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tdebindings/dcoppython
Timothy Pearson 67e97e9262
Rename many classes and header files to avoid conflicts with KDE4
12 years ago
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lib Initial TQt conversion 13 years ago
shell Update for recent TQ changes. 13 years ago
test Rename many classes and header files to avoid conflicts with KDE4 12 years ago
Makefile.am Copy the KDE 3.5 branch to branches/trinity for new KDE 3.5 features. 15 years ago
README Fix retquire 13 years ago
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README

PYTHON bindings for DCOP
========================

These are the new-style Python DCOP bindings. The way in which the bindings are
implemented has changed since KDE 3.1.1.


How they work
=============

The code is divided into two parts:

pcop.cpp - the C++ interface between Python and DCOP - generates shared library pcop.so
           which can be imported by Python

pydcop.py - the Python interface to pcop.cpp

pcop.cpp includes a header file marshal_funcs.h, which is generated from
a data file called marshal_funcs.data by a converter script, gen_marshal_funcs.py

marshal_funcs.data contains the basic code necessary to marshal and demarshal the different
types that DCOP can handle. For example, it codes how to convert a TQString for use by Python
(in this case, a Python string) and the reverse - what the user may supply in Python when
DCOP requires a TQString. In addition to the fundemental types, more complex QT classes are
coded, such as TQRect (which converts to a Python tuple ( (x1,y1), (x2,y2) ) ).

Documentation is auto-generated out of marshal_funcs.data, creating file marshal_funcs_doc.html,
which details how each DCOP type (e.g. TQString, TQRect, int, QCStringList) is represented in Python.

In this implementation, each DCOP type is represented by a basic Python type - numeric, tuple, etc.
There are no "QT bindings" necessary.

These bindings allow you to code Python to act as a DCOP client (querying and/or controlling
other DCOP applications), or as a DCOP server. This means that you can DCOP-enable Python applications
even if they are not QT based.

If you want to use DCOP in the context of a Python QT application, then there are DCOP bindings included in
the PyQT and PyKDE bindings available from:

http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/

Examples
========

There are some example Python programs in the test directory.

Known problems
=============

There is currently a bug which means you must import both pcop and pydcop in your Python programs.
This means that a Python program using dcoppython must include:

import pcop
import pydcop

In that order. If you don't import pcop, a seg fault occurs when the interpreter exits. This, of course, will be
fixed once I find out what the hell's going on.

Authors
=======

The original Python DCOP bindings were written by Torben Weis (weis@kde.org).
The current implementation, based on Torben's worked, was written by Julian Rockey (kde@jrockey.com).
Julian is also the current maintainer.