful information about which button was actually clicked (i.e., it does not call the connected function with any parameters), so you may end up tediously creating one function for each button, and having that | Sometimes it is desirable to connect multiple buttons to the same exact functions, but to provide that function with slightly different arguments. However, in many toolkits the button's "click" event does not provide any useful information about which button was actually clicked (i.e., it does not call the connected function with any parameters), so you may end up tediously creating one function for each button, and having that function call the much more desirable function with the parameter that you wanted. Here is a quick example of three buttons hooked to three functions: | ||
===== Naive ===== | ===== Naive ===== |
Revision as of 04:20, 9 September 2010
Introduction
A GUI toolkit is a set of widgets and APIs that can be used and extended to construct a graphical user interface application. At a minimum a GUI toolkit will provide generic graphical widgets to display to the screen, and an eventing system to tie interactive widget pieces with other widgets, or to a data model. Most toolkits will provide widget containers for easy layouts, abstract data model types and containers, and an easy to use mechanism for implementing an observer pattern for linking widgets and data structures. Advanced toolkits, such as Qt, will even offer convenience widgets for advanced data display, concurrent programming abstractions, or even a whole browser backend (based on Webkit, in Qt's case). Ideally a toolkit would work across several different operating systems with very minimal changes to the application code or compilation process.
Most GUI toolkits are natively composed in C++. Object-oriented language features are all but required for the level of base functionality extension required in a large GUI systems. In many cases, though, bindings for the toolkit will spring up in different languages, and usually the most useful bindings will be in a dynamic scripting language such as Python, or Ruby. This page will talk about several GUI toolkit bindings in the Ruby language.
Dynamically typed languages offer many different advantages for GUI development. Since GUIs typically work with many different simple and composite data types, and the toolkit itself adds a large number of class types on top of that, defining class interfaces and usable data structures, and making them available to the right widgets at the right time within the application can be tedious in statically typed languages. Dynamic languages offer the ability to define, and redefine these things, allowing very rapid development.
The only downside to coding with the dynamic languages is that the speed of the application will suffer due to interpreter overhead, but even for large applications this may be acceptable if the application does not require a particularly high frame rate under heavy load. Logistically, however, in many cases there are problems with the level of support and maintenance in a particular binding project. It is always useful to look at when the last version control checkin was made for a project if that is available, and try to compare the latest binding release date with the latest native implementation release date. Also, it is usually harder to find documentation for the specific dynamic language that you are using, and you may be stuck reading C++ API documentation, and potentially source code for the binding project when you hit something you did not expect. There are also usually slight complications with deployment, and there may be licensing discrepancies between the C++ and Python/Ruby versions as well.
Overview of Ruby GUI Toolkits
Ruby/Tk
Tk is an older GUI toolkit, originally written in Tcl. Tk offers a good set of generic widgets, widget containers for relatively easy layouts, a Canvas, and event binding. Unfortunately none of these features are very advanced, and they're generally quirky to use once you've worked with either a wxWidgets-based project, or a Qt project. For example, Tk appears to only give you a single callback or variable binding for widget output and events, instead of providing a more robust mechanism for observing data changes through events or signals. You could roll your own mechanism with those features, but that could get tedious in a hurry. Also, the widgets are drawn in a distinctly Tk-style, instead of in the native style of the OS. It is highly desirable for a production GUI application to offer the standard idioms that a user expects in a native OS application, so Tk probably should never be used for a globally deployed application.
Example
Hello World
This is a simple hello world application. It demonstrates how to create a root-level frame, and add a single label to it with the given text.
require 'tk' root = TkRoot.new { title "Hello, World!" } TkLabel.new(root) do text 'Hello, World!' pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end Tk.mainloop
When run, this program will display the following:
Hello World button
This short example replaces the label from above with a TkButton, and connects the button to the "printHello" function via the "command" argument. It looks similar to the example above, but with a button instead of a label, and it will print "Hello, world!" to the terminal when the button is pressed.
require 'tk' def printHello puts "Hello, world!" end root = TkRoot.new { title "Hello, World!" } helpButton = TkButton.new(root) do text "Hello, world!" command proc { printHello } pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end Tk.mainloop
Notice that the "command" argument to the TkButton allows a generic codeblock, and any callable may be returned from this block. That is useful to do something like in the following example
Buttons with closures
Sometimes it is desirable to connect multiple buttons to the same exact functions, but to provide that function with slightly different arguments. However, in many toolkits the button's "click" event does not provide any useful information about which button was actually clicked (i.e., it does not call the connected function with any parameters), so you may end up tediously creating one function for each button, and having that function call the much more desirable function with the parameter that you wanted. Here is a quick example of three buttons hooked to three functions:
Naive
require 'tk' def buttonPress(number) puts "Button #{number} pressed!" end def buttonPress1() buttonPress(1) end def buttonPress2() buttonPress(2) end def buttonPress3() buttonPress(3) end root = TkRoot.new { title "Hello, World!" } button1 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 1" command proc { buttonPress1 } pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end button2 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 2" command proc { buttonPress2 } pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end button3 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 3" command proc { buttonPress3 } pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end Tk.mainloop
This application will look like this, and will print the expected "Button X pressed!" message from above:
Better
It would be far better to make use of Ruby's ability to create dynamic closures, if possible. The button will only ever call a function with zero required parameters, but Ruby can save a function (really a method) context with parameters in it to be called later, like this:
require 'tk' def buttonPressed(number) lambda {puts "Button #{number} pressed!"} end root = TkRoot.new { title "Hello, World!" } button1 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 1" command buttonPressed(1) pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end button2 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 2" command buttonPressed(2) pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end button3 = TkButton.new(root) do text "Button 3" command buttonPressed(3) pack { padx 15 ; pady 15; side 'left' } end Tk.mainloop
Notice "buttonPressed(number)" returns an anonymous function that takes no parameters. The "command buttonPressed(X)" lines actually execute the buttonPressed method, which then stores "X" in the anonymous method's context so that it can be used later. This is a common idea when mixing GUI toolkits and dynamic languages. The toolkit may provide rigid callback facilities that, at best, can be used in the first "naive" manner above. However, since Ruby (and Python) offer the flexibility of closures, we can augment a callback with some context when we pass it to the widget that will eventually call it. You will notice below that QtRuby, unfortunately, makes this hard by requiring each "slot" to be registered as a string at startup (unless the author has missed something), but both Ruby/Tk and wxRuby offer this facility. The ability to do this can quickly become addictive when building out a quick GUI application. You are not limited to one extra parameter, either, and this method can be used to augment callbacks that will be called with one or more arguments by the widget to which it was passed, as well.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Well-supported
- Tk has an implementation in a great many languages
Cons
- Very old
- Does not use native OS widgets
- Generally considered quirky and hard to use.
QtRuby
Qt is well-supported open source GUI toolkit that is available under the LGPL license. QtRuby attempts to offer the vast array of functionality provided by Qt in Ruby form. One useful and distinguishing characteristic of Qt is the signal/slot mechanism, which allows you to register an arbitrary number of "slots" to receive a particular "signal." Signals are generally emitted through interacting with widgets on the screen, but can be emitted from anywhere in the code. This allows a very powerful method of "observing" the behavior of a particular widget.
Qt is very robust, and works across all three major operating systems. QtRuby strives to achieve the same feat.
Unfortunately it appears that QtRuby is not being actively maintained, as the last release was in August of 2009.
Examples
Hello World!
This is a very easy way to get started, and to make sure you've installed QtRuby correctly. Simply paste the code below into a file "hello_world.rb", and execute `ruby hello_world.rb`. It's just that easy.
require 'Qt4' app = Qt::Application.new(ARGV) hello = Qt::PushButton.new('Hello World!') hello.resize(100, 30) hello.show() app.exec()
The example is relatively straightforward. The first line includes the Qt4 module. The second line instantiates an Qt "application" instance, for which they will only ever be one instance for the duration of the Qt portion of your application. The application contains the main event loop, some event handling mechanism, and just a few global variables that can be accessed from within your application. However, the application is relatively useless without some widgetry added. This program simply instantiates a "QPushButton" instance, and sets the size, and then tells it to show itself. Here is what it looks like:
Signal/Slot setup
As mentioned, Qt's signal/slot mechanism is relatively unique in the GUI toolkit world, and is extremely easy to use. This is a quick demonstration showing how to create a new custom widget by subclassing the QWidget class, and then creating a vertical box layout, add three buttons to it, and connect those buttons to three different slots:
require 'Qt4' class MyWidget < Qt::Widget slots 'button1()', 'button2()', 'button3()' def initialize(parent = nil) super setFixedSize(200, 120) button1 = Qt::PushButton.new(tr('Button1'), self) button2 = Qt::PushButton.new(tr('Button2'), self) button3 = Qt::PushButton.new(tr('Button3'), self) buttonLayout = Qt::VBoxLayout.new() buttonLayout.addWidget(button1) buttonLayout.addWidget(button2) buttonLayout.addWidget(button3) setLayout(buttonLayout) connect(button1, SIGNAL('clicked()'), self, SLOT('button1()')) connect(button2, SIGNAL('clicked()'), self, SLOT('button2()')) connect(button3, SIGNAL('clicked()'), self, SLOT('button3()')) end def button1() puts "Button 1 pressed!" end def button2() puts "Button 2 pressed!" end def button3() puts "Button 3 pressed!" end end app = Qt::Application.new(ARGV) widget = MyWidget.new() widget.show() app.exec()
Here is what this application looks like when you run it:
As you may expect, it prints out "Button X pressed!" whenever the button X is pressed. Unfortunately, QtRuby makes you declare your slots upfront instead of allowing any method to be used as a slot.
