SDS2 Parametric API
 All Classes Namespaces Functions Variables Pages
List of all members
dialog.rules.Disable Class Reference

Disable another field triggered off of this field. More...

Inheritance diagram for dialog.rules.Disable:
dialog.rule.ValueRule dialog.rule.Rule

Methods defined here:

def IsEnabled
def __init__
def delete
def new
def run

Methods inherited from dialog.rule.ValueRule:

def __getdisplay__
def __getname__
def __getvalid__
def get_storage
def set_storage

Data descriptors inherited from dialog.rule.ValueRule:

def display
def name
def valid

Methods inherited from dialog.rule.Rule:

def __getdialog__
def __getenabled__
def __getobject__

Data descriptors inherited from dialog.rule.Rule:

def __dict__
 dictionary for instance variables (if defined)
def __weakref__
 list of weak references to the object (if defined)
def dialog
def enabled
def object

Additional Inherited Members

- Public Member Functions inherited from dialog.rule.ValueRule
def foo
def foo
- Public Member Functions inherited from dialog.rule.Rule

Detailed Description

Disable another field triggered off of this field.

This rule will be triggered based on any change to this current field. You may access other fields in your predicate, however they won't trigger this rule directly so you may need to attach it to multiple fields.

The field you list as the first argument to this rule is the one which will be disabled. Be careful about mixing this rule and the State rule.

Example: dlg = Dialog() a = dlg.entry( 'a', 5 ) b = dlg.entry( 'b', 6 ) b.AddRule( Disable, a, expr( 'b > 6' ) )

dlg.done() #disable 'a' when 'b' is greater than 6

Method resolution order

Disable
dialog.rule.ValueRule
dialog.rule.Rule
builtin.object

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

def dialog.rules.Disable.__init__ (   args)
 __init__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

Member Function Documentation

def dialog.rules.Disable.__dict__ (   args)

dictionary for instance variables (if defined)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getdialog__ (   args)
 __getdialog__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getdisplay__ (   args)
 __getdisplay__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getenabled__ (   args)
 __getenabled__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getname__ (   args)
 __getname__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getobject__ (   args)
 __getobject__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__getvalid__ (   args)
 __getvalid__(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.__weakref__ (   args)

list of weak references to the object (if defined)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.delete (   args)
 delete(args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.dialog (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.display (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.enabled (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.get_storage (   args)
 This is where you store your data if you need to store data between
 invocations of your rule.
 @param dat The item you're editing.
 
 @return a list.  You can put things into this list and they'll
         be there the next time you call get_storage
 
 @note This is a constant time function.

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.IsEnabled (   args)
 IsEnabled(args)
def dialog.rules.Disable.name (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.new (   args)
 new(args)
def dialog.rules.Disable.object (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.run (   args)
 run(args)
def dialog.rules.Disable.set_storage (   args)
 You may prefer to override the default storage.
 Lists actually get pretty expensive, so if you modify
 your rule to use tuples (if you need to save multiple values)
 or the single value you need to save you'll save a lot of memory
 in multi edit.
 For the Change rule, this means 178 bytes per item instead of 242 bytes.

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.

def dialog.rules.Disable.valid (   args)

Reimplemented from dialog.rule.ValueRule.