]> git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blame - interface/wx/event.h
Added convenient wxCmdLineParser::AddLong{Option,Switch}() wrappers.
[wxWidgets.git] / interface / wx / event.h
CommitLineData
23324ae1
FM
1/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2// Name: event.h
6496345c 3// Purpose: interface of wxEvtHandler, wxEventBlocker and many
42013f4c 4// wxEvent-derived classes
23324ae1
FM
5// Author: wxWidgets team
6// RCS-ID: $Id$
526954c5 7// Licence: wxWindows licence
23324ae1
FM
8/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
9
d48b06bd
FM
10/**
11 The predefined constants for the number of times we propagate event
12 upwards window child-parent chain.
13*/
14enum wxEventPropagation
15{
16 /// don't propagate it at all
17 wxEVENT_PROPAGATE_NONE = 0,
18
19 /// propagate it until it is processed
20 wxEVENT_PROPAGATE_MAX = INT_MAX
21};
22
23/**
24 The different categories for a wxEvent; see wxEvent::GetEventCategory.
25
dde19c21 26 @note They are used as OR-combinable flags by wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor.
d48b06bd
FM
27*/
28enum wxEventCategory
29{
30 /**
31 This is the category for those events which are generated to update
32 the appearance of the GUI but which (usually) do not comport data
33 processing, i.e. which do not provide input or output data
34 (e.g. size events, scroll events, etc).
35 They are events NOT directly generated by the user's input devices.
36 */
37 wxEVT_CATEGORY_UI = 1,
38
39 /**
40 This category groups those events which are generated directly from the
41 user through input devices like mouse and keyboard and usually result in
42 data to be processed from the application
43 (e.g. mouse clicks, key presses, etc).
44 */
45 wxEVT_CATEGORY_USER_INPUT = 2,
46
47 /// This category is for wxSocketEvent
48 wxEVT_CATEGORY_SOCKET = 4,
49
50 /// This category is for wxTimerEvent
51 wxEVT_CATEGORY_TIMER = 8,
52
53 /**
54 This category is for any event used to send notifications from the
55 secondary threads to the main one or in general for notifications among
56 different threads (which may or may not be user-generated).
22d17afa 57 See e.g. wxThreadEvent.
d48b06bd
FM
58 */
59 wxEVT_CATEGORY_THREAD = 16,
60
61 /**
dde19c21
FM
62 This mask is used in wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor to specify that all event
63 categories should be processed.
d48b06bd
FM
64 */
65 wxEVT_CATEGORY_ALL =
66 wxEVT_CATEGORY_UI|wxEVT_CATEGORY_USER_INPUT|wxEVT_CATEGORY_SOCKET| \
67 wxEVT_CATEGORY_TIMER|wxEVT_CATEGORY_THREAD
68};
7c913512 69
42013f4c
FM
70/**
71 @class wxEvent
7c913512 72
42013f4c
FM
73 An event is a structure holding information about an event passed to a
74 callback or member function.
1f1d2182 75
42013f4c
FM
76 wxEvent used to be a multipurpose event object, and is an abstract base class
77 for other event classes (see below).
1f1d2182 78
3e083d65 79 For more information about events, see the @ref overview_events overview.
1f1d2182 80
42013f4c
FM
81 @beginWxPerlOnly
82 In wxPerl custom event classes should be derived from
83 @c Wx::PlEvent and @c Wx::PlCommandEvent.
84 @endWxPerlOnly
1f1d2182 85
42013f4c 86 @library{wxbase}
23324ae1 87 @category{events}
42013f4c
FM
88
89 @see wxCommandEvent, wxMouseEvent
23324ae1 90*/
42013f4c 91class wxEvent : public wxObject
23324ae1
FM
92{
93public:
94 /**
707aaf17
VZ
95 Constructor.
96
97 Notice that events are usually created by wxWidgets itself and creating
98 e.g. a wxPaintEvent in your code and sending it to e.g. a wxTextCtrl
99 will not usually affect it at all as native controls have no specific
100 knowledge about wxWidgets events. However you may construct objects of
101 specific types and pass them to wxEvtHandler::ProcessEvent() if you
102 want to create your own custom control and want to process its events
103 in the same manner as the standard ones.
104
105 Also please notice that the order of parameters in this constructor is
106 different from almost all the derived classes which specify the event
107 type as the first argument.
108
109 @param id
110 The identifier of the object (window, timer, ...) which generated
111 this event.
112 @param eventType
3a194bda
SL
113 The unique type of event, e.g. @c wxEVT_PAINT, @c wxEVT_SIZE or
114 @c wxEVT_COMMAND_BUTTON_CLICKED.
23324ae1 115 */
42013f4c 116 wxEvent(int id = 0, wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL);
23324ae1
FM
117
118 /**
42013f4c 119 Returns a copy of the event.
1f1d2182 120
c3f94162 121 Any event that is posted to the wxWidgets event system for later action
cf2918d4
FM
122 (via wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent, wxEvtHandler::QueueEvent or wxPostEvent())
123 must implement this method.
42013f4c
FM
124
125 All wxWidgets events fully implement this method, but any derived events
126 implemented by the user should also implement this method just in case they
127 (or some event derived from them) are ever posted.
128
129 All wxWidgets events implement a copy constructor, so the easiest way of
130 implementing the Clone function is to implement a copy constructor for
131 a new event (call it MyEvent) and then define the Clone function like this:
132
133 @code
134 wxEvent *Clone() const { return new MyEvent(*this); }
135 @endcode
23324ae1 136 */
42013f4c 137 virtual wxEvent* Clone() const = 0;
23324ae1
FM
138
139 /**
42013f4c 140 Returns the object (usually a window) associated with the event, if any.
23324ae1 141 */
42013f4c 142 wxObject* GetEventObject() const;
23324ae1
FM
143
144 /**
42013f4c 145 Returns the identifier of the given event type, such as @c wxEVT_COMMAND_BUTTON_CLICKED.
23324ae1 146 */
42013f4c 147 wxEventType GetEventType() const;
23324ae1 148
d48b06bd
FM
149 /**
150 Returns a generic category for this event.
3a567740 151 wxEvent implementation returns @c wxEVT_CATEGORY_UI by default.
d48b06bd 152
dde19c21 153 This function is used to selectively process events in wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor.
d48b06bd
FM
154 */
155 virtual wxEventCategory GetEventCategory() const;
156
23324ae1 157 /**
42013f4c 158 Returns the identifier associated with this event, such as a button command id.
23324ae1 159 */
42013f4c 160 int GetId() const;
23324ae1
FM
161
162 /**
42013f4c 163 Returns @true if the event handler should be skipped, @false otherwise.
23324ae1 164 */
42013f4c 165 bool GetSkipped() const;
23324ae1 166
23324ae1 167 /**
42013f4c
FM
168 Gets the timestamp for the event. The timestamp is the time in milliseconds
169 since some fixed moment (not necessarily the standard Unix Epoch, so only
170 differences between the timestamps and not their absolute values usually make sense).
3c52ef94
FM
171
172 @warning
173 wxWidgets returns a non-NULL timestamp only for mouse and key events
174 (see wxMouseEvent and wxKeyEvent).
23324ae1 175 */
42013f4c 176 long GetTimestamp() const;
23324ae1
FM
177
178 /**
42013f4c 179 Returns @true if the event is or is derived from wxCommandEvent else it returns @false.
1f1d2182 180
42013f4c 181 @note exists only for optimization purposes.
23324ae1 182 */
42013f4c 183 bool IsCommandEvent() const;
23324ae1
FM
184
185 /**
42013f4c
FM
186 Sets the propagation level to the given value (for example returned from an
187 earlier call to wxEvent::StopPropagation).
188 */
189 void ResumePropagation(int propagationLevel);
1f1d2182 190
42013f4c
FM
191 /**
192 Sets the originating object.
23324ae1 193 */
42013f4c 194 void SetEventObject(wxObject* object);
23324ae1
FM
195
196 /**
42013f4c
FM
197 Sets the event type.
198 */
199 void SetEventType(wxEventType type);
1f1d2182 200
42013f4c
FM
201 /**
202 Sets the identifier associated with this event, such as a button command id.
23324ae1 203 */
42013f4c 204 void SetId(int id);
23324ae1
FM
205
206 /**
42013f4c 207 Sets the timestamp for the event.
23324ae1 208 */
3c52ef94 209 void SetTimestamp(long timeStamp = 0);
23324ae1
FM
210
211 /**
42013f4c
FM
212 Test if this event should be propagated or not, i.e. if the propagation level
213 is currently greater than 0.
23324ae1 214 */
42013f4c 215 bool ShouldPropagate() const;
23324ae1
FM
216
217 /**
42013f4c
FM
218 This method can be used inside an event handler to control whether further
219 event handlers bound to this event will be called after the current one returns.
1f1d2182 220
42013f4c
FM
221 Without Skip() (or equivalently if Skip(@false) is used), the event will not
222 be processed any more. If Skip(@true) is called, the event processing system
223 continues searching for a further handler function for this event, even though
224 it has been processed already in the current handler.
225
226 In general, it is recommended to skip all non-command events to allow the
227 default handling to take place. The command events are, however, normally not
228 skipped as usually a single command such as a button click or menu item
229 selection must only be processed by one handler.
23324ae1 230 */
42013f4c 231 void Skip(bool skip = true);
23324ae1
FM
232
233 /**
42013f4c 234 Stop the event from propagating to its parent window.
1f1d2182 235
42013f4c
FM
236 Returns the old propagation level value which may be later passed to
237 ResumePropagation() to allow propagating the event again.
23324ae1 238 */
42013f4c 239 int StopPropagation();
23324ae1 240
42013f4c 241protected:
23324ae1 242 /**
42013f4c 243 Indicates how many levels the event can propagate.
