SDEF(5) BSD File Formats Manual SDEF(5)NAME
sdef — scripting definition file
DESCRIPTION
Scripting definition files (sdefs) are XML files that describe everything
about an application scripting interface: terminology, implementation
information, and complete documentation. Applications may incorporate
them to define their own scriptability, and scripting clients such as
AppleScript and Scripting Bridge read them to determine what operations
an application supports.
BASICS
To read this man page, you should know what “element” and “attribute”
mean in an XML document. To create an sdef, you should know how to cre‐
ate well-formed XML; use of an XML editor will probably make your life
easier. For basic concepts and style guidelines, see Technical Note
TN2106, Scripting Interface Guidelines. Knowledge of AppleScript is
helpful but not necessary; see the AppleScript Language Guide, especially
chapters 4 (Commands) and 5 (Objects and References). If you have
already been working with sdefs in an older version of Mac OS X, read the
History section, since there have been changes to the format. If you are
using Cocoa, Cocoa Scripting as of Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) supports using
sdefs directly rather than preprocessing them with sdp(1); see the Sdef
Scriptability Guide for Cocoa for details.
If you are familiar with AppleScript or with writing aete resources, most
of the sdef elements will be familiar to you. If you are not, or if you
want to know how sdef elements map to your implementation language, here
is a brief translation guide. Many of these equivalents are not exact;
for more detailed information, see the definitions in the Reference sec‐
tion.
sdef code
class class
class-extension category
property property (ObjC), member variable (C++), attribute
(XML), to-one relation
element element (XML), to-many relation
command, event method (ObjC), member function (C++)
parameter parameter
direct parameter self (ObjC), this (C++)
STRUCTURE
There are two broad categories of elements:
terminology element: An element that defines a term usable in a script:
class, command, contents, enumerator, event, parameter, property,
record-type, and value-type.
implementation element: An element that holds implementation information
for a particular application framework. Currently, the only imple‐
mentation element is the cocoa element.
The element structure of an sdef is as follows. Indentation shows con‐
tainment, and ‘*’, ‘+’, and ‘?’ have their usual EBNF meanings: ‘*’ means
zero or more, ‘+’ means one or more, and ‘?’ means zero or one (i.e.,
optional).
dictionary (the root element)
suite+
(class | class-extension | command | enumeration |
event | record-type | value-type) +
enumeration
enumerator+
record-type
property+
class | class-extension
contents?
property*
element*
accessor*
responds-to*
command | event
direct-parameter?
parameter*
result?
The elements listed above may also contain documentation, implementation,
synonym, xref and access-group elements, as noted here:
element occurs in
documentation dictionary, suite, and all terminology elements
implementation all but dictionary
synonym all terminology elements
xref suite children: class, class-extension, command,
enumeration, event, record-type, and value-type.
access-group suite, class, class-extension, command, element,
property, contents, and responds-to.
Including Other Scripting Definitions
If you wish to re-export scripting features from a framework your appli‐
cation links to, such as AppKit, you should include the sdef of that
framework in your own. (Sdef-based applications have only the scripting
interface that they explicitly declare. This is in contrast to the older
scriptSuite scheme, which would automatically import scripting interface
from any loaded bundles.)
To do this, use an XInclude element (http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude)
pointing to the desired file. Sdefs for system frameworks are located in
/System/Library/ScriptingDefinitions. For example, the sdef for a typi‐
cal Cocoa application would begin with this:
<dictionary xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude">
<xi:include
href="file:///System/Library/ScriptingDefinitions/CocoaStandard.sdef"
xpointer="xpointer(/dictionary/suite)"
/>
...
By using inclusion instead of copying and pasting, your application will
automatically stay up to date with changes to the framework. Only
include a framework sdef if you also link to that framework; otherwise
you run the risk of your application interface disagreeing with what it
actually implements.
REFERENCE
Common Attributes
The following attributes are common to several of the element types
described below.
name For terminology elements, the scripting term for the ele‐
ment. Names must be one or more C identifiers (i.e.,
[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*) separated by a space. (Other
elements have name attributes too, but for different
purposes and with different content rules.)
id (optional) A unique identifier for the element. Use one
when you want to refer to one of a set of identically named
elements in a responds-to or xref element.
code The four-character code (eight-character for verbs) for the
element. AppleScript and the Apple Event Manager use these
codes to handle dispatching. “Character” is something of a
misnomer; a four-character code is really four bytes of data
expressed as a string of four characters in the Mac OS Roman
encoding. A code may also be expressed as hexadecimal data
with a leading “0x”. For example, “ABCD” and “0x41424344”
are equivalent. This is useful when one of the bytes is not
in the printable ASCII range of 0x20 to 0x7E, such as the
code “0x00000001”.
