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helmutm 73c33a108e Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cy55.de/Zope3/src/loops/trunk@1111 fd906abe-77d9-0310-91a1-e0d9ade77398
2006-03-04 19:10:38 +00:00
browser Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa 2006-03-04 19:10:38 +00:00
tests Improvements on resource.MediaAsset; moved tests to directory in order to place files there for test upload 2006-01-20 12:14:46 +00:00
__init__.py More on assigning targets to views/nodes via a vocabulary, including doc tests 2006-02-06 15:14:04 +00:00
concept.py Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa 2006-03-04 15:22:14 +00:00
configure.zcml Work in progress: indexing and searching 2006-02-26 12:58:14 +00:00
external.py Defined adapters for export/import of nodes 2006-01-16 19:09:34 +00:00
interfaces.py Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa 2006-03-04 14:50:16 +00:00
README.txt Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa 2006-03-04 14:50:16 +00:00
resource.py Assignment of resources to concepts and vice versa 2006-03-04 14:50:16 +00:00
target.py Work in progress: indexing and searching 2006-02-26 16:30:00 +00:00
util.py Some refactoring concerning node configuration and target assignment 2006-02-04 20:38:30 +00:00
view.py Work in progress: new ConceptRelation implementation that uses concepts as predicates 2006-02-21 09:53:41 +00:00

===============================================================
loops - Linked Objects for Organization and Processing Services
===============================================================

  ($Id$)

  >>> from zope.app.testing.setup import placefulSetUp, placefulTearDown
  >>> site = placefulSetUp(True)
  
  >>> from zope.app import zapi
  >>> from zope.app.tests import ztapi
  >>> from zope.interface import Interface
  >>> from zope.publisher.browser import TestRequest
  

Concepts and Relations
======================

Let's start with creating a few example concepts, putting them in a
top-level loops container and a concept manager:

  >>> from loops import Loops
  >>> site['loops'] = Loops()
  >>> loopsRoot = site['loops']

  >>> from loops.concept import ConceptManager, Concept
  >>> loopsRoot['concepts'] = ConceptManager()
  >>> concepts = loopsRoot['concepts']
  >>> cc1 = Concept()
  >>> concepts['cc1'] = cc1
  >>> cc1.title
  u''
  >>> loopsRoot.getLoopsUri(cc1)
  '.loops/concepts/cc1'

  >>> cc2 = Concept(u'Zope 3')
  >>> concepts['cc2'] = cc2
  >>> cc2.title
  u'Zope 3'

Now we want to relate the second concept to the first one.

In order to do this we first have to provide a relation registry. For
testing we use a simple dummy implementation. As relationships are
based on predicates that are themselves concepts we also need a
default predicate concept; the default name for this is 'standard'.

  >>> from cybertools.relation.interfaces import IRelationRegistry
  >>> from cybertools.relation.registry import DummyRelationRegistry
  >>> from zope.app.testing import ztapi
  >>> ztapi.provideUtility(IRelationRegistry, DummyRelationRegistry())
  >>> concepts['standard'] = Concept(u'subconcept')

Now we can assign the concept c2 as a child to c1 (using the standard
ConceptRelation):
        
  >>> cc1.assignChild(cc2)

We can now ask our concepts for their related child and parent concepts:

  >>> [zapi.getName(c) for c in cc1.getChildren()]
  [u'cc2']
  >>> len(cc1.getParents())
  0
  >>> [zapi.getName(p) for p in cc2.getParents()]
  [u'cc1']

  >>> len(cc2.getChildren())
  0

Each concept should have a concept type; this is in fact provided by a
relation to a special kind of concept object with the magic name 'type'.
This type object is its own type. The type relations themselves are of
a special predicate 'hasType'.

