How do I get a list of all IRegistrations/ComponentRegistrations in my WindsorContainer or its kernel? I can see a way of doing this by wiring to the ComponentRegistered event and tracking there, but is there an eaiser way?
Thanks.
You can get the handlers from the container, but not the IRegistrations:
IHandler[] handlers = container.Kernel.GetAssignableHandlers(typeof(object));
Handlers are basically the registered components. IHandler.ComponentModel contains most of the information of a registered component.
Related
Does there exists a build in function that keeps on reloading the whole component until a boolean gets true. Bacause now before I can get some data I need to wait until a user has clicked a button in another component. But there is no relationship between those 2 components.
Does someone knows a way how to do this.
thx!
you can make use of Event Emitters in components to share information so that you need not wait for a user dependent action . Also make use of Service classes in order to pass information between components.
https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/cookbook/component-communication.html#!#bidirectional-service
Also if you are getting information from a http call try and use observables or promises and then use ngIf or a elvus operator to get info into the component.
More on Angular Concepts https://rahulrsingh09.github.io/AngularConcepts/
I solved it by using a service where is create a subject/observable.
Check the link:
https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/cookbook/component-communication.html#!#bidirectional-service
check the: Parent and children communicate via a service
I am starting developing with Symfony2 framework and I like to use the Eventdispatcher. Now I have three questions I could find an answer with google yet.
Where I place the dispatcher so it is accessable from everywhere in
tha app?
How I can configure customevents? Should I place all in one file or
one for each bunble?
How much effort is it to configure it with annotations, i.e
#Event("some.event")? Is that possible?
General
I might suggest the Symfony 2 documentation on the EventDispatcher as a good starting point, assuming that you mean you wish to provide custom events rather than a custom event dispatcher.
Symfony2 Internals - The Event Dispatcher
Location of Events
In terms of location, an 'Event' folder within the appropriate bundle is a good choice. It is likely that the actual dispatching of the event will take place only within the bundle context, whereas listeners may reside elsewhere. This is however a separate topic and of minimal relevance as they simply subscribe to the event's string-name (e.g., 'store.order' to borrow the documentation's example) and only require knowledge of the Event's interface/type.
So you might have an Event called 'Foo' within the 'Bar' bundle in 'Zap' namespace:
namespace Zap\Bar\Event;
use Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\Event;
class FooEvent extends Event
{
// ...
}
When you then come to dispatch an event from within your bundle, you might choose to use the event identifier 'zap.bar.foo', and of course you can then register listeners from elsewhere to be notified on this identifier as you see fit.
Accessing the Event Dispatcher
Where you wish to access the primary EventDispatcher instance, acquire access to the Dependency Injection Container and retrieve the 'event_dispatcher' service. A simple approach is to have your class extend 'ContainerAware' and then retrieve the dispatcher with
$dispatcher = $this->container->get('event_dispatcher');
To answer your first question:
Where I place the dispatcher so it is accessable from everywhere in tha app?
Actually, there is already preconfigured event dispatcher service accessible, as #jstephenson pointed out, by calling $dispatcher = $this->container->get('event_dispatcher'); so you don't have to create your own instance anywhere.
However, if you need your own event dispatcher, you can simply configure it in your services configuration file (i.e. services.xml) of your bundle like this:
<service id="my_dispatcher" class="Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\EventDispatcher" />
You can of course use your own dispatcher class as long as it implements EventDispatcherInterface.
I am working on an AIR application:
The main window is like a dashboard. With the menu bar, I can open other windows with dashboard details. When I close these, I'd like to refresh the main window.
I tried to use an event listener, but the result is not good. If I open detail windows directly from the main window, I know how to add an event listener - and it works - but I don't know how to do it, if the detail window is opening from the menubar!
Thanks for helping me.
A Singleton is what you are looking for. Just put an event dispatcher inside and you will be able to listen from everywhere in the application.
A Singleton is like having a unique instance of an object in memory, so anyone modifying a variable inside that object ( or sending events throught ) will be modified for everyone.
Here is an example of code on how to use it.
http://life.neophi.com/danielr/2006/10/singleton_pattern_in_as3.html
Note: Singletons are powerful and dangerous at the same time, there is a lot of talk about how to use them, please read a little more about that if you are considering building a big project.
Hope it helps!
The issue is that you're performing business logic from a View. Don't do this. Instead, dispatch an event from each menu rather than directly opening the window from within it. Listen for those events at a higher level, and then you can either directly listen to the new windows you have opened, or you can create a base window Class that exposes a variable of type IEventDispatcher. If you populate that variable with the same event dispatcher, what you wind up with is called an "event bus," and you can listen on that for events.
This architecture requires a little more thought than using a Singleton, but it avoids the tight coupling and other issues you'll run into by introducing one into your project.
You can listen to an object (EventDispatcher) directly by adding an event listener to it, or if the dispatcher object is on the displaylist, such as a Sprite, you could listen at the stage level with the capture parameter set to true.
But the main caveat is that the dispatcher must be on stage for you to catch this event.
Your main window listens to stage (with capture = true):
stage.addEventListener("MY_CUSTOM_EVENT", handle_custom_event, true);
private function handle_custom_event(e:Event):void
{
var sub_window:Object = e.target;
// do something to your sub_window
}
Your sub window can dispatch events like this:
dispatchEvent(new Event("MY_CUSTOM_EVENT"));
But (ab)using the stage as a message passing infrastructure for custom events in this way is a little messy. You could consider a more formal message passing architecture if you really want this kind of communication. Even a static MessageBus class would at least quickly help you identify where you use this in your codebase. Either way, you'll have to be careful about references and memory leaks.
What exactly will this addActionListener Do.....we we call button.addActionListener(this) what will happen
It basically adds this (the current object) to a list of objects that will be notified when the component has an action performed on it, such as a button being pressed.
It's a way of registering your interest in what is happening to the component and is useful in that you don't have to keep polling a component to check its status.
Your object (or class, really) simply implements the interface methods for listening (such as actionPerformed) and that method will be called for each event that happens.
The Java tutorials have a large variety of different articles on the various listeners that you're likely to use.
I was on the point of start using AS3 Signals for my new project because Native Events has a bad reputation, and then I found this:
http://code.google.com/p/nineveh-responder/
But I couldn't find more information (in addition to official docs and tuts).
What do you think about NResponder?
OT: I can't create the tag "NResponder" in this question because is new :(
NResponder goes above and beyond the call of duty. It is soo easy to use and learn. The real difference maker is its NResponder.remove(action,function,target) method.
It has the ability to remove all event listeners that fall under the parameters provided. In one call, you can remove all listeners associated to one object(target), any listeners associated to a certain function, listeners that respond to a certain event like MouseEvent.CLICK, or any combination of these parameters.