So it's kosher then to reimport the Zope module and use app() in a constructor method, Shane? I was always afraid it would do something horrible.
-----Original Message----- From: Jeff K. Hoffman [mailto:jeff.hoffman@goingv.com] Sent: Monday, July 17, 2000 1:11 PM To: Shane Hathaway Cc: Chris McDonough; 'Jeff K. Hoffman'; zope-dev@zope.org Subject: Re: [Zope-dev] The Application object
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Shane Hathaway wrote:
The way to get the root application object is to open a connection to the ZODB and get the 'Application' object from the list of root objects. There is an easy shortcut:
import Zope app = Zope.app()
app now refers to a *copy* of the root Application object.
Yeehaw, that worked! I was so close. :-)
When you're done modifying it and its descendants you have to commit or abort the transaction.
[snip]
Do I need to commit or abort even if I don't make changes to the application object? The only thing I need it for is to get to the Control_Panel; I am instantiating ZClass instances in the constructor of a Python class, i.e.:
class MyClass:
def __init__(self, id, title=''): import Zope app = Zope.app()
ob = app.Control_Panel.Products.MyProduct.MyZClass('newId') ob.id = 'newId'
self._setObject('newId', ob)
# Do I need a get_transaction().abort() here? Will that not abort # the wrong transaction?
app._p_jar.close()
...
This gives you all kinds of benefits like undo and elimination of threading conflicts.
[snip]
Good stuff. Thanks, Shane.
Shane
--Jeff
--- Jeff K. Hoffman 704.849.0731 x108 Chief Technology Officer mailto:jeff.hoffman@goingv.com Going Virtual, L.L.C. http://www.goingv.com/