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Tip revision: d39f5f64538edd6c690fe635926063fb7cac853b authored by cvs2svn on 10 April 1995, 12:32:31 UTC
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libpanel.tex
\section{Standard Module \sectcode{panel}}
\stmodindex{panel}

\strong{Please note:} The FORMS library, to which the \code{fl} module described
above interfaces, is a simpler and more accessible user interface
library for use with GL than the Panel Module (besides also being by a
Dutch author).

This module should be used instead of the built-in module
\code{pnl}
to interface with the
{\em Panel Library}.

The module is too large to document here in its entirety.
One interesting function:

\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module panel)}
\begin{funcdesc}{defpanellist}{filename}
Parses a panel description file containing S-expressions written by the
{\em Panel Editor}
that accompanies the Panel Library and creates the described panels.
It returns a list of panel objects.
\end{funcdesc}

\strong{Warning:}
the Python interpreter will dump core if you don't create a GL window
before calling
\code{panel.mkpanel()}
or
\code{panel.defpanellist()}.

\section{Standard Module \sectcode{panelparser}}
\stmodindex{panelparser}

This module defines a self-contained parser for S-expressions as output
by the Panel Editor (which is written in Scheme so it can't help writing
S-expressions).
The relevant function is
\code{panelparser.parse_file(\var{file})}
which has a file object (not a filename!) as argument and returns a list
of parsed S-expressions.
Each S-expression is converted into a Python list, with atoms converted
to Python strings and sub-expressions (recursively) to Python lists.
For more details, read the module file.
% XXXXJH should be funcdesc, I think

\section{Built-in Module \sectcode{pnl}}
\bimodindex{pnl}

This module provides access to the
{\em Panel Library}
built by NASA Ames (to get it, send e-mail to
{\tt panel-request@nas.nasa.gov}).
All access to it should be done through the standard module
\code{panel},
which transparantly exports most functions from
\code{pnl}
but redefines
\code{pnl.dopanel()}.

\strong{Warning:}
the Python interpreter will dump core if you don't create a GL window
before calling
\code{pnl.mkpanel()}.

The module is too large to document here in its entirety.
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