Previous: atoms, Up: Sexp Types [Contents][Index]
The syntax for the composite widget construct is:
type ::= (construct [keyword argument]... component...)
where each component must be a widget type. Each component widget will be displayed in the buffer, and will be editable by the user.
The value of a cons
widget must be a cons-cell whose CAR
and CDR have two specified types. It uses this syntax:
type ::= (cons [keyword argument]... car-type cdr-type)
The value matched by a choice
widget must have one of a fixed
set of types. The widget’s syntax is as follows:
type ::= (choice [keyword argument]... type ... )
The value of a choice
widget can be anything that matches any of the
types.
The value of a list
widget must be a list whose element types
match the specified component types:
type ::= (list [keyword argument]... component-type...)
Thus, (list string number)
matches lists of two elements,
the first being a string and the second being a number.
The vector
widget is like the list
widget but matches
vectors instead of lists. Thus, (vector string number)
matches
vectors of two elements, the first being a string and the second being
a number.
The above suffice for specifying fixed size lists and vectors. To get
variable length lists and vectors, you can use a choice
,
set
, or repeat
widget together with the :inline
keyword. If any component of a composite widget has the
:inline
keyword set, its value must be a list which will then
be spliced into the composite. For example, to specify a list whose
first element must be a file name, and whose remaining elements should
either be the symbol t
or two strings (file names), you can use
the following widget specification:
(list file (choice (const t) (list :inline t :value ("foo" "bar") string string)))
The value of a widget of this type will either have the form
(file t)
or (file string string)
.
This concept of :inline
may be hard to understand. It was
certainly hard to implement, so instead of confusing you more by
trying to explain it here, I’ll just suggest you meditate over it for
a while.
Specifies a type whose values are the lists whose elements all belong to a given set. The order of elements of the list is not significant. Here’s the syntax:
type ::= (set [keyword argument]... permitted-element ... )
Use const
to specify each permitted element, like this:
(set (const a) (const b))
.
Specifies a list of any number of elements that fit a certain type.
type ::= (repeat [keyword argument]... type)
Previous: atoms, Up: Sexp Types [Contents][Index]