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EDE is made up of a series of classes implemented with EIEIO. These classes define an interface that can be used to create different types of projects.
EDE defines two superclasses which are ede-project and
ede-target.  All commands in EDE are usually meant to
address the current project, or current target.
All specific projects in EDE derive subclasses of the EDE superclasses. In this way, specific behaviors such as how a project is saved, or how a target is compiled can be customized by a project author in detail. EDE communicates to these project objects via an API using methods. The commands you use in EDE mode are high-level functional wrappers over these methods.
Some example project types are:
project-amAutomake project which reads existing Automake files.
ede-proj-projectThis project type will create Makefiles, or Makefile.am files to compile your project.
ede-linuxThis project type will detect linux source trees.
ede-emacsThis project will detect an Emacs source tree.
There are several other project types as well.
The first class you need to know to create a new project type is
ede-project-autoload.  New instances of this class are needed
to define how Emacs associates different files/buffers with different
project types.  All the autoloads are kept in the variable
ede-project-class-files.
The next most important class to know is ede-project.  This is
the baseclass defines how all projects behave.  The basic pattern for
a project is that there is one project per directory, and the topmost
project or directory defines the project as a whole.
Key features of ede-project are things like name and version
number.  It also holds a list of ede-target objects and a list
of sub projects, or more ede-project objects.
New project types must subclass ede-project to add special
behavior. New project types also need to subclass ede-target to
add specialty behavior.
In this way, the common EDE interface is designed to work against
ede-project, and thus all subclasses.
ede-project subclasses ede-project-placeholder.  This is
the minimum necessary project needed to be cached between runs of
Emacs.  This way, Emacs can track all projects ever seen, without
loading those projects into memory.
Here is a high-level UML diagram for the EDE system created with COGRE..
+-----------------------+        +-----------------------+
|                       |        |ede-project-placeholder|
|ede-project-class-files|        +-----------------------+
|                       |        +-----------------------+
+-----------------------+        +-----------------------+
           /\                                ^
           \/                               /_\
            |                                |
 +--------------------+                +-----------+         +----------+
 |ede-project-autoload|                |ede-project|         |ede-target|
 +--------------------+<>--------------+-----------+<>-------+----------+
 +--------------------+                +-----------+         +----------+
 +--------------------+                +-----------+         +----------+
                                             ^
                                            /_\
                                             |
                       +---------------------+-----------------+
                       |                     |                 |
                       |                     |                 |
                       |                     |                 |
              +----------------+   +-------------------+  +---------+
              |ede-proj-project|   |project-am-makefile|  |ede-emacs|
              +----------------+   +-------------------+  +---------+
              +----------------+   +-------------------+  +---------+
              +----------------+   +-------------------+  +---------+
Next: Detecting a Project, Previous: Extending EDE, Up: Extending EDE [Contents]