Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Hi. I saw your blog post and I'm interested in helping with this issue. I have
some
experience with the Java2D API and think I can help.
Here is a sample of my work with Java2D (still work in progress)
http://www.cin.ufpe.br/~vcac/projetos/PaintOnline.jnlp
If you are willing to accept my help please send me an email with further
instructions (gmail: victorcisneiros). I have never contributed to an
open-source
project so I'm not sure how I should proceed.
Original comment by victorci...@gmail.com
on 24 Jun 2008 at 3:22
FYI, I talked to victorcisneiros and he's no longer interested in implementing
this. If anyone wants it, it's up-for-
grabs yet again.
Original comment by limpbizkit
on 24 Jun 2008 at 5:18
I'm working on a library for automated graph layout --
http://code.google.com/p/modsl/. The primary goal of my project was to be able
to
process a simple domain specific language into a UML diagram (for quick and
dirty UML
sketching). Internally the graph is represented as a simple hierarchical tree of
nodes, edges and labels of different types, so I think it wouldn't be that hard
to
reuse it for your injector graphing. Also it is quite flexible in terms of
customizing look and feel. I could work out the integration part. Please let me
know.
Original comment by avi...@gmail.com
on 2 Jul 2008 at 9:35
We've already got Graphviz for graph rendering and layout. It works fine and
meets our needs.
The problem I'm interested in solving is generating the actual Graphviz file to
use as input. This file should
describe the injector, balancing the tradeoffs between readability and
completeness.
Original comment by limpbizkit
on 3 Jul 2008 at 12:15
Graphviz is an excellent tool. I'm curious though if you're planning to bundle
it
with Guice (Graphviz is not cross-platform) or if it is expected to be present
on the
developer's machine to take advantage of the Guice graphing functionality.
Original comment by avi...@gmail.com
on 3 Jul 2008 at 2:48
I'd prefer we generate a graphviz .dot file but not render it.
Users can view .dot files in many viewers. According to graphviz.org, there's
viewers for Unix, Windows, Mac,
Java and even SVG.
Original comment by limpbizkit
on 3 Jul 2008 at 3:11
The tool should provide information about the scopes of the bindings, both
built-in
and custom scopes. It would also be useful to see an object diagram, which
visualizes
how the object graph will look like at runtime. This would be useful in
debugging the
number of instances per scope (see http://groups.google.com/group/google-
guice/browse_thread/thread/93dd8f0efc765ac8?hl=en).
Original comment by esko.luo...@gmail.com
on 14 Sep 2008 at 6:50
I'd like to take this on.
I've attached some output from the tool I whipped up. I still need to handle
providers, and I think there's some
improvements that could be made to the display (Graphviz apparently has rough
HTML support, so I could do
background colors, possibly small text, and italics).
Let me know what you think.
Original comment by phopkins
on 22 Dec 2008 at 7:46
Attachments:
Oh, and the generated dot file.
Original comment by phopkins
on 22 Dec 2008 at 7:47
Attachments:
@phopkins - wow, this is fantastic. I really like the dotted lines styling the
interfaces. Sweet!
FYI, I've recently made some big changes to the SPI, which will certainly break
your code. I've changed the
Bindings to have proper types so the visitors aren't the only way to get at the
data - they were quite clumsy to
work with.
I'd also like to use your grapher to help us to ensure the SPI is 'good
enough'. What are the rough edges? What
are we missing? I'm going to try to fill in the gaps to make sure all the
necessary stuff is in there, and your
input is extremely valuable.
Original comment by limpbizkit
on 25 Dec 2008 at 4:39
A bit more. :)
Gray background denotes an instance, double arrow denotes binding to a
provider, and circle-arrow denotes a
constant type conversion.
I think I packed in most ways to Guice stuff together in this example.
There's no scope display yet, but I figure it'd be better to focus on getting
this cleaned up and checked in first.
Original comment by phopkins
on 25 Dec 2008 at 4:42
Attachments:
Crossed messages. :)
The two bugs I filed (that you found) are mostly what I found for roughness.
The other big one I can think of is
Multibinding support. The bindings that it creates are a bit of a mess when
viewed naively through SPI (in
particular, the RealMultibinder instance has no dependencies on the elements,
just on an Injector), and the
classes that one could try to instanceof a way out of (such as @Element) are
package-private, so no luck
there.
What's the best way to share the code, so you can see if the Visitor bits look
right to you? It'll be a big CL.
(Btw, are there code conventions / developer docs lying around? Is it basically
just Google style? 80 or 100?)
Looking forward to trying your updates. I haven't synched since the weekend, so
I'll see how things come
together over the next day or two.
Oh, and as I said I haven't looked through Scopes yet, so I don't know how well
the SPI stuff works there.
Original comment by phopkins
on 25 Dec 2008 at 4:51
Original comment by phopkins
on 30 Dec 2008 at 8:05
Fixed w/ r752
Original comment by phopkins
on 30 Dec 2008 at 9:59
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
limpbizkit
on 23 Jun 2008 at 4:48Attachments: