Events

Introduction

Although many branches of Logic can be defined in Incari's Logic Editor, a branch will never be executed without being initiated by an Event. They define when, and under what conditions, functionality should be triggered. In both Incari and computer science in general, event systems define a relationship between the fulfillment of criteria and the set of instructions to be performed once those criteria are met, and are made up of two parts: triggers and listeners.

Triggers can be thought of as being like announcements. A real-world example of a trigger is a school teacher announcing that an exam's time limit has been reached. The other staff members and students are the listeners in this case, whereby the Event occurring prompts the staff members to begin collecting exam papers, while students stop writing and put down their pencils.

Events in Incari can be directly triggered by the user's input, as is the case with Keyboard and Mouse Events, or triggered automatically when something happens relating to an Object, Variable, Scene, or Screen. One of the most powerful aspects of Incari's Events is that you can even define your own custom triggers and listeners, to establish the criteria under which one part of your Logic causes the execution of others.

What is event programming? on Musing Mortoray.

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