  >>> concepts['hasType'] = Concept(u'has type')
  >>> concepts['type'] = Concept(u'Type')
  >>> typeObject = concepts['type']
  >>> typeObject.setConceptType(typeObject)
  >>> typeObject.getConceptType().title
  u'Type'

  >>> concepts['unknown'] = Concept(u'Unknown Type')
  >>> unknown = concepts['unknown']
  >>> unknown.setConceptType(typeObject)
  >>> unknown.getConceptType().title
  u'Type'

  >>> cc1.setConceptType(unknown)
  >>> cc1.getConceptType().title
  u'Unknown Type'

  >>> concepts['topic'] = Concept(u'Topic')
  >>> topic = concepts['topic']
  >>> topic.setConceptType(typeObject)
  >>> cc1.setConceptType(topic)
  >>> cc1.getConceptType().title
  u'Topic'

We get a list of types using the ConceptTypeSourceList:

  >>> from loops.concept import ConceptTypeSourceList
  >>> types = ConceptTypeSourceList(cc1)
  >>> sorted(t.title for t in types)
  [u'Topic', u'Type', u'Unknown Type']

Using a PredicateSourceList we can retrieve a list of the available
predicates. In order for this to work we first have to assign our predicates
a special concept type.

  >>> concepts['predicate'] = Concept(u'Predicate')
  >>> predicate = concepts['predicate']
  >>> concepts['hasType'].conceptType = predicate
  >>> concepts['standard'].conceptType = predicate

  >>> from loops.concept import PredicateSourceList
  >>> predicates = PredicateSourceList(cc1)
  >>> sorted(t.title for t in predicates)
  [u'has type', u'subconcept']

Concept Views
-------------

  >>> from loops.browser.concept import ConceptView, ConceptConfigureView
  >>> view = ConceptView(cc1, TestRequest())

  >>> children = list(view.children())
  >>> [c.title for c in children]
  [u'Zope 3']

The token attribute provided with the items returned by the children() and
parents() methods identifies identifies not only the item itself but
also the relationship to the context object using a combination
of URIs to item and the predicate of the relationship:
  
  >>> [c.token for c in children]
  ['.loops/concepts/cc2:.loops/concepts/standard']

There is also a concept configuration view that allows updating the
underlying context object:

  >>> cc3 = Concept(u'loops for Zope 3')
  >>> concepts['cc3'] = cc3
  >>> view = ConceptConfigureView(cc1,
  ...           TestRequest(action='assign', tokens=['.loops/concepts/cc3']))
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> sorted(c.title for c in cc1.getChildren())
  [u'Zope 3', u'loops for Zope 3']

  >>> view = ConceptConfigureView(cc1,
  ...           TestRequest(action='remove', qualifier='children',
  ...               tokens=['.loops/concepts/cc2:.loops/concepts/standard']))
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> sorted(c.title for c in cc1.getChildren())
  [u'loops for Zope 3']

We can also create a new concept and assign it:

  >>> params = {'action': 'create', 'create.name': 'cc4',
  ...           'create.title': u'New concept'}
  >>> view = ConceptConfigureView(cc1, TestRequest(**params))
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> sorted(c.title for c in cc1.getChildren())
  [u'New concept', u'loops for Zope 3']

The concept configuration view provides methods for displaying concept
types and predicates:

  >>> from zope.publisher.interfaces.browser import IBrowserRequest
  >>> from loops.browser.common import LoopsTerms
  >>> from zope.app.form.browser.interfaces import ITerms
  >>> from zope.schema.interfaces import IIterableSource
  >>> ztapi.provideAdapter(IIterableSource, ITerms, LoopsTerms,
  ...                      with=(IBrowserRequest,))
      
  >>> sorted((t.title, t.token) for t in view.conceptTypes())
  [(u'Topic', '.loops/concepts/topic'), (u'Type', '.loops/concepts/type'),
      (u'Unknown Type', '.loops/concepts/unknown')]
          
  >>> sorted((t.title, t.token) for t in view.predicates())
  [(u'has type', '.loops/concepts/hasType'),
      (u'subconcept', '.loops/concepts/standard')]

Index attributes adapter
------------------------

  >>> from loops.concept import IndexAttributes
  >>> idx = IndexAttributes(cc2)
  >>> idx.text()
  u'cc2 Zope 3'
  
  >>> idx.title()
  u'cc2 Zope 3'

  >>> idx.type()
  'loops:concept:unknown'


Resources and what they have to do with Concepts
================================================

  >>> from loops.interfaces import IDocument, IMediaAsset

We first need a resource manager:
    
  >>> from loops.resource import ResourceManager
  >>> loopsRoot['resources'] = ResourceManager()
  >>> resources = loopsRoot['resources']

A common type of resource is a document:
      
