In a normal method call, a calling program determines which method of an object or a class needs to be called. As fixed handler method is not registered for every event, in case of event handling, the handler method determines the event that needs to be triggered.
An event of a class can trigger an event handler method of the same class by using the RAISE EVENT statement. For an event, the event handler method can be defined in the same or different class by using the FOR EVENT clause, as shown in the following syntax −
FOR EVENT <event_name> OF <class_name>.
Similar to the methods of a class, an event can have parameter interface but it has only output parameters. The output parameters are passed to the event handler method by the RAISE EVENT statement that receives them as input parameters. An event is linked to its handler method dynamically in a program by using the SET HANDLER statement.
When an event is triggered, appropriate event handler methods are supposed to be executed in all the handling classes.
Example
REPORT ZEVENT1.
CLASS CL_main DEFINITION.
PUBLIC SECTION.
DATA: num1 TYPE I.
METHODS: PRO IMPORTING num2 TYPE I.
EVENTS: CUTOFF.
ENDCLASS.
CLASS CL_eventhandler DEFINITION.
PUBLIC SECTION.
METHODS: handling_CUTOFF FOR EVENT CUTOFF OF CL_main.
ENDCLASS.
START-OF-SELECTION.
DATA: main1 TYPE REF TO CL_main.
DATA: eventhandler1 TYPE REF TO CL_eventhandler.
CREATE OBJECT main1.
CREATE OBJECT eventhandler1.
SET HANDLER eventhandler1→handling_CUTOFF FOR main1.
main1→PRO( 4 ).
CLASS CL_main IMPLEMENTATION.
METHOD PRO.
num1 = num2.
IF num2 ≥ 2.
RAISE EVENT CUTOFF.
ENDIF.
ENDMETHOD.
ENDCLASS.
CLASS CL_eventhandler IMPLEMENTATION.
METHOD handling_CUTOFF.
WRITE: 'Handling the CutOff'.
WRITE: / 'Event has been processed'.
ENDMETHOD. ENDCLASS.
The above code produces the following output:
Handling the CutOff
Event has been processed
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