type The type of an element, property, or parameter. The value
must be one of the primitive types ‘any’, ‘text’, ‘integer’,
‘real’, ‘number’, ‘boolean’, ‘specifier’, ‘location
specifier’, ‘record’, ‘date’, ‘file’, ‘point’, ‘rectangle’,
‘type’, or ‘missing value’, or the name of a class, enumera‐
tion, record-type, or value-type defined elsewhere in the
sdef. To specify a complex type such as “list of integer”
or “number or text”, use a type element as described below.
Usage of type attributes changed significantly in Mac OS X
10.4; see History for details.
description (optional) A short description of the element.
hidden (optional) If an element is marked hidden, it is not shown
in the dictionary, though it is still implemented. This is
useful for obsolete or not-ready-for-prime-time scripting
features. Cocoa scriptTerminology files do not support hid‐
den terms; for best results, build an ‘aete’ into your
application as well. The value may be ‘yes’ or ‘no’ (the
default).
Elements
access-group
Defines a group of operations that is safe to use by sand‐
boxed applications. A set of access-group elements with a
single identifier defines a group identifier that a client
application may use in its profile. Any element without an
access group is not accessible from a sandboxed application.
access-groups are inherited by document containment. For
example, applying an access-group element to a class effec‐
tively applies the same rights to all of its property and
element elements as well. access-group elements are not
inherited by class inheritance or class containment, so in
the above example, while a client would be able to get ref‐
erences to elements of the original class, they would not
necessarily be able to do anything with them, nor would they
necessarily have access to elements defined in subclasses.
ATTRIBUTES
identifier The name of the category; should be a reverse-
DNS string that describes its purpose. An
identifier of “*” means the element is usable
by any application, without an explicit enti‐
tlement.
access (optional) The access rights this category
grants for the enclosing element. This
attribute is only meaningful when applied to a
property or element, either directly or by
inheritance. The value may be ‘r’ (read), ‘w’
(write), or ‘rw’ (read-write, the default).
accessor Accessors define which access forms an element supports.
There are six forms:
index numeric index (window 1)
name named element (window "Bob")
id unique id (file id 8727). Ids are often
numeric, but don't have to be.
range a range of elements (records 4 through 12)
relative relative to another object (word before
paragraph 2)
test objects satisfying a test (shapes whose color
is blue)
Accessor elements are currently only useful for aetes; Cocoa
Scripting ignores them and figures out supported forms based
on the element's properties.
ATTRIBUTES
style index | name | id | range | relative | test
class An abstract object definition that lists the properties,
elements, and supported verbs for instances of that class.
Class instances are called “objects.”
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*, contents?, element*, property*,
responds-to*
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
id As above.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
plural (optional) The plural name of the class. If
omitted, defaults to the name with ‘s’
appended.
inherits (optional) The class, if any, that this one
descends from.
class-extension
An extension to an existing class; in Objective-C terms, a
category. Use one of these when you want to add behavior to
an existing class, such as the base “application” class,
without defining a subclass. You can also use it to break a
class definition across multiple suites. A class-extension
has mostly the same content as a class, but because it is
extending an existing class, it does not define its own name
or code, but instead an ‘extends’ attribute.
A class-extension may have a cocoa element, depending on how
it is implemented: despite its resemblance to an Objective-C
category, the implementation of a class-extension may in
fact be a subclass. For example, when defining your own
document class, the sdef would extend the standard
“document” definition, but the implementation would be a
subclass of NSDocument. If the implementation is an Objec‐
tive-C category, then a cocoa element is not required; if it
is a subclass, then use a cocoa element with a ‘class’
attribute naming the subclass.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*, contents?, element*, property*,
responds-to*
ATTRIBUTES
extends The name of the class this element extends.
id As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
cocoa Holds implementation information for Cocoa Scripting. Use
the appropriate attribute for the containing element to
describe the relevant bit of Cocoa implementation.
