Difference between revisions of "Property Lists"
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== Programming == | == Programming == | ||
− | GNUstep permits such property list files ( | + | GNUstep permits such property list files (normally having a .plist extension) to be loaded and subsequently used in your applications or tools. FoundationKit - in our case gnustep-base - classes NSDictionary and NSArray are used as representations of the property list data structures. Check the base API documentation for more information on working with these types programmatically. |
− | + | NSString can be used to turn property lists in string form - either read from a file or constructed programmatically - to an equivalent data structure in memory. Again, see the API documentation for NSString (particularly the propertyList method). | |
== Other tips == | == Other tips == |
Revision as of 09:55, 7 July 2005
NOTE: this document is still a work in progress. No responsibility is accepted for any problems arising from inaccuracies.
Introduction
Property lists are used throughout GNUstep to store defaults, program settings, application meta information, etc. MacOS X uses XML based property lists, but GNUstep uses another property list implementation also (TODO: history of this style of property list). Support for XML property lists is still wanting on some platforms; this situation should improve in the future.
They are composed of a "tree of arrays and dictionary's, which may be embedded inside each other for several layers. TODO: limits of embedding array/dictionaries inside each other.
Dictionary
A dictionary is a list of key-value pairs, where each item in the list has a name associated with it (key) and another type (value), which could be another dictionary, an array or often a string. It programmatically corresponds to NSDictionary/NSMutableDictionary. They take the following syntax:
{ KeyName1 = Value1; AnotherKeyName = "Value2"; Something = ( "ArrayItem1", "ArrayItem2", "ArrayItem3" ); Key4 = 0.10; KeyFive = { Dictionary2Key1 = "Something"; AnotherKey = "Somethingelse"; }; }
As can be seen, each key-value pair is seperated by a semi-colon. Within the pair, the key is seperated from the value with an "equals" (=) sign. The key name is arbitrary, and not put in inverted commas (""). Shown above are: an unknown type (could be some sort of string - TODO), a string, an array, a number and another dictionary (respectively).
Array
An array is a list of values, each of the same type (often arrays or dictionaries). Programmatically, it uses NSArray/NSMutableArray. It takes a syntax similar to the following:
( Value1, Value2, Value3, Value4 )
or
( Value1, Value2, Value3, Value4 )
Each value is seperated by commas. By the technical definition of an array, each value is of the same type (but I believe GNUstep permits different types TODO: check this).
Programming
GNUstep permits such property list files (normally having a .plist extension) to be loaded and subsequently used in your applications or tools. FoundationKit - in our case gnustep-base - classes NSDictionary and NSArray are used as representations of the property list data structures. Check the base API documentation for more information on working with these types programmatically.
NSString can be used to turn property lists in string form - either read from a file or constructed programmatically - to an equivalent data structure in memory. Again, see the API documentation for NSString (particularly the propertyList method).
Other tips
- Property lists are much like C programming, where newlines and spaces and tabs are not so important to parsing.
- Some examples of property lists may include:
- ~/GNUstep/System/Defaults/.GNUstepDefaults (this is your defaults file for software; be careful when editing)