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+<html>
+<!-- ***** BEGIN LICENSE BLOCK *****
+ - Version: MPL 1.1/GPL 2.0/LGPL 2.1
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+ - The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version
+ - 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
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+ - WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License
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+ - the Initial Developer. All Rights Reserved.
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
+<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage 4.0">
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+<title>Python XPCOM Advanced Topics</title>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+<h1>Python XPCOM Advanced Topics</h1>
+
+<p>This document contains a series of tidbits that don't fit
+anywhere else. As the Python XPCOM Package documentation matures, most of
+these topics will have another home.</p>
+
+<h2>XPCOM Services</h2>
+<p>An XPCOM service is simply a singleton registered by name.&nbsp; Python has
+full support for both using and implementing XPCOM services.&nbsp; To use a
+service, use <i>xpcom.components.services</i> just like the JavaScript
+counterpart.&nbsp; There is nothing special about implementing a service in
+Python; see the standard XPCOM documentation on services for more information.</p>
+
+<h2>nsIVariant</h2>
+
+<p>There is (almost) full support for <i>nsIVariant</i>.&nbsp; Any <i>nsIVariant</i>
+parameters will automatically be translated to and from regular Python objects
+giving, in effect, a multi-type parameter.&nbsp; This should be automatic, so
+there is not much else to say!&nbsp; Note that if you really want, you can
+create and pass your own <i>nsIVariant</i> object instead of a regular Python
+object, thereby allowing explicit control over the type of variant created.</p>
+
+<h2>nsISupports Primitives.</h2>
+
+<p>There is a set of interfaces described in <i>nsISupportsPrimitives.idl</i>, which I
+term collectively the <i>nsISupports Primitives Interfaces</i>.&nbsp; These
+are a set of interfaces a component can support to allow automatic conversion to
+and from many basic types.&nbsp; For example, an interface can define that it
+supports the <i>nsISupportsCString</i> interface, and this could be used by any
+program that wishes to get a string representation of the object.&nbsp; If an
+interface wishes to expose itself as a &quot;boolean value&quot;, it may choose
+to support the <i>nsISupportsPRBool</i> interface.</p>
+<p>When you call an XPCOM object (i.e., you have an XPCOM interface you are
+calling), you can use
+the builtin functions <i>str()</i>, <i>int()</i>, <i>long()</i> etc., on the
+object<i>.</i>&nbsp; In the
+case of <i>str()</i>, if the object does not support the <i>nsISupportsCString</i>
+or <i>nsISupportsString</i> interfaces, the default string <i>str()</i> for the
+object will be returned (i.e., what is normally returned for most XPCOM objects -
+support for these interface is not very common!).&nbsp; In the case of the numeric functions, a <i>ValueError</i>
+exception will be raised if the objects do not support any interface that can be
+used for the conversion.&nbsp;<i>ValueError</i> is used instead of <i>TypeError</i>,
+as the type itself (i.e., an XPCOM object) can sometimes be used in this context -
+hence it is the specific <i>value</i> of the object that is the problem.</p>
+<p>The use of <i>repr()</i> on an XPCOM interface object prevents support
+attempts for these interfaces, and allows you to see the
+&quot;real&quot; object, rather than what the object wants you to see!</p>
+<p>When you implement an XPCOM object, you have two choices for implementation
+of these interfaces:</p>
+<ul>
+ <li>You can explicitly handle these interfaces like any other interface.&nbsp;
+ In this case, you have full control.&nbsp; However, if you
+ implement only one of these standard interfaces, then you are only
+ overriding the default behavior for that specific interface - all other
+ interfaces not explicitly listed in your class will still get the behavior
+ described below.<br>
+ </li>
+ <li>If your class does not define support for these interfaces, the framework
+ will use standard Python class semantics to implement them - i.e., if your
+ class provides a <i>__str__</i> method, it will be used to implement <i>nsISupportsCString</i>
+ and <i>nsISupportsString</i>, if you provide <i>__int__</i>, <i>__long__</i>,
+ <i>__float__</i> etc., methods, they will be used to implement the numeric
+ interfaces.&nbsp; If your class defines no such special methods, then the <i>
+ QueryInterface()</i> for those interfaces fails (rather than the QI succeeding
+ and the operation to fetch the data failing).</li>
+</ul>
+<blockquote>
+<p>This allows for an interesting feature that would not normally be
+possible.&nbsp; Consider Python code that does a <i>str()</i> on an&nbsp; XPCOM
+interface, and where the XPCOM interface itself is implemented in Python and
+provides a <i>__str__</i> method.&nbsp; The <i>str()</i> on the original
+interface queries for the <i>nsISupportsCString</i> interface.&nbsp; The
+Python implemented object responds to this interface and delegates to the <i>__str__</i>
+method. At the end of all this, <i>str()</i> returns the same result
+as if the objects were native Python objects with no XPCOM layer in between.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<h2>Enumerators</h2>
+
+<p>The primary enumerator used by XPCOM is <i>nsISimpleEnumerator</i>.