ATTRIBUTES
class An Objective-C class name: use for classes and
the CommandClass of verbs.
key A string key for an NSDictionary of parame‐
ters, or a KVC key name for a property or ele‐
ment.
method An Objective-C method name: use for responds-
to methods.
boolean-value, string-value, integer-value
A value for an enumerator. For
‘boolean-value’, the value may be YES or NO;
for ‘string-value’, any text; and for
‘integer-value’, any integer. You may use at
most one of these three attributes in a given
cocoa element. The default value is the
numeric value of the enumerator's ‘code’
attribute.
insert-at-beginning
This attribute may appear in cocoa elements
attached to element elements. Its value may
be ‘yes’, meaning that new items will be added
at the beginning if their position is not
specified, or ‘no’, the default, meaning that
they will be added at the end. See the Foun‐
dation release notes for more details.
name A name used internally by Cocoa Scripting: use
for suites, command and event key names, enu‐
merations, and enumerators. This attribute is
only used for compatibility with older script‐
Suite files; ordinary sdefs do not need it.
cocoa elements are optional; if omitted, sdp(1) will gener‐
ate a default name. The basic rule is to capitalize each
word of the element's name except the first, and then to
remove any spaces. There are two special cases: classes
also capitalize the first word, and elements start with the
plural of the specified element type. For example:
element default name
<class name="refresh rate"> RefreshRate
<property name="current resolution"> currentResolution
<element type="monitor"> monitors
This default name becomes the ‘class’ for classes, the ‘key’
for properties, elements, and parameters, and the ‘name’ for
suites, verbs, enumerations, and enumerators. In Cocoa,
verbs are implemented by a class, which Cocoa refers to in
scriptSuite files as the CommandClass; the default is always
NSScriptCommand. An explicit cocoa element is only neces‐
sary if you want to override these defaults.
WARNING: The above is correct for sdp(1), but not for Cocoa
Scripting. See Bugs.
command (aka method, member function; see also event) Commands and
events, collectively called “verbs,” are messages that may
be sent to an object. For documentation purposes, sdefs
distinguish between commands, which are verbs a script would
send to an object (e.g., “close”), and events, which are
notifications sent to an object by a framework or system
service (e.g., “did close”).
Unlike most object-oriented languages, verbs are defined
independently of any particular class; a class may then list
the verbs that it responds to. To Java and Objective-C pro‐
grammers, sdef verbs therefore resemble protocols more than
member functions. You may specify the same command more
than once with different parameters, such as to define a
polymorphic “open” command that has different parameters
depending on whether it is applied to a document or a data‐
base.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*, direct-parameter?, parameter*,
result?
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
id As above.
code As above; event codes are eight characters.
description As above.
hidden As above.
contents contents is a special type of property: like a property, it
defines a unique data member, but its name and code are
optional; if omitted, they default to “contents” and ‘pcnt’,
respectively. There may be at most one contents element in
a class.
In addition, Cocoa Scripting will treat the contents prop‐
erty as its class's implied container: scripts may refer to
properties and elements of the contents property as if they
belong to the class. For example, TextEdit documents have a
“text” contents property. Technically, the first word of a
document is “word 1 of text of document 1”, but because
“text” is an implied container, a script can also say “word
1 of document 1”.
dictionary The root element of an sdef.
CONTAINS
suite+
ATTRIBUTES
title (optional) The title of the dictionary, which
appears in the dictionary display.
direct-parameter
direct-parameter is a special type of parameter: like a
parameter, it defines a value included with a verb, but it
has no ‘name’ or ‘code’ attribute, and may not be hidden.
There may be at most one direct-parameter element in a verb.
The direct parameter of a verb is a value that appears imme‐
diately after the verb and specifies its target. The type
of the direct parameter is usually an application class.
For example, in the command “close window 1”, the direct
parameter is “window 1”. Not all verbs have a direct param‐
eter; in such cases, omit this element.
In Cocoa Scripting, the direct parameter is the object to
which the message is sent (i.e., “self”) if the direct
parameter is an application class. Otherwise, the message
is sent to the application object with the direct parame‐
ter's value as a normal parameter.
documentation
When an element needs more exposition than a simple
‘description’ attribute can provide, use a documentation
element. A documentation element may contain any number of
html elements, which contain text that will be displayed at
that point in the dictionary. The text may contain HTML
markup tags, but in order to keep the XML processor from
interpreting them as XML, they must be escaped using either
entities or a CDATA section, for example:
<documentation>
<html>
For answers to commonly asked questions about
<i>do shell script</i>, see
<![CDATA[
<a href="http://developer.apple.com">TN2065</a>.
]]>
</html>
</documentation>
Bear in mind that an sdef is intended to be a reference, not
a tutorial. If you want to include any lengthy material,
consider using a link to an external resource.
element (aka to-many relation.) An object contained in another one.
An object may have any number of elements of a given class,
including none at all, and may have any number of element
classes. For example, the documents of an application are
elements.
