What do you mean with "isn't running"? As I wrote, you have to execute it manually whenever you change the initialize method.
- Bert -
On Feb 27, 2007, at 13:33 , Mispunt wrote:
After some better testing, It doesn't work :S It seems that the initialize of the constants class isn't running... (the normal classVariableNames are working...) I have to use the poolDictionary because there are some codes that return in a lot of classes..
Mispunt
On 2/27/07, Mispunt mispunt@users.sourceforge.net wrote:
Thanks Bert, it works. When I am using the poolDictionary it isn't possible to use the constants in the Workspace right? or do I have to write methods for them when I want to use them? (well I don't want to, because it is just for testing purpose).
Mispunt.
On 2/27/07, Bert Freudenberg bert@freudenbergs.de wrote:
On Feb 27, 2007, at 10:08 , Mispunt wrote:
Hi all,
For programming my Lego Mindstorms NXT I have to use codes
like 16r1F.
But I actually want to be able to use "readable" codes. In a
language
like Java I will do that with a static const, but as far as I
know I
have to do it with symbols in Smalltalk.
No, there is a better way.
If you are inside one class (or its subclasses), you would use
"class
variables", one per constant. You add them in the class template:
Object subclass: #Bla instanceVariableNames: '' classVariableNames: 'Const1 Const2' poolDictionaries: '' category: 'Bert-Bla'
and the initialization code is in a class-side #initialize method:
initialize "self initialize" Const1 := 16r1F. Const2 := 12345.
You need to execute the "self initialize" in the browser to do the initialization. It will be executed automatically when loaded into another image.
Class variables are capitalized because they are sort-of "global", they can be used in the defining class, its metaclass, and all
their
subclasses. If you need to give access to these variables across
the
class hierarchies, then you would do the same, but as a subclass of SharedPool:
SharedPool subclass: #BlaConstants instanceVariableNames: '' classVariableNames: 'Const1 Const2' poolDictionaries: '' category: 'Bert-Bla'.
To use this "pool" of variables in another class, list it as a
"pool
dictionary":
Object subclass: #Bla instanceVariableNames: '' classVariableNames: '' poolDictionaries: 'BlaConstants' category: 'Bert-Bla'
This makes all class variables of BlaConstants available to Bla
as if
they were class variables.
There are quite a few other ways to allow "global" variables in Smalltalk, but this one is the "clean" way to do it which works nicely with tools like Monticello.
- Bert -