QtRuby slider
require 'Qt4' class MyWidget < Qt::Widget def initialize() super() quit = Qt::PushButton.new('Quit') quit.setFont(Qt::Font.new('Times', 18, Qt::Font::Bold)) lcd = Qt::LCDNumber.new(2) slider = Qt::Slider.new(Qt::Horizontal) slider.setRange(0, 99) slider.setValue(0) connect(quit, SIGNAL('clicked()'), $qApp, SLOT('quit()')) connect(slider, SIGNAL('valueChanged(int)'), lcd, SLOT('display(int)')) layout = Qt::VBoxLayout.new() layout.addWidget(quit) layout.addWidget(lcd) layout.addWidget(slider) setLayout(layout) end end app = Qt::Application.new(ARGV) widget = MyWidget.new() widget.show() app.exec()
This example illustrates how to create an LCDNumber widget, and a slider widget, add them to a layout, then connect the slider signal to the lcd slot. It ends up looking like this:
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Excellent documentation
- Easy to use
- Extensive widget collection and default signals/slots
- Generally very good native OS look and feel reproduction
- Qt Designer for rapid layout creation.
Cons
- Requires you to declare slots upfront, instead of being able to use any method, or generic callable as a slot.
- Unfortunately QtRuby may not be well-supported anymore.
wxRuby
wxWidgets is a very popular GUI toolkit as it has been under an open license resembling the LGPL for much longer than Qt. It is entirely open source and never developed exclusively by a for-profit company. Documentation for wxWidgets is generally very good, although a lot of documentation for wxPython is generally found when hitting google.
Examples
Hello World
This is a simple "hello world" application in wxRuby. It demonstrates a way to create an "App" instance, and display a frame.
require "wx" include Wx # a new class which derives from the Wx::App class class HelloWorld < App # we're defining what the application is going to do when it starts def on_init # it's going to make a frame entitled "Hello World" helloframe = Frame.new(nil, -1, "Hello World") # it's going to put the text "Hello World" in that frame StaticText.new(helloframe,-1,"Hello World") # and then it's going to make the window appear helloframe.show() end end # and this line makes it actually do it! HelloWorld.new.main_loop
wxRuby requires you to inherit and instantiate a WX::App, and create widgetry from there. A "Frame" is a generic top-level container for more widgets, and here it is being made to be the parent of the StaticText widget, which is just a label, or sorts.
More Complex
require 'wx' include Wx class MyFrame < Frame def initialize() super(nil, -1, 'My Frame Title') # First create the controls @my_panel = Panel.new(self) @my_label = StaticText.new(@my_panel, -1, 'My Label Text', DEFAULT_POSITION, DEFAULT_SIZE, ALIGN_CENTER) @my_textbox = TextCtrl.new(@my_panel, -1, 'Default Textbox Value') @my_combo = ComboBox.new(@my_panel, -1, 'Default Combo Text', DEFAULT_POSITION, DEFAULT_SIZE, ['Item 1', 'Item 2', 'Item 3']) @my_button = Button.new(@my_panel, -1, 'My Button Text') # Bind controls to functions evt_button(@my_button.get_id()) { |event| my_button_click(event)} # Now do the layout @my_panel_sizer = BoxSizer.new(VERTICAL) @my_panel.set_sizer(@my_panel_sizer) @my_panel_sizer.add(@my_label, 0, GROW|ALL, 2) @my_panel_sizer.add(@my_textbox, 0, GROW|ALL, 2) @my_panel_sizer.add(@my_combo, 0, GROW|ALL, 2) @my_panel_sizer.add(@my_button, 0, GROW|ALL, 2) show() end def my_button_click(event) puts "Button clicked!" end end class MyApp < App def on_init MyFrame.new end end MyApp.new.main_loop()
This example looks like this:
You can see one of the easier ways to connect the button to a randomly specified function, by using a code block. This feature greatly facilitates rapid GUI development, as you do not have to keep up with event numbers, or slots, like in wxRuby.
Pros and cons
Pros
- Very good C++ documentation
- Widely supported
- Longer time under the LGPL means it's generally used more often in the industry for rapid prototyping
- Works on Windows, Linux, Mac, and BSD.
- Generic code blocks may be connected to default widget event emitters.
- wxGlade for rapid layout creation
Cons
- Proper event management and usage can get tricky with large applications, though see above about connections with generic code blocks.
- Not as many native widgets as Qt
- Generally not as intuitive as Qt.
Other GUI toolkits
- FXRuby
- Ruby-GNOME2
- Shoe
Conclusion
Dynamic languages are very good for quick GUI prototyping, and Ruby is one shining example of that. While Qt may be a more robust GUI toolkit on its own, it seems like QtRuby has some restrictions that will make rapid prototyping slower than it really should be, since slots have to be managed in a long list, and cannot be dynamic instance methods or code blocks. wxRuby appears to be well-supported, well-documented, and easy to use for prototyping. wxRuby may even be good enough for large team usage, if not for production release software. Unfortunately QtRuby does not seem to meet the production release standards, and if it is really not being maintained then even using it internally across multiple teams will be counter-productive when someone has to make changes to it a year from now. Ruby/Tk is only be suitable for individual or small team usage. Nevertheless, if Ruby is a well-understood language on a given team, any of these three Ruby toolkit implementation would be better for rapid prototyping, or for small helper applications than heavier languages like C++ and Java.