1 | /* |
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2 | * ORXONOX - the hottest 3D action shooter ever to exist |
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3 | * > www.orxonox.net < |
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4 | * |
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5 | * |
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6 | * License notice: |
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7 | * |
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8 | * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
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9 | * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License |
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10 | * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 |
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11 | * of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
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12 | * |
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13 | * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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14 | * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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15 | * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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16 | * GNU General Public License for more details. |
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17 | * |
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18 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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19 | * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
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20 | * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. |
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21 | * |
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22 | * Author: |
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23 | * Fabian 'x3n' Landau |
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24 | * Co-authors: |
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25 | * ... |
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26 | * |
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27 | */ |
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28 | |
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29 | /** |
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30 | @file |
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31 | @ingroup Command ArgumentCompletion |
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32 | @brief Declaration of all argument completion functions and macros used to define them. |
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33 | |
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34 | @anchor ArgumentCompletionExample |
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35 | |
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36 | Argument completion functions are used to create a list of possible arguments |
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37 | for an orxonox::ConsoleCommand. These functions are usually wrapped by an instance |
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38 | of orxonox::ArgumentCompleter. |
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39 | |
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40 | Argument completion functions can be declared and implemented by using the macros |
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41 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION() and ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION() |
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42 | respectively. They are necessary because they don't simply define the function, but they also |
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43 | create a static helper function that returns an instance of orxonox::ArgumentCompleter which |
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44 | wraps the defined function. This allows easier referencing of argument completion functions |
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45 | by simply calling autocompletion::functionname(). |
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46 | |
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47 | Argument completion functions can take up to 5 arguments, all of type std::string. |
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48 | The first argument is always the current argument which is being entered by the user |
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49 | in the shell. The second argument is the argument before, so in fact arguments from |
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50 | the shell are sent in reversed order to the argument completion function. This is |
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51 | necessary because the number of arguments can be variable |
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52 | |
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53 | Example: The user types the following into the shell: |
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54 | @code |
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55 | $ commandname argument1 argument2 argum |
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56 | @endcode |
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57 | Then he presses the @a tab key to print the possible arguments. Now the argument |
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58 | completion function for the @a third argument of @a commandname will be called in |
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59 | the following way: |
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60 | @code |
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61 | list = argcompfunction3("argum", "argument2", "argument1"); |
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62 | @endcode |
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63 | |
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64 | Usually each argument is one word (without whitespaces in it), but some argument completion |
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65 | functions need more than one word. This can be achieved by using ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION_MULTI(). |
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66 | In this case all supernumerous words are passed to the first (!) argument. |
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67 | |
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68 | An example to show how to declare, implement, and use an argument completion function: |
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69 | @code |
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70 | // ArgumentCompletionFunctions.h: |
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71 | // ------------------------------ |
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72 | |
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73 | // Declaration of the function: |
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74 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(month)(const std::string& fragment); |
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75 | |
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76 | // ArgumentCompletionFunctions.cc: |
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77 | // ------------------------------- |
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78 | |
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79 | // Implementation of the function |
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80 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION(month)(const std::string& fragment) |
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81 | { |
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82 | ArgumentCompletionList list; |
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83 | |
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84 | // check if the first part of the argument is a number - if yes, the user likely wants to enter the month as a number |
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85 | if (isNumber(fragment)) |
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86 | { |
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87 | for (int month = 1; month <= 12; ++month) |
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88 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement(multi_cast<std::string>(month))); |
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89 | } |
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90 | else |
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91 | { |
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92 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("January", "january")); |
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93 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("February", "february")); |
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94 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("March", "march")); |
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95 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("April", "april")); |
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96 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("May", "may")); |
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97 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("June", "june")); |
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98 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("July", "july")); |
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99 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("August", "august")); |
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100 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("September", "september")); |
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101 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("October", "october")); |
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102 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("November", "november")); |
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103 | list.push_back(ArgumentCompletionListElement("December", "december")); |
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104 | } |
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105 | |
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106 | return list; |
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107 | } |
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108 | |
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109 | // SomeFile: |
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110 | // --------- |
