Java tutorial
/******************************************************************************* * Copyright (c) 2000, 2006 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.jface.operation; import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException; /** * Interface for UI components which can execute a long-running operation * in the form of an <code>IRunnableWithProgress</code>. * The context is responsible for displaying a progress indicator and Cancel * button to the end user while the operation is in progress; the context * supplies a progress monitor to be used from code running inside the operation. * Note that an <code>IRunnableContext</code> is not a runnable itself. * <p> * For examples of UI components which implement this interface, * see <code>ApplicationWindow</code>, <code>ProgressMonitorDialog</code>, * and <code>WizardDialog</code>. * </p> * * @see IRunnableWithProgress * @see org.eclipse.jface.window.ApplicationWindow * @see org.eclipse.jface.dialogs.ProgressMonitorDialog * @see org.eclipse.jface.wizard.WizardDialog */ public interface IRunnableContext { /** * <p> * Runs the given <code>IRunnableWithProgress</code> in this context. * For example, if this is a <code>ProgressMonitorDialog</code> then the runnable * is run using this dialog's progress monitor. * </p> * <p> * If <code>fork</code> is <code>false</code>, the current thread is used * to run the runnable. Note that if <code>fork</code> is <code>true</code>, * it is unspecified whether or not this method blocks until the runnable * has been run. Implementers should document whether the runnable is run * synchronously (blocking) or asynchronously (non-blocking), or if no * assumption can be made about the blocking behaviour. * </p> * * @param fork <code>true</code> if the runnable should be run in a separate thread, * and <code>false</code> to run in the same thread * @param cancelable <code>true</code> to enable the cancelation, and * <code>false</code> to make the operation uncancellable * @param runnable the runnable to run * * @exception InvocationTargetException wraps any exception or error which occurs * while running the runnable * @exception InterruptedException propagated by the context if the runnable * acknowledges cancelation by throwing this exception. This should not be thrown * if cancelable is <code>false</code>. */ public void run(boolean fork, boolean cancelable, IRunnableWithProgress runnable) throws InvocationTargetException, InterruptedException; }