  >>> from loops.interfaces import IDocument
  >>> from loops.resource import Document
  >>> doc1 = Document(u'Zope Info')
  >>> resources['doc1'] = doc1
  >>> doc1.title
  u'Zope Info'
  >>> doc1.data
  u''
  >>> doc1.contentType
  ''

Another one is a media asset:

  >>> from loops.interfaces import IMediaAsset
  >>> from loops.resource import MediaAsset
  >>> img = MediaAsset(u'A png Image')

For testing we use some simple files from the tests directory:
      
  >>> from loops import tests
  >>> import os
  >>> path = os.path.join(*tests.__path__)
  >>> img.data = open(os.path.join(path, 'test_icon.png')).read()
  >>> img.getSize()
  381
  >>> img.getImageSize()
  (16, 16)
  >>> img.contentType
  'image/png'

  >>> pdf = MediaAsset(u'A pdf File')
  >>> pdf.data = open(os.path.join(path, 'test.pdf')).read()
  >>> pdf.getSize()
  25862
  >>> pdf.getImageSize()
  (-1, -1)
  >>> pdf.contentType
  'application/pdf'

We can associate a resource with a concept by assigning it to the concept:

  >>> cc1.assignResource(doc1)
  >>> res = cc1.getResources()
  >>> list(res)
  [<loops.resource.Document ...>]

The concept configuration view discussed above also manages the relations
from concepts to resources:

  >>> len(cc1.getResources())
  1
  >>> form = dict(action='remove', qualifier='resources',
  ...               tokens=['.loops/resources/doc1:.loops/concepts/standard'])
  >>> view = ConceptConfigureView(cc1, TestRequest(form=form))
  >>> [zapi.getName(r.context) for r in view.resources()]
  [u'doc1']
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> len(cc1.getResources())
  0
  >>> form = dict(action='assign', assignAs='resource',
  ...               tokens=['.loops/resources/doc1'])
  >>> view = ConceptConfigureView(cc1, TestRequest(form=form))
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> len(cc1.getResources())
  1

These relations may also be managed starting from a resource using
the resource configuration view:

  >>> from loops.browser.resource import ResourceConfigureView
    
Index attributes adapter
------------------------

  >>> from loops.resource import IndexAttributes
  >>> idx = IndexAttributes(doc1)
  >>> idx.text()
  u'doc1 Zope Info'
  
  >>> idx.title()
  u'doc1 Zope Info'

  >>> idx.type()
  'loops:resource:Document'


Views/Nodes: Menus, Menu Items, Listings, Pages, etc
====================================================

Note: the term "view" here is not directly related to the special
Zope 3 term "view" (a multiadapter for presentation purposes) but basically
bears the common sense meaning: an object (that may be persistent or
created on the fly) that provides a view to content of whatever kind.

Views (or nodes - that's the only type of views existing at the moment)
thus provide the presentation space for concepts and resources, i.e. visitors
of a site only see views or nodes but never concepts or resources directly;
the views or nodes, however, present informations coming from the concepts
or resources they are related to.

We first need a view manager:
    
  >>> from loops.view import ViewManager, Node
  >>> from zope.security.checker import NamesChecker, defineChecker
  >>> nodeChecker = NamesChecker(('body',))
  >>> defineChecker(Node, nodeChecker)

  >>> loopsRoot['views'] = ViewManager()
  >>> views = loopsRoot['views']

The view space is typically built up with nodes; a node may be a top-level
menu that may contain other nodes as menu or content items:
      
  >>> m1 = Node(u'Menu')
  >>> views['m1'] = m1
  >>> m11 = Node(u'Zope')
  >>> m1['m11'] = m11
  >>> m111 = Node(u'Zope in General')
  >>> m11['m111'] = m111
  >>> m112 = Node(u'Zope 3')
  >>> m11['m112'] = m112
  >>> m112.title
  u'Zope 3'
  >>> m112.description
  u''

There are a few convienence methods for accessing parent and child nodes:

  >>> m1.getParentNode() is None
  True
  >>> m11.getParentNode() is m1
  True
  >>> [zapi.getName(child) for child in m11.getChildNodes()]
  [u'm111', u'm112']

What is returned by these may be controlled by the nodeType attribute:

  >>> m1.nodeType = 'menu'
  >>> m11.nodeType = 'page'
  >>> m11.getParentNode('menu') is m1
  True
  >>> m11.getParentNode('page') is None
  True
  >>> m111.nodeType = 'info'
  >>> m112.nodeType = 'text'
  >>> len(list(m11.getChildNodes('text')))
  1

There are also shortcut methods to retrieve certain types of nodes
in a simple and logical way:

  >>> m1.getMenu() is m1
  True
  >>> m111.getMenu() is m1
  True
  >>> m1.getPage() is m1
  True
  >>> m111.getPage() is m111
  True
  >>> m112.getPage() is m11
  True
  >>> len(list(m1.getMenuItems()))
  1
  >>> len(list(m11.getMenuItems()))
  0
  >>> len(list(m111.getMenuItems()))
  0
  >>> len(list(m1.getTextItems()))
  0
  >>> len(list(m11.getTextItems()))
  1
  >>> len(list(m111.getTextItems()))
  0

Targets
-------

We can associate a node with a concept or directly with a resource via the
view class's target attribute. (We also have to supply a subscriber to
IRelationInvalidatedEvent to make sure associated actions will be carried
out - this is usually done through ZCML.)

  >>> from loops.util import removeTargetRelation
  >>> from loops.interfaces import ITargetRelation
  >>> from cybertools.relation.interfaces import IRelationInvalidatedEvent
  >>> ztapi.subscribe([ITargetRelation, IRelationInvalidatedEvent], None,
  ...                 removeTargetRelation)
  
  >>> m111.target = cc1
  >>> m111.target is cc1
  True
  >>> m111.target = cc1
  >>> m111.target is cc1
  True
  >>> m111.target = cc2
  >>> m111.target is cc2
  True

A resource provides access to the associated views/nodes via the
getClients() method:

  >>> len(doc1.getClients())
  0
  >>> m112.target = doc1
  >>> nodes = doc1.getClients()
  >>> nodes[0] is m112
  True

Node Views
----------

  >>> from loops.interfaces import INode
  >>> from loops.browser.node import NodeView
  >>> view = NodeView(m11, TestRequest())

  >>> page = view.page
  >>> items = page.textItems()
  >>> for item in items:
  ...     print item.url, item.editable
  http://127.0.0.1/loops/views/m1/m11/m112 False

  >>> menu = view.menu
  >>> items = menu.menuItems()
  >>> for item in items:
  ...     print item.url, view.selected(item)
  http://127.0.0.1/loops/views/m1/m11 True

A Node and its Target
---------------------

When configuring a node you may specify what you want to do with respect
to the node's target: associate an existing one or create a new one.

  >>> from loops.browser.node import ConfigureView
  >>> form = {'action': 'create', 'create.title': 'New Resource',
  ...         'create.type': 'loops.resource.MediaAsset',}
  >>> view = ConfigureView(m111, TestRequest(form = form))
  >>> sorted((t.token, t.title) for t in view.targetTypes())
  [('loops.concept.Concept', u'Concept'),
      ('loops.resource.Document', u'Document'),
      ('loops.resource.MediaAsset', u'Media Asset')]
  >>> view.update()
  True
  >>> sorted(resources.keys())
  [u'doc1', u'm1.m11.m111']

  >>> view.target.title, view.target.token
  ('New Resource', '.loops/resources/m1.m11.m111')

A node object provides the targetSchema of its target:

  >>> from loops.interfaces import IDocumentView
  >>> from loops.interfaces import IMediaAssetView
  >>> IDocumentView.providedBy(m111)
  False
  >>> IMediaAssetView.providedBy(m111)
  True
  >>> m111.target = None
  >>> IDocumentView.providedBy(m111)
  False
  >>> m111.target = resources['doc1']
  >>> IDocumentView.providedBy(m111)
  True
  >>> IMediaAssetView.providedBy(m111)
  False

A node's target is rendered using the NodeView's renderTargetBody()
method. This makes use of a browser view registered for the target interface,
and of a lot of other stuff needed for the rendering machine.

