Manipulator(3)
base class for defining direct-manipulation semantics
SYNOPSIS
#include <Unidraw/manip.h>
DESCRIPTION
Tools use manipulator objects to encapsulate the mechanics of direct
manipulation. Manipulators turn user input events into an animation
sequence that characterize the manipulation. Manipulators abstract
the manipulation into three phases: the grasping phase, which
occurs at the start of the manipulation and lets the manipulator
initialize state it will need in later phases; the manipulating
phase, during which the manipulator accepts input events and generates
graphical output that characterizes successive frames of the
animation; and finally the effect phase, which occurs at the end
of the manipulation and lets the manipulator finalize its state.
Manipulator is an abstract base class. Subclasses support different
manipulation semantics.
MANIPULATOR PUBLIC OPERATIONS
- virtual void Grasp(Event&)
-
Grasp is called once at the beginning of direct manipulation to allow
the manipulator to initialize its internal state based on the
initiating event.
- virtual boolean Manipulating(Event&)
-
Manipulating is called repeatedly during the manipulation whenever a
new event arrives, until it returns false. Each call to Manipulating
should produce a new frame of the animation that characterizes the
manipulation.
- virtual void Effect(Event&)
-
Effect is called once at the end of direct manipulation to allow the
manipulator to finalize its internal state based on the last event supplied
to the Manipulating operation.
- virtual void SetViewer(Viewer*)
-
- virtual Viewer* GetViewer()
-
- virtual void SetTool(Tool*)
-
- virtual Tool* GetTool()
-
Get and set the viewer, in which the manipulator generates graphical
output, and the tool that created the manipulator. These operations
do nothing by default; subclasses that require this information must
redefine these operations to assign and retrieve the state they
require.
MANIPULATOR PROTECTED OPERATIONS
- Manipulator()
-
The constructor is protected to disallow instantiation of abstract
base class objects.