23324ae1 244
42013f4c
FM
245 This member is protected and should typically only be set in the constructors
246 of the derived classes. It may be temporarily changed by StopPropagation()
247 and ResumePropagation() and tested with ShouldPropagate().
23324ae1 248
42013f4c
FM
249 The initial value is set to either @c wxEVENT_PROPAGATE_NONE (by default)
250 meaning that the event shouldn't be propagated at all or to
251 @c wxEVENT_PROPAGATE_MAX (for command events) meaning that it should be
252 propagated as much as necessary.
23324ae1 253
42013f4c
FM
254 Any positive number means that the event should be propagated but no more than
255 the given number of times. E.g. the propagation level may be set to 1 to
256 propagate the event to its parent only, but not to its grandparent.
257 */
258 int m_propagationLevel;
259};
e54c96f1 260
23324ae1 261/**
42013f4c 262 @class wxEventBlocker
7c913512 263
42013f4c
FM
264 This class is a special event handler which allows to discard
265 any event (or a set of event types) directed to a specific window.
7c913512 266
42013f4c
FM
267 Example:
268
269 @code
270 void MyWindow::DoSomething()
271 {
272 {
273 // block all events directed to this window while
274 // we do the 1000 FunctionWhichSendsEvents() calls
275 wxEventBlocker blocker(this);
276
277 for ( int i = 0; i 1000; i++ )
278 FunctionWhichSendsEvents(i);
279
280 } // ~wxEventBlocker called, old event handler is restored
281
282 // the event generated by this call will be processed:
283 FunctionWhichSendsEvents(0)
284 }
285 @endcode
1f1d2182 286
23324ae1
FM
287 @library{wxcore}
288 @category{events}
7c913512 289
3e083d65 290 @see @ref overview_events_processing, wxEvtHandler
23324ae1 291*/
42013f4c 292class wxEventBlocker : public wxEvtHandler
23324ae1
FM
293{
294public:
295 /**
42013f4c 296 Constructs the blocker for the given window and for the given event type.
23324ae1 297
42013f4c
FM
298 If @a type is @c wxEVT_ANY, then all events for that window are blocked.
299 You can call Block() after creation to add other event types to the list
300 of events to block.
3c4f71cc 301
42013f4c
FM
302 Note that the @a win window @b must remain alive until the
303 wxEventBlocker object destruction.
23324ae1 304 */
5e6e278d 305 wxEventBlocker(wxWindow* win, wxEventType type = -1);
23324ae1
FM
306
307 /**
42013f4c
FM
308 Destructor. The blocker will remove itself from the chain of event handlers for
309 the window provided in the constructor, thus restoring normal processing of events.
23324ae1 310 */
42013f4c 311 virtual ~wxEventBlocker();
23324ae1
FM
312
313 /**
42013f4c 314 Adds to the list of event types which should be blocked the given @a eventType.
23324ae1 315 */
42013f4c
FM
316 void Block(wxEventType eventType);
317};
23324ae1 318
1f1d2182 319
42013f4c 320
d775ec48
RD
321/**
322 Helper class to temporarily change an event to not propagate.
323*/
324class wxPropagationDisabler
325{
326public:
327 wxPropagationDisabler(wxEvent& event);
328 ~wxPropagationDisabler();
329};
330
331
332/**
333 Helper class to temporarily lower propagation level.
334*/
335class wxPropagateOnce
336{
337public:
338 wxPropagateOnce(wxEvent& event);
339 ~wxPropagateOnce();
340};
341
342
343
42013f4c
FM
344/**
345 @class wxEvtHandler
42013f4c
FM
346
347 A class that can handle events from the windowing system.
6496345c 348 wxWindow is (and therefore all window classes are) derived from this class.
42013f4c
FM
349
350 When events are received, wxEvtHandler invokes the method listed in the
7f853dd0 351 event table using itself as the object. When using multiple inheritance
6496345c
FM
352 <b>it is imperative that the wxEvtHandler(-derived) class is the first
353 class inherited</b> such that the @c this pointer for the overall object
354 will be identical to the @c this pointer of the wxEvtHandler portion.
42013f4c
FM
355
356 @library{wxbase}
357 @category{events}
358
8e40ed85 359 @see @ref overview_events_processing, wxEventBlocker, wxEventLoopBase
42013f4c 360*/
9de71074 361class wxEvtHandler : public wxObject, public wxTrackable
42013f4c
FM
362{
363public:
364 /**
365 Constructor.
23324ae1 366 */
42013f4c 367 wxEvtHandler();
23324ae1
FM
368
369 /**
42013f4c 370 Destructor.
1f1d2182 371
7f853dd0
FM
372 If the handler is part of a chain, the destructor will unlink itself
373 (see Unlink()).
23324ae1 374 */
42013f4c 375 virtual ~wxEvtHandler();
23324ae1 376
db82d78b
FM
377
378 /**
379 @name Event queuing and processing
380 */
381 //@{
382
23324ae1 383 /**
c3f94162
VZ
384 Queue event for a later processing.
385
386 This method is similar to ProcessEvent() but while the latter is
387 synchronous, i.e. the event is processed immediately, before the
388 function returns, this one is asynchronous and returns immediately
389 while the event will be processed at some later time (usually during
390 the next event loop iteration).
391
392 Another important difference is that this method takes ownership of the
393 @a event parameter, i.e. it will delete it itself. This implies that
394 the event should be allocated on the heap and that the pointer can't be
395 used any more after the function returns (as it can be deleted at any
396 moment).
397
398 QueueEvent() can be used for inter-thread communication from the worker
399 threads to the main thread, it is safe in the sense that it uses
400 locking internally and avoids the problem mentioned in AddPendingEvent()
401 documentation by ensuring that the @a event object is not used by the
402 calling thread any more. Care should still be taken to avoid that some
403 fields of this object are used by it, notably any wxString members of
404 the event object must not be shallow copies of another wxString object
405 as this would result in them still using the same string buffer behind
22d17afa 406 the scenes. For example:
c3f94162
VZ
407 @code
408 void FunctionInAWorkerThread(const wxString& str)
409 {
36a2d2c4 410 wxCommandEvent* evt = new wxCommandEvent;
42013f4c 411
36a2d2c4
RR
412 // NOT evt->SetString(str) as this would be a shallow copy
413 evt->SetString(str.c_str()); // make a deep copy
42013f4c 414
36a2d2c4 415 wxTheApp->QueueEvent( evt );
c3f94162
VZ
416 }
417 @endcode
42013f4c 418
22d17afa
FM
419 Note that you can use wxThreadEvent instead of wxCommandEvent
420 to avoid this problem:
421 @code
422 void FunctionInAWorkerThread(const wxString& str)
423 {
424 wxThreadEvent evt;
425 evt->SetString(str);
426
427 // wxThreadEvent::Clone() makes sure that the internal wxString
428 // member is not shared by other wxString instances:
429 wxTheApp->QueueEvent( evt.Clone() );
430 }
431 @endcode
432
c3f94162
VZ
433 Finally notice that this method automatically wakes up the event loop
434 if it is currently idle by calling ::wxWakeUpIdle() so there is no need
435 to do it manually when using it.
42013f4c 436
c3f94162 437 @since 2.9.0
42013f4c
FM
438
439 @param event
c3f94162
VZ
440 A heap-allocated event to be queued, QueueEvent() takes ownership
441 of it. This parameter shouldn't be @c NULL.
442 */
443 virtual void QueueEvent(wxEvent *event);
444
445 /**
446 Post an event to be processed later.
447
448 This function is similar to QueueEvent() but can't be used to post
449 events from worker threads for the event objects with wxString fields
450 (i.e. in practice most of them) because of an unsafe use of the same
451 wxString object which happens because the wxString field in the
452 original @a event object and its copy made internally by this function
453 share the same string buffer internally. Use QueueEvent() to avoid
f1d5aa12 454 this.
c3f94162 455
bb69632a 456 A copy of @a event is made by the function, so the original can be deleted
c3f94162
VZ
457 as soon as function returns (it is common that the original is created
458 on the stack). This requires that the wxEvent::Clone() method be
459 implemented by event so that it can be duplicated and stored until it
460 gets processed.
461
462 @param event
463 Event to add to the pending events queue.
23324ae1 464 */
42013f4c 465 virtual void AddPendingEvent(const wxEvent& event);
23324ae1 466
db82d78b
FM
467 /**
468 Processes an event, searching event tables and calling zero or more suitable
469 event handler function(s).
470
471 Normally, your application would not call this function: it is called in the
472 wxWidgets implementation to dispatch incoming user interface events to the
473 framework (and application).
474
475 However, you might need to call it if implementing new functionality
476 (such as a new control) where you define new event types, as opposed to
477 allowing the user to override virtual functions.
478
8cc208e3
VZ
479 Notice that you don't usually need to override ProcessEvent() to
480 customize the event handling, overriding the specially provided
481 TryBefore() and TryAfter() functions is usually enough. For example,
482 wxMDIParentFrame may override TryBefore() to ensure that the menu
483 events are processed in the active child frame before being processed
484 in the parent frame itself.
db82d78b
FM
485
486 The normal order of event table searching is as follows:
8cc208e3
VZ
487 -# wxApp::FilterEvent() is called. If it returns anything but @c -1
488 (default) the processing stops here.
8cc208e3
VZ
489 -# TryBefore() is called (this is where wxValidator are taken into
490 account for wxWindow objects). If this returns @true, the function exits.