CONTAINS
implementation?, accessor*
ATTRIBUTES
type As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
access (optional) The allowed access for the element
class: ‘r’ for read-only, ‘w’ for write-only,
or ‘rw’ for read-write (the default).
enumeration A list of symbolic constants (enumerators). For example,
the type of the “saving” parameter for “close” is the enu‐
meration yes/no/ask.
CONTAINS
implementation?, enumerator+
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
id As above.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
inline (optional) Controls how many enumerators are
displayed in-line. By default (with no
attribute), all enumerators are displayed in-
line. For example:
sdef:
<enumeration name="save options">
<enumerator name="yes"/>
<enumerator name="no"/>
<enumerator name="ask"/>
</enumeration>
<parameter name="saving" type="save options"/>
display:
saving yes/no/ask
By specifying a number, that number of enumer‐
ators will be listed in-line, with a link to
the complete definition. To show only the
enumeration name, use “inline="0"”. For exam‐
ple:
inline="2" saving yes/no/more...
inline="0" saving save options
This attribute only affects the display; it
has no semantic meaning.
enumerator A symbolic constant.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
event See command.
parameter A named value included with a verb. Parameter names are
often prepositions: “with”, “by”, etc.
CONTAINS
implementation?
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
code As above.
type As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
optional (optional) Indicates whether the parameter is
optional or required. The value may be ‘yes’
(optional) or ‘no’ (required; the default).
requires-access
(optional) The access required for the actual
value of the parameter: ‘r’ for read-only, ‘w’
for write-only, or ‘rw’ for read-write (the
default).
property (aka field, instance variable, to-one relation.) A unique
data member of an object. Properties always have a name,
and there is always exactly one of them with a given name in
an object. For example, the name of a document is a prop‐
erty.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
code As above.
type As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
access (optional) ‘r’, ‘w’, or ‘rw’ (the default), as
for element.
in-properties
(optional) For frameworks that provide auto‐
matic support for a “properties” property,
indicates whether or not this property should
not be included. The value may be ‘yes’ (the
default) or ‘no’.
record-type A simple structure, as opposed to a class. (In C terms, a
“POD” or “plain old data” type.) Points, rectangles, and
print settings are all record-types.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*, property+
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
id As above.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
plural As for class.
WARNING: scriptSuite and scriptTerminology files do not sup‐
port record-type elements. You must use an sdef file
directly.
responds-to Defines a verb that a class responds to. Cocoa Scripting
only requires these in order to define a custom method for
handling a verb (see cocoa); they are otherwise purely for
documentation.
CONTAINS
implementation?
ATTRIBUTES
command The name or id of the verb. (This attribute
used to be called ‘name’; see History.)
hidden As above.
result The type of value generated when a verb is executed. If
there is no result, omit this element. result is a special
case of parameter; it has only ‘type’ and ‘description’
attributes and may not be hidden or optional.
suite A collection of related terms. Suites are purely an organi‐
zational aid to the user; they have no impact on scripts.
There is no technical limit on how many items a suite can
contain, but 10 to 15 items is considered a comfortable
size.
CONTAINS
implementation?, (class | command | enumeration | event |
record-type | value-type)+
ATTRIBUTES
name The name of the suite, which appears in the
dictionary display.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
synonym Defines an alternate term or code for the main element.
ATTRIBUTES
name The alternate name, which follows the rules
for terminology element names.
code The alternate code.
hidden As above.
At least one of ‘name’ or ‘code’ is required. Depending on
which attributes are present, the element will have differ‐
ent effects:
Name only
Use these to define an alternate term that may be used
at compile time. It will decompile as the main term.
For example, AppleScript uses “app” as a name-only syn‐
onym for “application”. Cocoa scriptTerminology files
do not support these; generate an ‘aete’ resource for
your application as well.
Code only
Use these when migrating from one code to another.
(Typically, this happens when correcting an older
version of the dictionary which used a non-standard
code.) Compiled scripts that use the synonym code will
decompile using the main term. Code-only synonyms are
implicitly hidden. Because of how Cocoa scriptSuite
files work, they must contain a cocoa element with a
‘method’ or ‘key’ attribute in order to generate a cor‐
rect scriptSuite file.
Name and Code
Use these to define an alternate term that is preserved
across compilation. Effectively, this is a separate
term that happens to act the same as the main one. As
with code-only synonyms, they must contain a cocoa ele‐
ment to generate a correct scriptSuite file.