+Although the Python XPCOM package has full support for <i>nsIEnumerator</i>,
+since this interface is not &quot;scriptable&quot;, you should avoided using it in interfaces
+you design.</p>
+
+<p>When you use <i>nsISimpleEnumerator</i> from Python, the following enhancements
+are available:</p>
+<ul>
+ <li>The <i>GetNext()</i> method takes an optional IID as a parameter. If
+ this is specified, the returned object will be of this interface.&nbsp; This
+ prevents the manual <i>QueryInterface()</i> generally required from other
+ languages.</li>
+ <li>There is a <i>FetchBlock(num, [iid])</i> method, which fetches the
+ specified number of elements in one operation and returns a Python
+ list. This can be useful for large enumerator sets, so the loop
+ iterating the elements runs at full C++ speed.</li>
+</ul>
+<p><i>nsIEnumerator</i> has similar enhancements.</p>
+<p>When implementing a Python XPCOM object, the Python class <i>xpcom.server.enumerator.SimpleEnumerator()</i>
+can be used.&nbsp; You can pass a standard Python sequence (list, etc), and it
+will be correctly wrapped in an <i>nsISimpleEnumerator</i> interface.</p>
+<h2>Files</h2>
+<p>The Python XPCOM package provides an <i> xpcom.file</i> module.&nbsp; This implements
+a Python-like file object on top of the XPCOM/Mozilla stream interfaces.&nbsp;
+When run from within the Mozilla environment, this allows you to open almost any
+URL supported by Mozilla (including &quot;chrome://&quot; etc.,).</p>
+<p>See this module for more information, including test code.</p>
+<h2>XPCOM Object Identity</h2>
+<p>XPCOM has defined rules for object identity and for how objects must behave
+in their <i> QueryInterface()</i> implementations.&nbsp; The Python XPCOM framework
+manages this for you; your code can return new Python instances etc., when
+responding to new interfaces, and the framework itself will ensure the XPCOM
+semantics are followed.&nbsp; Critically, the framework provides no mechanism
+for breaking these rules.</p>
+<h2>Policies</h2>
+<p>The Python XPCOM framework has the concept of &quot;policies&quot; that
+define how XPCOM semantics are mapped to Python objects.&nbsp; It is the policy
+that implements delegation of <i> QueryInterface()</i>, translates property
+references into direct property references, and failing that, &quot;get_name&quot;
+and &quot;set_name&quot; calls, decides how to handle exceptions in the
+component, and so on.</p>
+<p>The default policy is very flexible and suitable for most purposes.
+Indeed, the Komodo project has never had to implement a custom policy.
+However, you should be aware the feature exists should you wish to do some
+bizarre things, such as using Python as a bridge between XPCOM and some other
+component technology.</p>
+
+</body>
+
+</html>