255ea4a7
VZ
491 -# If the object is disabled (via a call to wxEvtHandler::SetEvtHandlerEnabled)
492 the function skips to step (7).
fde702ea 493 -# Dynamic event table of the handlers bound using Bind<>() is
8cc208e3
VZ
494 searched. If a handler is found, it is executed and the function
495 returns @true unless the handler used wxEvent::Skip() to indicate
496 that it didn't handle the event in which case the search continues.
fde702ea 497 -# Static events table of the handlers bound using event table
8cc208e3 498 macros is searched for this event handler. If this fails, the base
57ab6f23 499 class event table is tried, and so on until no more tables
8cc208e3
VZ
500 exist or an appropriate function was found. If a handler is found,
501 the same logic as in the previous step applies.
db82d78b 502 -# The search is applied down the entire chain of event handlers (usually the
7f853dd0 503 chain has a length of one). This chain can be formed using wxEvtHandler::SetNextHandler():
830b7aa7 504 @image html overview_events_chain.png
7f853dd0
FM
505 (referring to the image, if @c A->ProcessEvent is called and it doesn't handle
506 the event, @c B->ProcessEvent will be called and so on...).
507 Note that in the case of wxWindow you can build a stack of event handlers
508 (see wxWindow::PushEventHandler() for more info).
509 If any of the handlers of the chain return @true, the function exits.
8cc208e3
VZ
510 -# TryAfter() is called: for the wxWindow object this may propagate the
511 event to the window parent (recursively). If the event is still not
512 processed, ProcessEvent() on wxTheApp object is called as the last
513 step.
514
3cbb9df8
VZ
515 Notice that steps (2)-(6) are performed in ProcessEventLocally()
516 which is called by this function.
db82d78b
FM
517
518 @param event
519 Event to process.
8cc208e3
VZ
520 @return
521 @true if a suitable event handler function was found and executed,
522 and the function did not call wxEvent::Skip.
db82d78b
FM
523
524 @see SearchEventTable()
525 */
526 virtual bool ProcessEvent(wxEvent& event);
527
3cbb9df8
VZ
528 /**
529 Try to process the event in this handler and all those chained to it.
530
531 As explained in ProcessEvent() documentation, the event handlers may be
532 chained in a doubly-linked list. This function tries to process the
533 event in this handler (including performing any pre-processing done in
534 TryBefore(), e.g. applying validators) and all those following it in
535 the chain until the event is processed or the chain is exhausted.
536
537 This function is called from ProcessEvent() and, in turn, calls
512220b6
VZ
538 TryThis() for each handler in turn. It is not virtual and so cannot be
539 overridden but can, and should, be called to forward an event to
540 another handler instead of ProcessEvent() which would result in a
3cbb9df8
VZ
541 duplicate call to TryAfter(), e.g. resulting in all unprocessed events
542 being sent to the application object multiple times.
543
544 @since 2.9.1
545
546 @param event
547 Event to process.
548 @return
549 @true if this handler of one of those chained to it processed the
550 event.
551 */
552 bool ProcessEventLocally(wxEvent& event);
553
db82d78b
FM
554 /**
555 Processes an event by calling ProcessEvent() and handles any exceptions
556 that occur in the process.
557 If an exception is thrown in event handler, wxApp::OnExceptionInMainLoop is called.
558
559 @param event
560 Event to process.
561
562 @return @true if the event was processed, @false if no handler was found
563 or an exception was thrown.
564
565 @see wxWindow::HandleWindowEvent
566 */
567 bool SafelyProcessEvent(wxEvent& event);
04a7eed1 568
cae9e7b1 569 /**
04a7eed1 570 Processes the pending events previously queued using QueueEvent() or
cae9e7b1
FM
571 AddPendingEvent(); you must call this function only if you are sure
572 there are pending events for this handler, otherwise a @c wxCHECK
573 will fail.
04a7eed1 574
cae9e7b1
FM
575 The real processing still happens in ProcessEvent() which is called by this
576 function.
04a7eed1
VZ
577
578 Note that this function needs a valid application object (see
cae9e7b1
FM
579 wxAppConsole::GetInstance()) because wxApp holds the list of the event
580 handlers with pending events and this function manipulates that list.
581 */
582 void ProcessPendingEvents();
db82d78b 583
cae9e7b1
FM
584 /**
585 Deletes all events queued on this event handler using QueueEvent() or
586 AddPendingEvent().
04a7eed1 587
cae9e7b1
FM
588 Use with care because the events which are deleted are (obviously) not
589 processed and this may have unwanted consequences (e.g. user actions events
590 will be lost).
591 */
592 void DeletePendingEvents();
04a7eed1 593
db82d78b
FM
594 /**
595 Searches the event table, executing an event handler function if an appropriate
596 one is found.
597
598 @param table
599 Event table to be searched.
600 @param event
601 Event to be matched against an event table entry.
602
603 @return @true if a suitable event handler function was found and
604 executed, and the function did not call wxEvent::Skip.
605
606 @remarks This function looks through the object's event table and tries
607 to find an entry that will match the event.
608 An entry will match if:
609 @li The event type matches, and
610 @li the identifier or identifier range matches, or the event table
611 entry's identifier is zero.
612
613 If a suitable function is called but calls wxEvent::Skip, this
614 function will fail, and searching will continue.
04a7eed1 615
cae9e7b1
FM
616 @todo this function in the header is listed as an "implementation only" function;
617 are we sure we want to document it?
db82d78b
FM
618
619 @see ProcessEvent()
620 */
621 virtual bool SearchEventTable(wxEventTable& table,
622 wxEvent& event);
623
624 //@}
625
626
627 /**
628 @name Connecting and disconnecting
629 */
630 //@{
631
23324ae1 632 /**
6c5e1aa7
VZ
633 Connects the given function dynamically with the event handler, id and
634 event type.
42013f4c 635
04a7eed1
VZ
636 Notice that Bind() provides a more flexible and safer way to do the
637 same thing as Connect(), please use it in any new code -- while
638 Connect() is not formally deprecated due to its existing widespread
639 usage, it has no advantages compared to Bind().
640
6c5e1aa7
VZ
641 This is an alternative to the use of static event tables. It is more
642 flexible as it allows to connect events generated by some object to an
643 event handler defined in a different object of a different class (which
644 is impossible to do directly with the event tables -- the events can be
645 only handled in another object if they are propagated upwards to it).
646 Do make sure to specify the correct @a eventSink when connecting to an
647 event of a different object.
648
04a7eed1 649 See @ref overview_events_bind for more detailed explanation
6c5e1aa7
VZ
650 of this function and the @ref page_samples_event sample for usage
651 examples.
42013f4c
FM
652
653 This specific overload allows you to connect an event handler to a @e range
654 of @e source IDs.
655 Do not confuse @e source IDs with event @e types: source IDs identify the
656 event generator objects (typically wxMenuItem or wxWindow objects) while the
657 event @e type identify which type of events should be handled by the
658 given @e function (an event generator object may generate many different
659 types of events!).
660
661 @param id
662 The first ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
663 handler function.
664 @param lastId
665 The last ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
666 handler function.
667 @param eventType
668 The event type to be associated with this event handler.
669 @param function
670 The event handler function. Note that this function should
671 be explicitly converted to the correct type which can be done using a macro
672 called @c wxFooEventHandler for the handler for any @c wxFooEvent.
673 @param userData
674 Data to be associated with the event table entry.
675 @param eventSink
6c5e1aa7
VZ
676 Object whose member function should be called. It must be specified
677 when connecting an event generated by one object to a member
678 function of a different object. If it is omitted, @c this is used.
04a7eed1 679
1058f652
MB
680 @beginWxPerlOnly
681 In wxPerl this function takes 4 arguments: @a id, @a lastid,
682 @a type, @a method; if @a method is undef, the handler is
683 disconnected.}
684 @endWxPerlOnly
685
04a7eed1 686 @see Bind<>()
23324ae1 687 */
42013f4c
FM
688 void Connect(int id, int lastId, wxEventType eventType,
689 wxObjectEventFunction function,
690 wxObject* userData = NULL,
691 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
692
693 /**
42013f4c
FM
694 See the Connect(int, int, wxEventType, wxObjectEventFunction, wxObject*, wxEvtHandler*)
695 overload for more info.
696
697 This overload can be used to attach an event handler to a single source ID:
698
699 Example:
700 @code
701 frame->Connect( wxID_EXIT,
702 wxEVT_COMMAND_MENU_SELECTED,
703 wxCommandEventHandler(MyFrame::OnQuit) );
704 @endcode
1058f652
MB
705
706 @beginWxPerlOnly
707 Not supported by wxPerl.
708 @endWxPerlOnly
23324ae1 709 */
42013f4c
FM
710 void Connect(int id, wxEventType eventType,
711 wxObjectEventFunction function,
712 wxObject* userData = NULL,
713 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
714
715 /**
42013f4c
FM
716 See the Connect(int, int, wxEventType, wxObjectEventFunction, wxObject*, wxEvtHandler*)
717 overload for more info.
718
719 This overload will connect the given event handler so that regardless of the
720 ID of the event source, the handler will be called.
1058f652
MB
721
722 @beginWxPerlOnly
723 Not supported by wxPerl.
724 @endWxPerlOnly
23324ae1 725 */
42013f4c
FM
726 void Connect(wxEventType eventType,
727 wxObjectEventFunction function,
728 wxObject* userData = NULL,
729 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
730
731 /**
42013f4c
FM
732 Disconnects the given function dynamically from the event handler, using the
733 specified parameters as search criteria and returning @true if a matching
734 function has been found and removed.
735
736 This method can only disconnect functions which have been added using the
737 Connect() method. There is no way to disconnect functions connected using
738 the (static) event tables.
739
740 @param eventType
741 The event type associated with this event handler.
742 @param function
743 The event handler function.
744 @param userData
745 Data associated with the event table entry.
746 @param eventSink
747 Object whose member function should be called.
1058f652
MB
748
749 @beginWxPerlOnly
750 Not supported by wxPerl.
751 @endWxPerlOnly
23324ae1 752 */
a44f3b5a
FM
753 bool Disconnect(wxEventType eventType,
754 wxObjectEventFunction function,
42013f4c
FM
755 wxObject* userData = NULL,
756 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
757
758 /**
42013f4c
FM
759 See the Disconnect(wxEventType, wxObjectEventFunction, wxObject*, wxEvtHandler*)
760 overload for more info.
23324ae1 761
42013f4c 762 This overload takes the additional @a id parameter.
1058f652
MB
763
764 @beginWxPerlOnly
765 Not supported by wxPerl.
766 @endWxPerlOnly
42013f4c
FM
767 */
768 bool Disconnect(int id = wxID_ANY,
769 wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL,
770 wxObjectEventFunction function = NULL,
771 wxObject* userData = NULL,
772 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
23324ae1 773
42013f4c
FM
774 /**
775 See the Disconnect(wxEventType, wxObjectEventFunction, wxObject*, wxEvtHandler*)
776 overload for more info.
e54c96f1 777
42013f4c 778 This overload takes an additional range of source IDs.
1058f652
MB
779
780 @beginWxPerlOnly
781 In wxPerl this function takes 3 arguments: @a id,
782 @a lastid, @a type.
783 @endWxPerlOnly
42013f4c 784 */
a44f3b5a
FM
785 bool Disconnect(int id, int lastId,
786 wxEventType eventType,
42013f4c
FM
787 wxObjectEventFunction function = NULL,
788 wxObject* userData = NULL,
789 wxEvtHandler* eventSink = NULL);
db82d78b
FM
790 //@}
791
792
04a7eed1
VZ
793 /**
794 @name Binding and Unbinding
795 */
796 //@{
797
798 /**
799 Binds the given function, functor or method dynamically with the event.
800
801 This offers basically the same functionality as Connect(), but it is
802 more flexible as it also allows you to use ordinary functions and
803 arbitrary functors as event handlers. It is also less restrictive then
804 Connect() because you can use an arbitrary method as an event handler,
57ab6f23 805 whereas Connect() requires a wxEvtHandler derived handler.
04a7eed1
VZ
806
807 See @ref overview_events_bind for more detailed explanation
808 of this function and the @ref page_samples_event sample for usage
809 examples.
810
811 @param eventType
812 The event type to be associated with this event handler.
813 @param functor
814 The event handler functor. This can be an ordinary function but also
815 an arbitrary functor like boost::function<>.
816 @param id
817 The first ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
818 handler.
819 @param lastId
820 The last ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
821 handler.
822 @param userData
823 Data to be associated with the event table entry.
824
eb23d11e
JS
825 @see @ref overview_cpp_rtti_disabled
826
04a7eed1
VZ
827 @since 2.9.0
828 */
829 template <typename EventTag, typename Functor>
830 void Bind(const EventTag& eventType,
831 Functor functor,
832 int id = wxID_ANY,
833 int lastId = wxID_ANY,
834 wxObject *userData = NULL);
835
836 /**
837 See the Bind<>(const EventTag&, Functor, int, int, wxObject*) overload for
838 more info.
839
840 This overload will bind the given method as the event handler.
841
842 @param eventType
843 The event type to be associated with this event handler.
844 @param method
845 The event handler method. This can be an arbitrary method (doesn't need
846 to be from a wxEvtHandler derived class).
847 @param handler
848 Object whose method should be called. It must always be specified
849 so it can be checked at compile time whether the given method is an
850 actual member of the given handler.
851 @param id
852 The first ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
853 handler.
854 @param lastId
855 The last ID of the identifier range to be associated with the event
856 handler.
857 @param userData
858 Data to be associated with the event table entry.
859
eb23d11e
JS
860 @see @ref overview_cpp_rtti_disabled
861
04a7eed1
VZ
862 @since 2.9.0
863 */
864 template <typename EventTag, typename Class, typename EventArg, typename EventHandler>
865 void Bind(const EventTag &eventType,
866 void (Class::*method)(EventArg &),
867 EventHandler *handler,
868 int id = wxID_ANY,
869 int lastId = wxID_ANY,
870 wxObject *userData = NULL);
871 /**
872 Unbinds the given function, functor or method dynamically from the
873 event handler, using the specified parameters as search criteria and
874 returning @true if a matching function has been found and removed.
875
876 This method can only unbind functions, functors or methods which have
877 been added using the Bind<>() method. There is no way to unbind
fde702ea 878 functions bound using the (static) event tables.
04a7eed1
VZ
879
880 @param eventType
881 The event type associated with this event handler.
882 @param functor
883 The event handler functor. This can be an ordinary function but also
884 an arbitrary functor like boost::function<>.
885 @param id
886 The first ID of the identifier range associated with the event
887 handler.
888 @param lastId
889 The last ID of the identifier range associated with the event
890 handler.
891 @param userData
892 Data associated with the event table entry.
893
eb23d11e
JS
894 @see @ref overview_cpp_rtti_disabled
895
04a7eed1
VZ
896 @since 2.9.0
897 */
898 template <typename EventTag, typename Functor>
899 bool Unbind(const EventTag& eventType,
900 Functor functor,
901 int id = wxID_ANY,
902 int lastId = wxID_ANY,
903 wxObject *userData = NULL);
904
905 /**
906 See the Unbind<>(const EventTag&, Functor, int, int, wxObject*)
907 overload for more info.
908
909 This overload unbinds the given method from the event..
910
911 @param eventType
912 The event type associated with this event handler.
913 @param method
914 The event handler method associated with this event.
915 @param handler
916 Object whose method was called.
917 @param id
918 The first ID of the identifier range associated with the event
919 handler.
920 @param lastId
921 The last ID of the identifier range associated with the event
922 handler.
923 @param userData
924 Data associated with the event table entry.
925
eb23d11e
JS
926 @see @ref overview_cpp_rtti_disabled
927
04a7eed1
VZ
928 @since 2.9.0
929 */
930 template <typename EventTag, typename Class, typename EventArg, typename EventHandler>
931 bool Unbind(const EventTag &eventType,
932 void (Class::*method)(EventArg&),
933 EventHandler *handler,
934 int id = wxID_ANY,
935 int lastId = wxID_ANY,
936 wxObject *userData = NULL );
937 //@}
db82d78b
FM
938 /**
939 @name User-supplied data
940 */
941 //@{
7c913512 942
42013f4c
FM
943 /**
944 Returns user-supplied client data.
7c913512 945
42013f4c
FM
946 @remarks Normally, any extra data the programmer wishes to associate with
947 the object should be made available by deriving a new class with
948 new data members.
1f1d2182 949
42013f4c
FM
950 @see SetClientData()
951 */
952 void* GetClientData() const;
1f1d2182 953
42013f4c
FM
954 /**
955 Returns a pointer to the user-supplied client data object.
1f1d2182 956
42013f4c
FM
957 @see SetClientObject(), wxClientData
958 */
959 wxClientData* GetClientObject() const;
7c913512 960
23324ae1 961 /**
db82d78b 962 Sets user-supplied client data.
42013f4c 963
db82d78b
FM
964 @param data
965 Data to be associated with the event handler.
23324ae1 966
db82d78b
FM
967 @remarks Normally, any extra data the programmer wishes to associate
968 with the object should be made available by deriving a new
969 class with new data members. You must not call this method
970 and SetClientObject on the same class - only one of them.
1f1d2182 971
db82d78b 972 @see GetClientData()
23324ae1 973 */
db82d78b 974 void SetClientData(void* data);
23324ae1
FM
975
976 /**
db82d78b 977 Set the client data object. Any previous object will be deleted.
1f1d2182 978
db82d78b 979 @see GetClientObject(), wxClientData
23324ae1 980 */
db82d78b 981 void SetClientObject(wxClientData* data);
7c913512 982
db82d78b 983 //@}
7c913512 984
1f1d2182 985
42013f4c 986 /**
7f853dd0
FM
987 @name Event handler chaining
988
989 wxEvtHandler can be arranged in a double-linked list of handlers
990 which is automatically iterated by ProcessEvent() if needed.
23324ae1 991 */
db82d78b 992 //@{
23324ae1 993
42013f4c 994 /**
db82d78b 995 Returns @true if the event handler is enabled, @false otherwise.
1f1d2182 996
db82d78b 997 @see SetEvtHandlerEnabled()
42013f4c 998 */
db82d78b 999 bool GetEvtHandlerEnabled() const;
7c913512 1000
42013f4c 1001 /**
db82d78b 1002 Returns the pointer to the next handler in the chain.
42013f4c 1003
db82d78b
FM
1004 @see SetNextHandler(), GetPreviousHandler(), SetPreviousHandler(),
1005 wxWindow::PushEventHandler, wxWindow::PopEventHandler
42013f4c 1006 */
db82d78b 1007 wxEvtHandler* GetNextHandler() const;
7c913512 1008
23324ae1 1009 /**
db82d78b 1010 Returns the pointer to the previous handler in the chain.
42013f4c 1011
db82d78b
FM
1012 @see SetPreviousHandler(), GetNextHandler(), SetNextHandler(),
1013 wxWindow::PushEventHandler, wxWindow::PopEventHandler
23324ae1 1014 */
db82d78b 1015 wxEvtHandler* GetPreviousHandler() const;
42013f4c
FM
1016
1017 /**
1018 Enables or disables the event handler.
1019
1020 @param enabled
1021 @true if the event handler is to be enabled, @false if it is to be disabled.
1022
1023 @remarks You can use this function to avoid having to remove the event
1024 handler from the chain, for example when implementing a
1025 dialog editor and changing from edit to test mode.
1026
1027 @see GetEvtHandlerEnabled()
1028 */
1029 void SetEvtHandlerEnabled(bool enabled);
23324ae1 1030
42013f4c
FM
1031 /**
1032 Sets the pointer to the next handler.
1033
7f853dd0
FM
1034 @remarks
1035 See ProcessEvent() for more info about how the chains of event handlers
1036 are internally used.
1037 Also remember that wxEvtHandler uses double-linked lists and thus if you
1038 use this function, you should also call SetPreviousHandler() on the
1039 argument passed to this function:
1040 @code
1041 handlerA->SetNextHandler(handlerB);
1042 handlerB->SetPreviousHandler(handlerA);
1043 @endcode
1044
42013f4c 1045 @param handler
7f853dd0
FM
1046 The event handler to be set as the next handler.
1047 Cannot be @NULL.
42013f4c 1048
3e083d65 1049 @see @ref overview_events_processing
42013f4c 1050 */
7f853dd0 1051 virtual void SetNextHandler(wxEvtHandler* handler);
42013f4c
FM
1052
1053 /**
1054 Sets the pointer to the previous handler.
7f853dd0 1055 All remarks about SetNextHandler() apply to this function as well.
42013f4c
FM
1056
1057 @param handler
7f853dd0
FM
1058 The event handler to be set as the previous handler.
1059 Cannot be @NULL.
1060
3e083d65 1061 @see @ref overview_events_processing
7f853dd0
FM
1062 */
1063 virtual void SetPreviousHandler(wxEvtHandler* handler);
1064
1065 /**
1066 Unlinks this event handler from the chain it's part of (if any);
1067 then links the "previous" event handler to the "next" one
1068 (so that the chain won't be interrupted).
1069
1070 E.g. if before calling Unlink() you have the following chain:
1071 @image html evthandler_unlink_before.png
1072 then after calling @c B->Unlink() you'll have:
1073 @image html evthandler_unlink_after.png
1074
1075 @since 2.9.0
1076 */
1077 void Unlink();
1078
1079 /**
1080 Returns @true if the next and the previous handler pointers of this
1081 event handler instance are @NULL.
1082
1083 @since 2.9.0
1084
1085 @see SetPreviousHandler(), SetNextHandler()
42013f4c 1086 */
7f853dd0 1087 bool IsUnlinked() const;
db82d78b
FM
1088
1089 //@}
8cc208e3 1090
58cc1587
VZ
1091 /**
1092 @name Global event filters.
1093
1094 Methods for working with the global list of event filters.
1095
1096 Event filters can be defined to pre-process all the events that happen
1097 in an application, see wxEventFilter documentation for more information.
1098 */
1099 //@{
1100
1101 /**
1102 Add an event filter whose FilterEvent() method will be called for each
1103 and every event processed by wxWidgets.
1104
1105 The filters are called in LIFO order and wxApp is registered as an
1106 event filter by default. The pointer must remain valid until it's
1107 removed with RemoveFilter() and is not deleted by wxEvtHandler.
1108
1109 @since 2.9.3
1110 */
1111 static void AddFilter(wxEventFilter* filter);
1112
1113 /**
1114 Remove a filter previously installed with AddFilter().
1115
1116 It's an error to remove a filter that hadn't been previously added or
1117 was already removed.
1118
1119 @since 2.9.3
1120 */
1121 static void RemoveFilter(wxEventFilter* filter);
1122
1123 //@}
1124
8cc208e3
VZ
1125protected:
1126 /**
1127 Method called by ProcessEvent() before examining this object event
1128 tables.
1129
1130 This method can be overridden to hook into the event processing logic
1131 as early as possible. You should usually call the base class version
1132 when overriding this method, even if wxEvtHandler itself does nothing
1133 here, some derived classes do use this method, e.g. wxWindow implements
1134 support for wxValidator in it.
1135
1136 Example:
1137 @code
1138 class MyClass : public BaseClass // inheriting from wxEvtHandler
1139 {
1140 ...
1141 protected:
1142 virtual bool TryBefore(wxEvent& event)
1143 {
1144 if ( MyPreProcess(event) )
1145 return true;
1146
1147 return BaseClass::TryBefore(event);
1148 }
1149 };
1150 @endcode
1151
512220b6 1152 @see ProcessEvent()
8cc208e3
VZ
1153 */
1154 virtual bool TryBefore(wxEvent& event);
1155
512220b6
VZ
1156 /**
1157 Try to process the event in this event handler.
1158
1159 This method is called from ProcessEventLocally() and thus, indirectly,
1160 from ProcessEvent(), please see the detailed description of the event
1161 processing logic there.
1162
1163 It is currently @em not virtual and so may not be overridden.
1164
1165 @since 2.9.1
1166
1167 @param event
1168 Event to process.
1169 @return
1170 @true if this object itself defines a handler for this event and
1171 the handler didn't skip the event.
1172 */
1173 bool TryThis(wxEvent& event);
1174
8cc208e3
VZ
1175 /**
1176 Method called by ProcessEvent() as last resort.
1177
1178 This method can be overridden to implement post-processing for the
1179 events which were not processed anywhere else.
1180
1181 The base class version handles forwarding the unprocessed events to
1182 wxApp at wxEvtHandler level and propagating them upwards the window
1183 child-parent chain at wxWindow level and so should usually be called
1184 when overriding this method:
1185 @code
1186 class MyClass : public BaseClass // inheriting from wxEvtHandler
1187 {
1188 ...
1189 protected:
1190 virtual bool TryAfter(wxEvent& event)
1191 {
1192 if ( BaseClass::TryAfter(event) )
1193 return true;
1194
1195 return MyPostProcess(event);
1196 }
1197 };
1198 @endcode
1199
512220b6 1200 @see ProcessEvent()
8cc208e3
VZ
1201 */
1202 virtual bool TryAfter(wxEvent& event);
42013f4c 1203};
23324ae1 1204
e54c96f1 1205
7a34307e
VZ
1206/**
1207 Flags for categories of keys.
1208
1209 These values are used by wxKeyEvent::IsKeyInCategory(). They may be
1210 combined via the bitwise operators |, &, and ~.
1211
1212 @since 2.9.1
1213*/
1214enum wxKeyCategoryFlags
1215{
1216 /// arrow keys, on and off numeric keypads
1217 WXK_CATEGORY_ARROW,
1218
1219 /// page up and page down keys, on and off numeric keypads
1220 WXK_CATEGORY_PAGING,
1221
1222 /// home and end keys, on and off numeric keypads
1223 WXK_CATEGORY_JUMP,
1224
4f742042 1225 /// tab key, on and off numeric keypads
7a34307e
VZ
1226 WXK_CATEGORY_TAB,
1227
1228 /// backspace and delete keys, on and off numeric keypads
1229 WXK_CATEGORY_CUT,
1230
1231 /// union of WXK_CATEGORY_ARROW, WXK_CATEGORY_PAGING, and WXK_CATEGORY_JUMP categories
1232 WXK_CATEGORY_NAVIGATION
1233};
1234
1235
23324ae1 1236/**
42013f4c 1237 @class wxKeyEvent
7c913512 1238
0d2f3b9d 1239 This event class contains information about key press and release events.
7c913512 1240
7333c0ef
VZ
1241 The main information carried by this event is the key being pressed or
1242 released. It can be accessed using either GetKeyCode() function or
1243 GetUnicodeKey(). For the printable characters, the latter should be used as
1244 it works for any keys, including non-Latin-1 characters that can be entered
1245 when using national keyboard layouts. GetKeyCode() should be used to handle
1246 special characters (such as cursor arrows keys or @c HOME or @c INS and so
1247 on) which correspond to ::wxKeyCode enum elements above the @c WXK_START
1248 constant. While GetKeyCode() also returns the character code for Latin-1
1249 keys for compatibility, it doesn't work for Unicode characters in general
1250 and will return @c WXK_NONE for any non-Latin-1 ones. For this reason, it's
1251 recommended to always use GetUnicodeKey() and only fall back to GetKeyCode()
1252 if GetUnicodeKey() returned @c WXK_NONE meaning that the event corresponds
1253 to a non-printable special keys.
1254
1255 While both of these functions can be used with the events of @c
1256 wxEVT_KEY_DOWN, @c wxEVT_KEY_UP and @c wxEVT_CHAR types, the values
1257 returned by them are different for the first two events and the last one.
1258 For the latter, the key returned corresponds to the character that would
1259 appear in e.g. a text zone if the user pressed the key in it. As such, its
1260 value depends on the current state of the Shift key and, for the letters,
1261 on the state of Caps Lock modifier. For example, if @c A key is pressed
1262 without Shift being held down, wxKeyEvent of type @c wxEVT_CHAR generated
1263 for this key press will return (from either GetKeyCode() or GetUnicodeKey()
1264 as their meanings coincide for ASCII characters) key code of 97
1265 corresponding the ASCII value of @c a. And if the same key is pressed but
1266 with Shift being held (or Caps Lock being active), then the key could would
1267 be 65, i.e. ASCII value of capital @c A.
1268
1269 However for the key down and up events the returned key code will instead
1270 be @c A independently of the state of the modifier keys i.e. it depends
1271 only on physical key being pressed and is not translated to its logical
1272 representation using the current keyboard state. Such untranslated key
1273 codes are defined as follows:
1274 - For the letters they correspond to the @e upper case value of the
1275 letter.
