diff options
author | Vito Caputo <vcaputo@pengaru.com> | 2022-03-12 17:29:26 -0800 |
---|---|---|
committer | Vito Caputo <vcaputo@pengaru.com> | 2022-03-12 23:22:51 -0800 |
commit | 7ff8ef94c05ae6386463b63f3ba25add52340d8b (patch) | |
tree | 585b67df6590acac86d287e42a6bffb0bf995639 /README | |
parent | 009f16f93b2a055ec0e14751e6d779849f87ab04 (diff) |
til_settings: always describe relevant settings
The existing iterative *_setup() interface only described
settings not found, quietly accepting usable settings already
present in the til_settings_t.
This worked fine for the existing interactive text setup thing,
but it's especially problematic for providing a GUI setup
frontend.
This commit makes it so the *_setup() methods always describe
undescribed settings they recognize, leaving the setup frontend
loop calling into the *_setup() methods to both apply the
description validation if wanted and actually tie the description
to respective setting returned by the _setup() methods as being
related to the returned description.
A new helper called til_settings_get_and_describe_value() has
been introduced primarily for use of module setup methods to
simplify this nonsense, replacing the til_settings_get_value()
calls and surrounding logic, but retaining the til_setting_desc_t
definitions largely verbatim.
This also results in discarding of some ad-hoc
til_setting_desc_check() calls, now that there's a centralized
place where settings become "described" (setup_interactively in
the case of rototiller).
Now a GUI frontend (like glimmer) would just provide its own
setup_interactively() equivalent for constructing its widgets for
a given *_setup() method's chain of returned descs. Whereas in
the past this wasn't really feasible unless there was never going
to be pre-supplied settings.
I suspect the til_setting_desc_check() integration into
setup_interactively() needs more work, but I think this is good
enough for now and I'm out of spare time for the moment.
Diffstat (limited to 'README')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions