On Aug 7, 2005, at 10:01 AM, Kevin Dangoor wrote: > On 8/7/05, Ronald Oussoren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >>> Here's the objC example from Apple's doc: >>> [appleEventManager setEventHandler:self >>> andSelector:@selector(handleGetURLEvent:withReplyEvent:) >>> forEventClass:kAEInternetSuite andEventID:kAEISGetURL]; >>> >>> Here's my translation to Python: >>> sel = objc.selector >>> (MacController.handleGetURLEvent_withReplyEvent_, >>> signature="vO:O:") >>> >>> aem.setEventHandler_andSelector_forEventClass_andEventID_(self, >>> sel, >>> 1735750252L, 1735750252L) >>> >> >> >> That's very wrong. You shouldn't call objc.selector unless you're >> defining a new method (in a class definition on the argument for >> objc.classAddMethods). The call to objc.selector should be in the >> class definition of MacController. >> > > I was confused by @selector(handleGetURLEvent:withReplyEvent:) and the > error message I got when I tried my first intuition. My first attempt > was to just pass my Python method, but that complained saying that SEL > was expected instead of an instance method.
That should've worked. > I really don't think I would have guessed to pass a string with the > selector name. That and the use of GURL instead of gurl was all it > took to get my program called at the right time. Selectors themselves are just interned char* -bob _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig