Mercurial > pidgin
view libpurple/plugins/perl/scripts/conversation.pl @ 22793:2ff3eb79078d
Change the "Screen name" text to "Username" per a number of discussions on
the mailing lists, IRC, and XMPP. This will truly come to fruition when
we merge im.pidgin.pidgin.next.minor back here, gaining us the help text
in the entry area.
| author | John Bailey <rekkanoryo@rekkanoryo.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 30 Apr 2008 06:02:26 +0000 |
| parents | 2f8274ce570a |
| children | 0646207f360f |
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$MODULE_NAME = "Conversation Test"; use Purple; # All the information Purple gets about our nifty plugin %PLUGIN_INFO = ( perl_api_version => 2, name => "Perl: $MODULE_NAME", version => "0.1", summary => "Test plugin for the Perl interpreter.", description => "Implements a set of test proccedures to ensure all " . "functions that work in the C API still work in the " . "Perl plugin interface. As XSUBs are added, this " . "*should* be updated to test the changes. " . "Furthermore, this will function as the tutorial perl " . "plugin.", author => "John H. Kelm <johnhkelm\@gmail.com>", url => "http://sourceforge.net/users/johnhkelm/", load => "plugin_load", unload => "plugin_unload" ); # These names must already exist my $GROUP = "UIUC Buddies"; my $USERNAME = "johnhkelm2"; # We will create these on load then destroy them on unload my $TEST_GROUP = "UConn Buddies"; my $TEST_NAME = "johnhkelm"; my $TEST_ALIAS = "John Kelm"; my $PROTOCOL_ID = "prpl-oscar"; sub plugin_init { return %PLUGIN_INFO; } # This is the sub defined in %PLUGIN_INFO to be called when the plugin is loaded # Note: The plugin has a reference to itself on top of the argument stack. sub plugin_load { my $plugin = shift; print "#" x 80 . "\n\n"; print "PERL: Finding account.\n"; $account = Purple::Accounts::find($USERNAME, $PROTOCOL_ID); ######### TEST CODE HERE ########## # First we create two new conversations. print "Testing Purple::Conversation::new()..."; $conv1 = Purple::Conversation->new(1, $account, "Test Conversation 1"); if ($conv1) { print "ok.\n"; } else { print "fail.\n"; } print "Testing Purple::Conversation::new()..."; $conv2 = Purple::Conversation->new(1, $account, "Test Conversation 2"); if ($conv2) { print "ok.\n"; } else { print "fail.\n"; } # Second we create a window to display the conversations in. # Note that the package here is Purple::Conversation::Window print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::new()...\n"; $win = Purple::Conversation::Window::new(); # The third thing to do is to add the two conversations to the windows. # The subroutine add_conversation() returns the number of conversations # present in the window. print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::add_conversation()..."; $conv_count = $conv1->add_conversation(); if ($conv_count) { print "ok..." . $conv_count . " conversations...\n"; } else { print "fail.\n"; } print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::add_conversation()..."; $conv_count = $win->add_conversation($conv2); if ($conv_count) { print "ok..." . $conv_count . " conversations...\n"; } else { print "fail.\n"; } # Now the window is displayed to the user. print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::show()...\n"; $win->show(); # Use get_im_data() to get a handle for the conversation print "Testing Purple::Conversation::get_im_data()...\n"; $im = $conv1->get_im_data(); if ($im) { print "ok.\n"; } else { print "fail.\n"; } # Here we send messages to the conversation print "Testing Purple::Conversation::IM::send()...\n"; $im->send("Message Test."); print "Testing Purple::Conversation::IM::write()...\n"; $im->write("SENDER", "<b>Message</b> Test.", 0, 0); print "#" x 80 . "\n\n"; } sub plugin_unload { my $plugin = shift; print "#" x 80 . "\n\n"; ######### TEST CODE HERE ########## print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::get_conversation_count()...\n"; $conv_count = $win->get_conversation_count(); print "...and it returned $conv_count.\n"; if ($conv_count > 0) { print "Testing Purple::Conversation::Window::destroy()...\n"; $win->destroy(); } print "\n\n" . "#" x 80 . "\n\n"; }
