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/*******************************************************************************
 * Copyright (c) 2000, 2005 IBM Corporation and others.
 * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
 * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0
 * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at
 * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html
 *
 * Contributors:
 *     IBM Corporation - initial API and implementation
 *******************************************************************************/
package org.eclipse.ui;

import org.eclipse.core.runtime.IAdaptable;
import org.eclipse.swt.graphics.Image;
import org.eclipse.swt.widgets.Composite;

/**
 * A workbench part is a visual component within a workbench page.  There
 * are two subtypes: view and editor, as defined by <code>IViewPart and
 * <code>IEditorPart.  
 * <p>
 * A view is typically used to navigate a hierarchy of information (like the 
 * workspace), open an editor, or display properties for the active editor.  
 * Modifications made in a view are saved immediately.  
 * </p>

* An editor is typically used to edit or browse a document or input object. * The input is identified using an <code>IEditorInput. Modifications made * in an editor part follow an open-save-close lifecycle model. * </p>

* This interface may be implemented directly. For convenience, a base * implementation is defined in <code>WorkbenchPart. * </p>

* The lifecycle of a workbench part is as follows: * <ul> * <li>When a part extension is created: * <ul> * <li>instantiate the part * <li>create a part site * <li>call part.init(site) * </ul> * <li>When a part becomes visible in the workbench: * <ul> * <li>add part to presentation by calling * <code>part.createControl(parent) to create actual widgets * <li>fire partOpened event to all listeners * </ul> * </li> * <li>When a part is activated or gets focus: * <ul> * <li>call part.setFocus() * <li>fire partActivated event to all listeners * </ul> * </li> * <li>When a part is closed: * <ul> * <li>if save is needed, do save; if it fails or is canceled return * <li>if part is active, deactivate part * <li>fire partClosed event to all listeners * <li>remove part from presentation; part controls are disposed as part * of the SWT widget tree * <li>call part.dispose() * </ul> * </li> * </ul> * </p> * <p> * After <code>createPartControl has been called, the implementor may * safely reference the controls created. When the part is closed * these controls will be disposed as part of an SWT composite. This * occurs before the <code>IWorkbenchPart.dispose method is called. * If there is a need to free SWT resources the part should define a dispose * listener for its own control and free those resources from the dispose * listener. If the part invokes any method on the disposed SWT controls * after this point an <code>SWTError will be thrown. * </p> * <p> * The last method called on <code>IWorkbenchPart is dispose. * This signals the end of the part lifecycle. * </p> * <p> * An important point to note about this lifecycle is that following * a call to init, createControl may never be called. Thus in the dispose * method, implementors must not assume controls were created. * </p> * <p> * Workbench parts implement the <code>IAdaptable interface; extensions * are managed by the platform's adapter manager. * </p> * * @see IViewPart * @see IEditorPart */ public interface IWorkbenchPart extends IAdaptable { /** * The property id for <code>getTitle, getTitleImage * and <code>getTitleToolTip. */ public static final int PROP_TITLE = IWorkbenchPartConstants.PROP_TITLE; /** * Adds a listener for changes to properties of this workbench part. * Has no effect if an identical listener is already registered. * <p> * The property ids are defined in {@link IWorkbenchPartConstants}. * </p> * * @param listener a property listener */ public void addPropertyListener(IPropertyListener listener); /** * Creates the SWT controls for this workbench part. * <p> * Clients should not call this method (the workbench calls this method when * it needs to, which may be never). * </p> * <p> * For implementors this is a multi-step process: * <ol> * <li>Create one or more controls within the parent. * <li>Set the parent layout as needed. * <li>Register any global actions with the site's IActionBars. * <li>Register any context menus with the site. * <li>Register a selection provider with the site, to make it available to * the workbench's <code>ISelectionService (optional). * </ol> * </p> * * @param parent the parent control */ public void createPartControl(Composite parent); /** * Disposes of this workbench part. * <p> * This is the last method called on the <code>IWorkbenchPart. At this * point the part controls (if they were ever created) have been disposed as part * of an SWT composite. There is no guarantee that createPartControl() has been * called, so the part controls may never have been created. * </p> * <p> * Within this method a part may release any resources, fonts, images, etc.  * held by this part. It is also very important to deregister all listeners * from the workbench. * </p> * <p> * Clients should not call this method (the workbench calls this method at * appropriate times). * </p> */ public void dispose(); /** * Returns the site for this workbench part. The site can be * <code>null while the workbench part is being initialized. After * the initialization is complete, this value must be non-<code>null * for the remainder of the part's life cycle. * * @return The part site; this value may be <code>null if the part * has not yet been initialized */ public IWorkbenchPartSite getSite(); /** * Returns the title of this workbench part. If this value changes * the part must fire a property listener event with * <code>PROP_TITLE. * <p> * The title is used to populate the title bar of this part's visual * container. * </p> * * @return the workbench part title (not <code>null) */ public String getTitle(); /** * Returns the title image of this workbench part. If this value changes * the part must fire a property listener event with * <code>PROP_TITLE. * <p> * The title image is usually used to populate the title bar of this part's * visual container. Since this image is managed by the part itself, callers * must <b>not dispose the returned image. * </p> * * @return the title image */ public Image getTitleImage(); /** * Returns the title tool tip text of this workbench part. * An empty string result indicates no tool tip. * If this value changes the part must fire a property listener event with * <code>PROP_TITLE. * <p> * The tool tip text is used to populate the title bar of this part's * visual container. * </p> * * @return the workbench part title tool tip (not <code>null) */ public String getTitleToolTip(); /** * Removes the given property listener from this workbench part. * Has no affect if an identical listener is not registered. * * @param listener a property listener */ public void removePropertyListener(IPropertyListener listener); /** * Asks this part to take focus within the workbench. * <p> * Clients should not call this method (the workbench calls this method at * appropriate times). To have the workbench activate a part, use * <code>IWorkbenchPage.activate(IWorkbenchPart) instead. * </p> */ public void setFocus(); }

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