Sdef synonym elements have nothing to do with ‘Synonyms’
sections in Cocoa's suite definition files. Those are a
trick to allow two different classes in the dictionary to
share the same implementation class; this is necessary
because suite definition files use the implementation class
name as a key. If you have two classes that happen to share
the same implementation, declare them separately, and point
their cocoa elements at the same class. sdp(1) will do the
right thing and generate a ‘Synonyms’ section for you.
type Any element that has a type attribute may instead have one
or more type elements. (Using both in the same element is
an error.) Using more than one type element indicates that
any of the types are allowed; using the ‘list’ attribute
indicates a list of the specified type. Using type elements
inside type elements, such as to express “list of list of
integer”, is not currently supported.
ATTRIBUTES
type As above.
list (optional) Indicates that the full type is a
list of the type specified by the ‘type’
attribute. May be ‘yes’ or ‘no’ (the
default).
hidden As above.
EXAMPLES
tabs (list of integer):
<property name="tabs">
<type type="integer" list="yes"/>
</property>
frequency (number or text):
<property name="frequency">
<type type="number"/>
<type type="text"/>
</property>
value-type A simple type definition. A value-type has no properties
and no elements accessible by your scripting; it is useful
for defining new basic types, such as an image.
CONTAINS
implementation?, synonym*
ATTRIBUTES
name As above.
id As above.
code As above.
description As above.
hidden As above.
plural As for class.
cocoa elements for value-type elements should declare the
backing Cocoa class (typically NSData) using the ‘class’
attribute, and may also declare the qualifier name using the
‘name’ attribute, but this is only used inside the script‐
Suite file. For example, an “image” type might be declared
like this:
<value-type name="image" code="PICT">
<cocoa class="NSData" name="Image"/>
</value-type>
xref A cross-reference. These are purely for documentation pur‐
poses; use one to refer to another suite child that is some‐
how related. For example, “open” might have a cross-refer‐
ence to “close”. The cross-referenced element does not need
to be of the same type as the original; a class may refer to
a command, for example.
ATTRIBUTES
target The name or id of the referenced item.
hidden As above.
EXAMPLES
/Developer/Examples/AppKit/Sketch.
SEE ALSOsdp(1), /System/Library/DTDs/sdef.dtd, TN2106: Scripting Interface Guide‐
lines ⟨http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn2002/tn2106.html⟩, Sdef
Scriptability Guide for Cocoa ⟨http://developer.apple.com/documentation/
Cocoa/Conceptual/ScriptableCocoaApplications⟩.
HISTORY
To upgrade an old sdef to the current format, you can use xsltproc(1)
with the supplied transform:
xsltproc /usr/share/sdef/upgrade.xsl my.sdef > upgraded.sdef
Changes in Mac OS X 10.8:
· Added access-group elements.
· Cocoa Scripting no longer requires cocoa elements for class,
parameter, responds-to, and value-type elements, and now uses default
values as described above.
Changes in Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard):
· Added xref elements.
· html elements (children of documentation elements) are now declared
to contain text, not XHTML elements. For example:
before: <html><b>Important</b><html>
after: <html><![CDATA[<b>Important</b>]]><html>
Both forms work in 10.4 and 10.5, but the former is now deprecated.
· The ‘name’ attribute of responds-to elements is now called ‘command’,
and may be an id or a name.
Changes in Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger):
· “collector” elements such as classes, types, and properties no longer
exist. Their former children should be moved to their immediate
ancestor element. In general, children may be freely mixed now. For
example, placing a command element next to a class element is per‐
fectly acceptable.
· Some primitive types changed their names: ‘string’ is now ‘text’,
‘object’ is now ‘specifier’, and ‘location’ is now ‘location
specifier’.
· Complex types such as ‘list of integer’ or ‘number or text’ are now
expressed using type elements, not complex strings. For example:
before:
<property name="tabs" type="list of integer"/>
after:
<property name="tabs">
<type type="integer" list="yes"/>
</property>
before:
<property name="frequency" type="number | text"/>
after:
<property name="frequency">
<type type="number"/>
<type type="text"/>
</property>
See the type documentation for complete details.
· Boolean attributes, that is, optional and hidden, now accept ‘yes’
and ‘no’ as values (formerly the attribute name, e.g.
‘hidden="hidden"’).
· The not-in-properties attribute is now named in-properties; its pos‐
sible values are ‘yes’ (the default) and ‘no’.
· cocoa elements of property and element elements now use a ‘key’
attribute (formerly ‘method’).
· The default Cocoa key for element elements is now the type's plural
(formerly its name).
Mac OS X August 30, 2006 Mac OS X