Defining Your Own Behaviour
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| Revision as of 00:58, 3 October 2006 (edit) Cyberlync (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Current revision (09:50, 26 June 2007) (edit) (undo) Mazen (Talk | contribs) |
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| == Epilogue == | == Epilogue == | ||
| - | + | This is a really short HowTo and I really debated whether to put this in a howto or just as a recipe in the cookbook. In the end, I figured this question was asked often enough and was important enough to put here. | |
| - | + | :I think it would be a good idea to give an example on how to actually use the behaviour as it is probably something that is very valuable for a newcomer. A tutorial should be end-to-end imho. | |
| [[Category:HowTo]] | [[Category:HowTo]] | ||
Current revision
[edit] Why Define a Behaviour?
In general behaviours are just a convenience for the coder. They insure that a module has implemented all the functions it needs to interact successfully with the system that has defined the behavior. So when you are creating a library or application that will be made use of by other libraries or applications with associated callbacks it may be a good idea to define a behaviour.
[edit] Defining the Behaviour
All in all, behaviours are pretty simple to define. All you need to do is include a function called behaviour_info with a single argument that is the atom 'callbacks'. The function should return a list of tuples that specify the required callback functions and their arity. It should look something like
-module(some_behaviour).
-export([behaviour_info/1]).
behaviour_info(callbacks) ->
[{init,1},
{handle, 1},
{sync, 2}];
behaviour_info(_Other) ->
undefined.
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This new behaviour requires the functions init/1, handle/1, and sync/2 to be defined in the callback module.
[edit] Epilogue
This is a really short HowTo and I really debated whether to put this in a howto or just as a recipe in the cookbook. In the end, I figured this question was asked often enough and was important enough to put here.
- I think it would be a good idea to give an example on how to actually use the behaviour as it is probably something that is very valuable for a newcomer. A tutorial should be end-to-end imho.

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