1276 - For the other alphanumeric keys (e.g. @c 7 or @c +), the untranslated
1277 key code corresponds to the character produced by the key when it is
1278 pressed without Shift. E.g. in standard US keyboard layout the
1279 untranslated key code for the key @c =/+ in the upper right corner of
1280 the keyboard is 61 which is the ASCII value of @c =.
1281 - For the rest of the keys (i.e. special non-printable keys) it is the
1282 same as the normal key code as no translation is used anyhow.
1283
1284 Notice that the first rule applies to all Unicode letters, not just the
1285 usual Latin-1 ones. However for non-Latin-1 letters only GetUnicodeKey()
1286 can be used to retrieve the key code as GetKeyCode() just returns @c
1287 WXK_NONE in this case.
1288
1289 To summarize: you should handle @c wxEVT_CHAR if you need the translated
1290 key and @c wxEVT_KEY_DOWN if you only need the value of the key itself,
1291 independent of the current keyboard state.
1292
1293 @note Not all key down events may be generated by the user. As an example,
1294 @c wxEVT_KEY_DOWN with @c = key code can be generated using the
1295 standard US keyboard layout but not using the German one because the @c
1296 = key corresponds to Shift-0 key combination in this layout and the key
1297 code for it is @c 0, not @c =. Because of this you should avoid
1298 requiring your users to type key events that might be impossible to
1299 enter on their keyboard.
1300
1301
1302 Another difference between key and char events is that another kind of
1303 translation is done for the latter ones when the Control key is pressed:
1304 char events for ASCII letters in this case carry codes corresponding to the
1305 ASCII value of Ctrl-Latter, i.e. 1 for Ctrl-A, 2 for Ctrl-B and so on until
1306 26 for Ctrl-Z. This is convenient for terminal-like applications and can be
1307 completely ignored by all the other ones (if you need to handle Ctrl-A it
1308 is probably a better idea to use the key event rather than the char one).
1309 Notice that currently no translation is done for the presses of @c [, @c
1310 \\, @c ], @c ^ and @c _ keys which might be mapped to ASCII values from 27
1311 to 31.
09bdb1cb
VZ
1312 Since version 2.9.2, the enum values @c WXK_CONTROL_A - @c WXK_CONTROL_Z
1313 can be used instead of the non-descriptive constant values 1-26.
7333c0ef
VZ
1314
1315 Finally, modifier keys only generate key events but no char events at all.
1316 The modifiers keys are @c WXK_SHIFT, @c WXK_CONTROL, @c WXK_ALT and various
1317 @c WXK_WINDOWS_XXX from ::wxKeyCode enum.
0d2f3b9d 1318
d0fb62a6
VZ
1319 Modifier keys events are special in one additional aspect: usually the
1320 keyboard state associated with a key press is well defined, e.g.
1321 wxKeyboardState::ShiftDown() returns @c true only if the Shift key was held
1322 pressed when the key that generated this event itself was pressed. There is
1323 an ambiguity for the key press events for Shift key itself however. By
1324 convention, it is considered to be already pressed when it is pressed and
1325 already released when it is released. In other words, @c wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
1326 event for the Shift key itself will have @c wxMOD_SHIFT in GetModifiers()
1327 and ShiftDown() will return true while the @c wxEVT_KEY_UP event for Shift
1328 itself will not have @c wxMOD_SHIFT in its modifiers and ShiftDown() will
1329 return false.
1330
1331
1332 @b Tip: You may discover the key codes and modifiers generated by all the
1333 keys on your system interactively by running the @ref
1334 page_samples_keyboard wxWidgets sample and pressing some keys in it.
1f1d2182 1335
42013f4c
FM
1336 @note If a key down (@c EVT_KEY_DOWN) event is caught and the event handler
1337 does not call @c event.Skip() then the corresponding char event
d0fb62a6
VZ
1338 (@c EVT_CHAR) will not happen. This is by design and enables the
1339 programs that handle both types of events to avoid processing the
1340 same key twice. As a consequence, if you do not want to suppress the
1341 @c wxEVT_CHAR events for the keys you handle, always call @c
1342 event.Skip() in your @c wxEVT_KEY_DOWN handler. Not doing may also
1343 prevent accelerators defined using this key from working.
1f1d2182 1344
5effc1cf
VZ
1345 @note If a key is maintained in a pressed state, you will typically get a
1346 lot of (automatically generated) key down events but only one key up
1347 one at the end when the key is released so it is wrong to assume that
1348 there is one up event corresponding to each down one.
1349
42013f4c
FM
1350 @note For Windows programmers: The key and char events in wxWidgets are
1351 similar to but slightly different from Windows @c WM_KEYDOWN and
1352 @c WM_CHAR events. In particular, Alt-x combination will generate a
0d2f3b9d
VZ
1353 char event in wxWidgets (unless it is used as an accelerator) and
1354 almost all keys, including ones without ASCII equivalents, generate
1355 char events too.
1f1d2182
FM
1356
1357
42013f4c 1358 @beginEventTable{wxKeyEvent}
8c6791e4 1359 @event{EVT_KEY_DOWN(func)}
3051a44a 1360 Process a @c wxEVT_KEY_DOWN event (any key has been pressed).
8c6791e4 1361 @event{EVT_KEY_UP(func)}
3051a44a 1362 Process a @c wxEVT_KEY_UP event (any key has been released).
8c6791e4 1363 @event{EVT_CHAR(func)}
3051a44a 1364 Process a @c wxEVT_CHAR event.
ff450486
VZ
1365 @event{EVT_CHAR_HOOK(func)}
1366 Process a @c wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK event which is sent to the active
1367 wxTopLevelWindow (i.e. the one containing the currently focused window)
1368 or wxApp global object if there is no active window before any other
1369 keyboard events are generated giving the parent window the opportunity
1370 to intercept all the keyboard entry. If the event is handled, i.e. the
1371 handler doesn't call wxEvent::Skip(), no further keyboard events are
5c16a699
VZ
1372 generated. Notice that this event is not generated when the mouse is
1373 captured as it is considered that the window which has the capture
1374 should receive all the keyboard events too without allowing its parent
1375 wxTopLevelWindow to interfere with their processing. Also please note
1376 that currently this event is not generated by wxOSX/Cocoa port.
1f1d2182 1377 @endEventTable
7c913512 1378
0e097789
VZ
1379 @see wxKeyboardState
1380
23324ae1
FM
1381 @library{wxcore}
1382 @category{events}
23324ae1 1383*/
0e097789
VZ
1384class wxKeyEvent : public wxEvent,
1385 public wxKeyboardState
23324ae1
FM
1386{
1387public:
1388 /**
1389 Constructor.
42013f4c 1390 Currently, the only valid event types are @c wxEVT_CHAR and @c wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK.
23324ae1 1391 */
42013f4c 1392 wxKeyEvent(wxEventType keyEventType = wxEVT_NULL);
23324ae1 1393
42013f4c 1394 /**
b6885972
VZ
1395 Returns the key code of the key that generated this event.
1396
1397 ASCII symbols return normal ASCII values, while events from special
1398 keys such as "left cursor arrow" (@c WXK_LEFT) return values outside of
1399 the ASCII range. See ::wxKeyCode for a full list of the virtual key
1400 codes.
1401
1402 Note that this method returns a meaningful value only for special
1403 non-alphanumeric keys or if the user entered a character that can be
1404 represented in current locale's default charset. Otherwise, e.g. if the
1405 user enters a Japanese character in a program not using Japanese
1406 locale, this method returns @c WXK_NONE and GetUnicodeKey() should be
1407 used to obtain the corresponding Unicode character.
1408
1409 Using GetUnicodeKey() is in general the right thing to do if you are
1410 interested in the characters typed by the user, GetKeyCode() should be
1411 only used for special keys (for which GetUnicodeKey() returns @c
1412 WXK_NONE). To handle both kinds of keys you might write:
1413 @code
1414 void MyHandler::OnChar(wxKeyEvent& event)
1415 {
1416 if ( event.GetUnicodeKey() != WXK_NONE )
1417 {
1418 // It's a printable character
1419 wxLogMessage("You pressed '%c'", event.GetUnicodeKey());
1420 }
1421 else
1422 {
1423 // It's a special key, deal with all the known ones:
1424 switch ( keycode )
1425 {
1426 case WXK_LEFT:
1427 case WXK_RIGHT:
1428 ... move cursor ...
1429 break;
1430
1431 case WXK_F1:
1432 ... give help ...
1433 break;
1434 }
1435 }
1436 }
1437 @endcode
42013f4c
FM
1438 */
1439 int GetKeyCode() const;
1440
7a34307e
VZ
1441 /**
1442 Returns true if the key is in the given key category.
1443
1444 @param category
1445 A bitwise combination of named ::wxKeyCategoryFlags constants.
1446
1447 @since 2.9.1
1448 */
1449 bool IsKeyInCategory(int category) const;
1450
42013f4c
FM
1451 //@{
1452 /**
1453 Obtains the position (in client coordinates) at which the key was pressed.
1454 */
1455 wxPoint GetPosition() const;
1456 void GetPosition(long* x, long* y) const;
1457 //@}
1458
1459 /**
5995a84f
VZ
1460 Returns the raw key code for this event.
1461
1462 The flags are platform-dependent and should only be used if the
1463 functionality provided by other wxKeyEvent methods is insufficient.
1464
1465 Under MSW, the raw key code is the value of @c wParam parameter of the
1466 corresponding message.
1467
1468 Under GTK, the raw key code is the @c keyval field of the corresponding
1469 GDK event.
1470
1471 Under OS X, the raw key code is the @c keyCode field of the
1472 corresponding NSEvent.
42013f4c
FM
1473
1474 @note Currently the raw key codes are not supported by all ports, use
1475 @ifdef_ wxHAS_RAW_KEY_CODES to determine if this feature is available.
