================
Stateful Objects
================
($Id$)
>>> from cybertools.stateful.definition import StatesDefinition
>>> from cybertools.stateful.definition import State, Transition
>>> from cybertools.stateful.definition import registerStatesDefinition
>>> from cybertools.stateful.base import Stateful
We start with a simple demonstration class that provides stateful
behaviour directly.
>>> class Demo(Stateful):
... pass
>>> demo = Demo()
The default states definition has the `started` state as its initial
state.
>>> demo.getState()
'started'
>>> demo.getStateObject().title
'Started'
We can now execute the `finish` Transition.
>>> demo.doTransition('finish')
>>> demo.getState()
'finished'
More complex states definitions
-------------------------------
We'll use a predefined simple publishing workflow that.
>>> from cybertools.stateful.publishing import simplePublishing
>>> registerStatesDefinition(simplePublishing())
>>> demo = Demo()
>>> demo.statesDefinition = 'simple_publishing'
>>> demo.getState()
'draft'
>>> [t.title for t in demo.getAvailableTransitions()]
['publish', 'hide', 'archive', 'remove']
If we try to execute a transition that is not an outgoing transition
of the current state we get an error.
>>> demo.doTransition('retract')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Transition 'retract' is not reachable from state 'draft'.
>>> demo.getState()
'draft'
Stateful Adapters
=================
Objects that show stateful behaviour need not be derived from the Stateful
class, for persistent objects one can also provide a stateful adapter.
>>> from persistent import Persistent
>>> class Demo(Persistent):
... pass
>>> demo = Demo()
>>> from zope import component
>>> from cybertools.stateful.base import StatefulAdapter
>>> component.provideAdapter(StatefulAdapter)
We can now retrieve a stateful adapter using the IStateful interface.
>>> from cybertools.stateful.interfaces import IStateful
>>> statefulDemo = IStateful(demo)
>>> statefulDemo.getState()
'started'
>>> statefulDemo.getStateObject().title
'Started'
>>> statefulDemo.doTransition('finish')
>>> statefulDemo.getState()
'finished'
If we make a new adapter for the same persistent object we get
back the state that is stored with the object.
>>> statefulDemo = IStateful(demo)
>>> statefulDemo.getState()
'finished'