  >>> from zope.app.publisher.interfaces.browser import IBrowserView
  >>> from loops.browser.resource import DocumentView
  >>> ztapi.provideAdapter(IDocument, Interface, DocumentView,
  ...                      with=(IBrowserRequest,))

  >>> from zope.component.interfaces import IFactory
  >>> from zope.app.renderer import rest
  >>> ztapi.provideUtility(IFactory, rest.ReStructuredTextSourceFactory,
  ...                      'zope.source.rest')
  >>> ztapi.provideAdapter(rest.IReStructuredTextSource, Interface,
  ...                      rest.ReStructuredTextToHTMLRenderer,
  ...                      with=(IBrowserRequest,))

  >>> m112.target = doc1
  >>> view = NodeView(m112, TestRequest())
  >>> view.renderTargetBody()
  u''
  >>> doc1.data = u'Test data\n\nAnother paragraph'
  >>> view.renderTargetBody()
  u'Test data\n\nAnother paragraph'
  >>> doc1.contentType = 'text/restructured'
  >>> view.renderTargetBody()
  u'<p>Test data</p>\n<p>Another paragraph</p>\n'

It is possible to edit a target's attributes directly in an
edit form provided by the node:

  >>> from loops.target import DocumentProxy, MediaAssetProxy
  >>> ztapi.provideAdapter(INode, IDocumentView, DocumentProxy)
  >>> ztapi.provideAdapter(INode, IMediaAssetView, MediaAssetProxy)

  >>> proxy = zapi.getAdapter(m111, IDocumentView)
  >>> proxy.title = u'Set via proxy'
  >>> resources['doc1'].title
  u'Set via proxy'

If the target object is removed from its container all references
to it are removed as well. (To make this work we have to handle
the IObjectRemovedEvent; this is usually done via ZCML in the
cybertools.relation package.)

  >>> from zope.app.container.interfaces import IObjectRemovedEvent
  >>> from zope.interface import Interface
  >>> from cybertools.relation.registry import invalidateRelations
  >>> ztapi.subscribe([Interface, IObjectRemovedEvent], None,
  ...                 invalidateRelations)

  >>> del resources['doc1']
  >>> m111.target
  >>> IMediaAssetView.providedBy(m111)
  False

Ordering Nodes
--------------

Note: this functionality has been moved to cybertools.container; we
include some testing here to make sure it still works and give a short
demonstration.

Let's add some more nodes and reorder them:

  >>> m113 = Node()
  >>> m11['m113'] = m113
  >>> m114 = Node()
  >>> m11['m114'] = m114
  >>> m11.keys()
  ['m111', 'm112', 'm113', 'm114']
      
A special management view provides methods for moving objects down, up,
to the bottom, and to the top.
      
  >>> from cybertools.container.ordered import OrderedContainerView
  >>> view = OrderedContainerView(m11, TestRequest())
  >>> view.move_bottom(('m113',))
  >>> m11.keys()
  ['m111', 'm112', 'm114', 'm113']
  >>> view.move_up(('m114',), 1)
  >>> m11.keys()
  ['m111', 'm114', 'm112', 'm113']

Import/Export
-------------

Nodes may be exported to and loaded from external sources, typically
file representations that allow the transfer of nodes from one Zope
instance to another.

  >>> from loops.external import NodesLoader
  >>> loader = NodesLoader(views)
  >>> data = [{'name': 'm2', 'path': '', 'description': u'desc 1',
  ...          'title': u'M 2', 'body': u'test m2', 'nodeType': 'menu' },
  ...         {'name': 'm21', 'path': 'm2', 'description': u'',
  ...          'title': u'M 21', 'body': u'test m21', 'nodeType': 'page' },
  ...         {'name': 'm114', 'path': 'm1/m11', 'description': u'',
  ...          'title': u'M 114', 'body': u'test m114', 'nodeType': 'page' },]
  >>> loader.load(data)
  >>> views['m2']['m21'].title
  u'M 21'
  >>> views['m1']['m11']['m114'].title
  u'M 114'

  >>> from loops.external import NodesExporter, NodesImporter
  >>> exporter = NodesExporter(views)
  >>> data = exporter.extractData()
  >>> len(data)
  8
  >>> data[3]['path']
  u'm1/m11'
  >>> data[3]['name']
  u'm112'

  >>> dumpname = os.path.dirname(__file__) + '/test.tmp'
  >>> exporter.filename = dumpname
  >>> exporter.dumpData()

Load them again from the exported file:
  
  >>> importer = NodesImporter(views)
  >>> importer.filename = dumpname
  >>> imported = importer.getData()
  >>> imported == data
  True

  >>> loader.load(imported)


Fin de partie
=============

  >>> os.unlink(dumpname)
  >>> placefulTearDown()