1476 */
1477 wxUint32 GetRawKeyCode() const;
1478
1479 /**
5995a84f
VZ
1480 Returns the low level key flags for this event.
1481
1482 The flags are platform-dependent and should only be used if the
1483 functionality provided by other wxKeyEvent methods is insufficient.
1484
1485 Under MSW, the raw flags are just the value of @c lParam parameter of
1486 the corresponding message.
1487
1488 Under GTK, the raw flags contain the @c hardware_keycode field of the
1489 corresponding GDK event.
1490
1491 Under OS X, the raw flags contain the modifiers state.
42013f4c
FM
1492
1493 @note Currently the raw key flags are not supported by all ports, use
1494 @ifdef_ wxHAS_RAW_KEY_CODES to determine if this feature is available.
1495 */
1496 wxUint32 GetRawKeyFlags() const;
1497
1498 /**
1499 Returns the Unicode character corresponding to this key event.
1500
0d2f3b9d 1501 If the key pressed doesn't have any character value (e.g. a cursor key)
86408a03
VZ
1502 this method will return @c WXK_NONE. In this case you should use
1503 GetKeyCode() to retrieve the value of the key.
0d2f3b9d 1504
42013f4c
FM
1505 This function is only available in Unicode build, i.e. when
1506 @c wxUSE_UNICODE is 1.
1507 */
1508 wxChar GetUnicodeKey() const;
1509
1510 /**
1511 Returns the X position (in client coordinates) of the event.
1512 */
1513 wxCoord GetX() const;
1514
1515 /**
1516 Returns the Y position (in client coordinates) of the event.
1517 */
1518 wxCoord GetY() const;
23324ae1
FM
1519};
1520
1521
e54c96f1 1522
23324ae1 1523/**
42013f4c 1524 @class wxJoystickEvent
7c913512 1525
42013f4c
FM
1526 This event class contains information about joystick events, particularly
1527 events received by windows.
1f1d2182 1528
42013f4c 1529 @beginEventTable{wxJoystickEvent}
3051a44a
FM
1530 @event{EVT_JOY_BUTTON_DOWN(func)}
1531 Process a @c wxEVT_JOY_BUTTON_DOWN event.
1532 @event{EVT_JOY_BUTTON_UP(func)}
1533 Process a @c wxEVT_JOY_BUTTON_UP event.
1534 @event{EVT_JOY_MOVE(func)}
1535 Process a @c wxEVT_JOY_MOVE event.
1536 @event{EVT_JOY_ZMOVE(func)}
1537 Process a @c wxEVT_JOY_ZMOVE event.
1538 @event{EVT_JOYSTICK_EVENTS(func)}
42013f4c 1539 Processes all joystick events.
1f1d2182
FM
1540 @endEventTable
1541
23324ae1
FM
1542 @library{wxcore}
1543 @category{events}
7c913512 1544
42013f4c 1545 @see wxJoystick
23324ae1 1546*/
42013f4c 1547class wxJoystickEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
1548{
1549public:
1550 /**
1551 Constructor.
1552 */
42013f4c
FM
1553 wxJoystickEvent(wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL, int state = 0,
1554 int joystick = wxJOYSTICK1,
1555 int change = 0);
23324ae1
FM
1556
1557 /**
42013f4c
FM
1558 Returns @true if the event was a down event from the specified button
1559 (or any button).
23324ae1 1560
42013f4c
FM
1561 @param button
1562 Can be @c wxJOY_BUTTONn where @c n is 1, 2, 3 or 4; or @c wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY to
1563 indicate any button down event.
23324ae1 1564 */
42013f4c 1565 bool ButtonDown(int button = wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY) const;
23324ae1
FM
1566
1567 /**
42013f4c 1568 Returns @true if the specified button (or any button) was in a down state.
23324ae1 1569
42013f4c
FM
1570 @param button
1571 Can be @c wxJOY_BUTTONn where @c n is 1, 2, 3 or 4; or @c wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY to
1572 indicate any button down event.
23324ae1 1573 */
42013f4c 1574 bool ButtonIsDown(int button = wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY) const;
23324ae1
FM
1575
1576 /**
42013f4c
FM
1577 Returns @true if the event was an up event from the specified button
1578 (or any button).
1579
1580 @param button
1581 Can be @c wxJOY_BUTTONn where @c n is 1, 2, 3 or 4; or @c wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY to
1582 indicate any button down event.
23324ae1 1583 */
42013f4c 1584 bool ButtonUp(int button = wxJOY_BUTTON_ANY) const;
23324ae1
FM
1585
1586 /**
42013f4c
FM
1587 Returns the identifier of the button changing state.
1588
1589 This is a @c wxJOY_BUTTONn identifier, where @c n is one of 1, 2, 3, 4.
23324ae1 1590 */
42013f4c 1591 int GetButtonChange() const;
23324ae1
FM
1592
1593 /**
42013f4c
FM
1594 Returns the down state of the buttons.
1595
1596 This is a @c wxJOY_BUTTONn identifier, where @c n is one of 1, 2, 3, 4.
23324ae1 1597 */
42013f4c 1598 int GetButtonState() const;
23324ae1
FM
1599
1600 /**
42013f4c
FM
1601 Returns the identifier of the joystick generating the event - one of
1602 wxJOYSTICK1 and wxJOYSTICK2.
23324ae1 1603 */
42013f4c 1604 int GetJoystick() const;
23324ae1
FM
1605
1606 /**
42013f4c 1607 Returns the x, y position of the joystick event.
23324ae1 1608 */
42013f4c 1609 wxPoint GetPosition() const;
23324ae1
FM
1610
1611 /**
42013f4c 1612 Returns the z position of the joystick event.
23324ae1 1613 */
42013f4c 1614 int GetZPosition() const;
23324ae1
FM
1615
1616 /**
42013f4c
FM
1617 Returns @true if this was a button up or down event
1618 (@e not 'is any button down?').
23324ae1 1619 */
42013f4c 1620 bool IsButton() const;
23324ae1
FM
1621
1622 /**
42013f4c 1623 Returns @true if this was an x, y move event.
23324ae1 1624 */
42013f4c 1625 bool IsMove() const;
23324ae1
FM
1626
1627 /**
42013f4c 1628 Returns @true if this was a z move event.
23324ae1 1629 */
42013f4c
FM
1630 bool IsZMove() const;
1631};
23324ae1 1632
3c4f71cc 1633
23324ae1 1634
42013f4c
FM
1635/**
1636 @class wxScrollWinEvent
42013f4c
FM
1637
1638 A scroll event holds information about events sent from scrolling windows.
1639
3051a44a
FM
1640 Note that you can use the EVT_SCROLLWIN* macros for intercepting scroll window events
1641 from the receiving window.
23324ae1 1642
42013f4c 1643 @beginEventTable{wxScrollWinEvent}
8c6791e4 1644 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN(func)}
42013f4c 1645 Process all scroll events.
8c6791e4 1646 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_TOP(func)}
3a194bda 1647 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_TOP scroll-to-top events.
8c6791e4 1648 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_BOTTOM(func)}
3a194bda 1649 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_BOTTOM scroll-to-bottom events.
8c6791e4 1650 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEUP(func)}
3a194bda 1651 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEUP line up events.
8c6791e4 1652 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEDOWN(func)}
3a194bda 1653 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEDOWN line down events.
8c6791e4 1654 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEUP(func)}
3a194bda 1655 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEUP page up events.
8c6791e4 1656 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEDOWN(func)}
3a194bda 1657 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEDOWN page down events.
8c6791e4 1658 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBTRACK(func)}
3a194bda 1659 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBTRACK thumbtrack events
42013f4c 1660 (frequent events sent as the user drags the thumbtrack).
8c6791e4 1661 @event{EVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBRELEASE(func)}
3a194bda 1662 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBRELEASE thumb release events.
42013f4c
FM
1663 @endEventTable
1664
1665
1666 @library{wxcore}
1667 @category{events}
1668
3e083d65 1669 @see wxScrollEvent, @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
1670*/
1671class wxScrollWinEvent : public wxEvent
1672{
1673public:
23324ae1 1674 /**
42013f4c 1675 Constructor.
23324ae1 1676 */
42013f4c
FM
1677 wxScrollWinEvent(wxEventType commandType = wxEVT_NULL, int pos = 0,
1678 int orientation = 0);
23324ae1
FM
1679
1680 /**
42013f4c
FM
1681 Returns wxHORIZONTAL or wxVERTICAL, depending on the orientation of the
1682 scrollbar.
1683
1684 @todo wxHORIZONTAL and wxVERTICAL should go in their own enum
23324ae1 1685 */
42013f4c 1686 int GetOrientation() const;
23324ae1
FM
1687
1688 /**
42013f4c
FM
1689 Returns the position of the scrollbar for the thumb track and release events.
1690
1691 Note that this field can't be used for the other events, you need to query
1692 the window itself for the current position in that case.
23324ae1 1693 */
42013f4c 1694 int GetPosition() const;
a90e69f7
RD
1695
1696 void SetOrientation(int orient);
1697 void SetPosition(int pos);
23324ae1
FM
1698};
1699
1700
e54c96f1 1701
23324ae1 1702/**
42013f4c 1703 @class wxSysColourChangedEvent
7c913512 1704
42013f4c
FM
1705 This class is used for system colour change events, which are generated
1706 when the user changes the colour settings using the control panel.
1707 This is only appropriate under Windows.
7c913512 1708
42013f4c
FM
1709 @remarks
1710 The default event handler for this event propagates the event to child windows,
1711 since Windows only sends the events to top-level windows.
