I have been experimenting with creating a Functional Reactive Programming framework for Scala. One thing at the moment I am confused about is how current implementations have dealt with representing behaviours at the top level. To explain what I mean I'll give an example. Say I have a JPanel and I want to do this:
JPanel panel = new Panel()
panel.setBackground(new Behaviour(time => Color.red))
Although the color is static here we want the panel background to update when the value of the Behaviour updates. The way I have done it so far is to essentially create a discretized Behaviour using Events (accessible via a changes
function on Behaviours). This is basically just an event source that occurs whenever the Behaviour changes. Using this the implementation of setBackground here would be:
def setBackground(color : Behaviour[Color]) {
super.setBackground(color.now)
color.changes.each(change => super.setBackground(change))
}
This feels kind of messy. Does anyone have any suggestions of whether this is a bad approach or not? I have been looking at Elliott's Push-Pull FRP today and it feels like I might be going in the right direction but getting lost somewhere.
EDIT: If no one has a definite clear cut solution then ideas/thoughts would be great!