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111 | |
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112 | // A class to manage the date: |
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113 | class Date |
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114 | { |
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115 | public: |
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116 | static void setDate(int day, const std::string& month, int year); |
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117 | }; |
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118 | |
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119 | // Define a console command that needs a date. Add argument completion for the month: |
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120 | SetConsoleCommand("setDate", &Date::setDate).argumentCompleter(1, autocompletion::month()); |
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121 | @endcode |
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122 | |
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123 | This example defines an argument completion function that returns a list of possible |
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124 | months. If the first part of the argument is a number, it returns the numbers 1-12, |
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125 | otherwise the name of the months are returned. Note how the list is composed by |
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126 | instances of orxonox::ArgumentCompletionListElement. For the name of the months, |
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127 | two strings are provided, one in normal case and one in lower case. See the documentation |
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128 | of orxonox::ArgumentCompletionListElement for more information about this. |
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129 | |
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130 | Also note that the argument completion list is assigned to the console command by using |
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131 | @ref orxonox::ConsoleCommand::argumentCompleter "argumentCompleter()". The first argument |
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132 | is the index of the argument: |
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133 | - 0 is the first argument (@a day) |
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134 | - 1 is the second argument (@a month) |
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135 | - 2 is the third argument (@a year) |
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136 | |
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137 | @a day and @a year don't need an argument completion function as they are just integers. |
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138 | |
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139 | The function @c autocompletion::month() is automatically created by the macros |
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140 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION() and ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION() |
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141 | and returns an orxonox::ArgumentCompleter that wraps the defined argument completion function. |
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142 | |
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143 | The implemented argument completion function uses only one argument, the fragment of the |
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144 | currently entered argument. More complex functions can also use the previous arguments |
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145 | to return different arguments depending on the other arguments (for example to list the |
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146 | members of a class, where the class-name is the first argument and the member the second). |
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147 | */ |
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148 | |
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149 | #ifndef _ArgumentCompletionFunctions_H__ |
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150 | #define _ArgumentCompletionFunctions_H__ |
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151 | |
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152 | #include "core/CorePrereqs.h" |
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153 | #include "ArgumentCompleter.h" |
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154 | |
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155 | /** |
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156 | @brief Used to declare an argument completion function with name @a functionname. |
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157 | @param functionname The name of the function, will also be used for the implementation of the function. |
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158 | |
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159 | The macro also defines a static function that returns an orxonox::ArgumentCompleter |
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160 | which wraps the defined function. This can be accessed by calling autocompletion::functionname(); |
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161 | */ |
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162 | #define ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(functionname) \ |
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163 | _CoreExport ArgumentCompleter* functionname(); \ |
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164 | _CoreExport ArgumentCompletionList acf_##functionname |
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165 | |
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166 | /** |
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167 | @brief Used to implement an argument completion function. |
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168 | @param functionname The name of the function |
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169 | */ |
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170 | #define ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION(functionname) \ |
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171 | _ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION_INTERNAL(functionname, false) |
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172 | |
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173 | /** |
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174 | @brief Used to implement an argument completion function which allows multiple words. |
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175 | @param functionname The name of the function |
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176 | */ |
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177 | #define ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION_MULTI(functionname) \ |
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178 | _ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION_INTERNAL(functionname, true) |
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179 | |
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180 | /// Internal macro |
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181 | #define _ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_IMPLEMENTATION_INTERNAL(functionname, bUseMultipleWords) \ |
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182 | ArgumentCompleter* functionname() \ |
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183 | { \ |
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184 | static ArgumentCompleter completer = ArgumentCompleter(&acf_##functionname, bUseMultipleWords); \ |
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185 | return &completer; \ |
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186 | } \ |
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187 | \ |
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188 | ArgumentCompletionList acf_##functionname |
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189 | |
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190 | /// Calls an argument completion function. Used for functions that return the results of another argument completion function. |
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191 | #define ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_CALL(functionname) acf_##functionname |
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192 | |
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193 | |
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194 | namespace orxonox |
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195 | { |
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196 | namespace autocompletion |
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197 | { |
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198 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(fallback)(); |
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199 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(groupsandcommands)(const std::string& fragment); |
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200 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(subcommands)(const std::string& fragment, const std::string& group); |
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201 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(command)(const std::string& fragment); |
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202 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(hiddencommand)(const std::string& fragment); |
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203 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(files)(const std::string& fragment); |
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204 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(settingssections)(); |
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205 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(settingsentries)(const std::string& fragment, const std::string& section); |
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206 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(settingsvalue)(const std::string& fragment, const std::string& entry, const std::string& section); |
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207 | ARGUMENT_COMPLETION_FUNCTION_DECLARATION(tclthreads)(); |
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208 | } |
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209 | } |
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210 | |
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211 | #endif /* _ArgumentCompletionFunctions_H__ */ |
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