1712 If intercepting this event for a top-level window, remember to call the base
1713 class handler, or to pass the event on to the window's children explicitly.
3d6c68c1 1714
42013f4c 1715 @beginEventTable{wxSysColourChangedEvent}
8c6791e4 1716 @event{EVT_SYS_COLOUR_CHANGED(func)}
3051a44a 1717 Process a @c wxEVT_SYS_COLOUR_CHANGED event.
3d6c68c1
VS
1718 @endEventTable
1719
23324ae1
FM
1720 @library{wxcore}
1721 @category{events}
7c913512 1722
3e083d65 1723 @see @ref overview_events
23324ae1 1724*/
42013f4c 1725class wxSysColourChangedEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
1726{
1727public:
1728 /**
3d6c68c1 1729 Constructor.
23324ae1 1730 */
42013f4c 1731 wxSysColourChangedEvent();
23324ae1
FM
1732};
1733
1734
e54c96f1 1735
23324ae1 1736/**
42013f4c 1737 @class wxWindowCreateEvent
7c913512 1738
42013f4c
FM
1739 This event is sent just after the actual window associated with a wxWindow
1740 object has been created.
7c913512 1741
42013f4c
FM
1742 Since it is derived from wxCommandEvent, the event propagates up
1743 the window hierarchy.
7c913512 1744
42013f4c 1745 @beginEventTable{wxWindowCreateEvent}
8c6791e4 1746 @event{EVT_WINDOW_CREATE(func)}
3051a44a 1747 Process a @c wxEVT_CREATE event.
42013f4c 1748 @endEventTable
7c913512 1749
23324ae1
FM
1750 @library{wxcore}
1751 @category{events}
7c913512 1752
3e083d65 1753 @see @ref overview_events, wxWindowDestroyEvent
23324ae1 1754*/
42013f4c 1755class wxWindowCreateEvent : public wxCommandEvent
23324ae1
FM
1756{
1757public:
1758 /**
42013f4c
FM
1759 Constructor.
1760 */
1761 wxWindowCreateEvent(wxWindow* win = NULL);
a79a6671 1762
57ab6f23 1763 /// Return the window being created.
a79a6671 1764 wxWindow *GetWindow() const;
42013f4c 1765};
3c4f71cc 1766
23324ae1 1767
23324ae1 1768
42013f4c
FM
1769/**
1770 @class wxPaintEvent
23324ae1 1771
42013f4c 1772 A paint event is sent when a window's contents needs to be repainted.
23324ae1 1773
7ca106e8
VZ
1774 The handler of this event must create a wxPaintDC object and use it for
1775 painting the window contents. For example:
42013f4c
FM
1776 @code
1777 void MyWindow::OnPaint(wxPaintEvent& event)
1778 {
1779 wxPaintDC dc(this);
23324ae1 1780
42013f4c
FM
1781 DrawMyDocument(dc);
1782 }
1783 @endcode
7ca106e8
VZ
1784
1785 Notice that you must @e not create other kinds of wxDC (e.g. wxClientDC or
1786 wxWindowDC) in EVT_PAINT handlers and also don't create wxPaintDC outside
1787 of this event handlers.
1788
1789
42013f4c
FM
1790 You can optimize painting by retrieving the rectangles that have been damaged
1791 and only repainting these. The rectangles are in terms of the client area,
1792 and are unscrolled, so you will need to do some calculations using the current
1793 view position to obtain logical, scrolled units.
1794 Here is an example of using the wxRegionIterator class:
1795 @code
1796 // Called when window needs to be repainted.
1797 void MyWindow::OnPaint(wxPaintEvent& event)
1798 {
1799 wxPaintDC dc(this);
23324ae1 1800
42013f4c
FM
1801 // Find Out where the window is scrolled to
1802 int vbX,vbY; // Top left corner of client
1803 GetViewStart(&vbX,&vbY);
23324ae1 1804
42013f4c
FM
1805 int vX,vY,vW,vH; // Dimensions of client area in pixels
1806 wxRegionIterator upd(GetUpdateRegion()); // get the update rect list
23324ae1 1807
42013f4c
FM
1808 while (upd)
1809 {
1810 vX = upd.GetX();
1811 vY = upd.GetY();
1812 vW = upd.GetW();
1813 vH = upd.GetH();
23324ae1 1814
42013f4c
FM
1815 // Alternatively we can do this:
1816 // wxRect rect(upd.GetRect());
3c4f71cc 1817
42013f4c
FM
1818 // Repaint this rectangle
1819 ...some code...
3c4f71cc 1820
42013f4c
FM
1821 upd ++ ;
1822 }
1823 }
1824 @endcode
3c4f71cc 1825
7ca106e8
VZ
1826 @remarks
1827 Please notice that in general it is impossible to change the drawing of a
1828 standard control (such as wxButton) and so you shouldn't attempt to handle
1829 paint events for them as even if it might work on some platforms, this is
1830 inherently not portable and won't work everywhere.
1831
3c4f71cc 1832
42013f4c 1833 @beginEventTable{wxPaintEvent}
8c6791e4 1834 @event{EVT_PAINT(func)}
3051a44a 1835 Process a @c wxEVT_PAINT event.
42013f4c 1836 @endEventTable
3c4f71cc 1837
42013f4c
FM
1838 @library{wxcore}
1839 @category{events}
3c4f71cc 1840
3e083d65 1841 @see @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
1842*/
1843class wxPaintEvent : public wxEvent
1844{
1845public:
1846 /**
1847 Constructor.
1848 */
1849 wxPaintEvent(int id = 0);
1850};
3c4f71cc 1851
3c4f71cc 1852
3c4f71cc 1853
42013f4c
FM
1854/**
1855 @class wxMaximizeEvent
3c4f71cc 1856
42013f4c
FM
1857 An event being sent when a top level window is maximized. Notice that it is
1858 not sent when the window is restored to its original size after it had been
1859 maximized, only a normal wxSizeEvent is generated in this case.
3c4f71cc 1860
89c6e024 1861 Currently this event is only generated in wxMSW, wxGTK, wxOSX/Cocoa and wxOS2
e22e5ee4
VZ
1862 ports so portable programs should only rely on receiving @c wxEVT_SIZE and
1863 not necessarily this event when the window is maximized.
1864
42013f4c 1865 @beginEventTable{wxMaximizeEvent}
8c6791e4 1866 @event{EVT_MAXIMIZE(func)}
3051a44a 1867 Process a @c wxEVT_MAXIMIZE event.
42013f4c 1868 @endEventTable
3c4f71cc 1869
42013f4c
FM
1870 @library{wxcore}
1871 @category{events}
23324ae1 1872
3e083d65 1873 @see @ref overview_events, wxTopLevelWindow::Maximize,
42013f4c
FM
1874 wxTopLevelWindow::IsMaximized
1875*/
1876class wxMaximizeEvent : public wxEvent
1877{
1878public:
23324ae1 1879 /**
42013f4c 1880 Constructor. Only used by wxWidgets internally.
23324ae1 1881 */
42013f4c
FM
1882 wxMaximizeEvent(int id = 0);
1883};
23324ae1 1884
42013f4c
FM
1885/**
1886 The possibles modes to pass to wxUpdateUIEvent::SetMode().
1887*/
1888enum wxUpdateUIMode
1889{
1890 /** Send UI update events to all windows. */
1891 wxUPDATE_UI_PROCESS_ALL,
23324ae1 1892
42013f4c
FM
1893 /** Send UI update events to windows that have
1894 the wxWS_EX_PROCESS_UI_UPDATES flag specified. */
1895 wxUPDATE_UI_PROCESS_SPECIFIED
1896};
23324ae1 1897
3c4f71cc 1898
42013f4c
FM
1899/**
1900 @class wxUpdateUIEvent
23324ae1 1901
42013f4c
FM
1902 This class is used for pseudo-events which are called by wxWidgets
1903 to give an application the chance to update various user interface elements.
23324ae1 1904
42013f4c
FM
1905 Without update UI events, an application has to work hard to check/uncheck,
1906 enable/disable, show/hide, and set the text for elements such as menu items
1907 and toolbar buttons. The code for doing this has to be mixed up with the code
1908 that is invoked when an action is invoked for a menu item or button.
3c4f71cc 1909
42013f4c
FM
1910 With update UI events, you define an event handler to look at the state of the
1911 application and change UI elements accordingly. wxWidgets will call your member
1912 functions in idle time, so you don't have to worry where to call this code.
23324ae1 1913
42013f4c
FM
1914 In addition to being a clearer and more declarative method, it also means you don't
1915 have to worry whether you're updating a toolbar or menubar identifier. The same
1916 handler can update a menu item and toolbar button, if the identifier is the same.
1917 Instead of directly manipulating the menu or button, you call functions in the event
1918 object, such as wxUpdateUIEvent::Check. wxWidgets will determine whether such a
1919 call has been made, and which UI element to update.
23324ae1 1920
42013f4c
FM
1921 These events will work for popup menus as well as menubars. Just before a menu is
1922 popped up, wxMenu::UpdateUI is called to process any UI events for the window that
1923 owns the menu.
23324ae1 1924
42013f4c
FM
1925 If you find that the overhead of UI update processing is affecting your application,
1926 you can do one or both of the following:
1927 @li Call wxUpdateUIEvent::SetMode with a value of wxUPDATE_UI_PROCESS_SPECIFIED,
1928 and set the extra style wxWS_EX_PROCESS_UI_UPDATES for every window that should
1929 receive update events. No other windows will receive update events.
1930 @li Call wxUpdateUIEvent::SetUpdateInterval with a millisecond value to set the delay
1931 between updates. You may need to call wxWindow::UpdateWindowUI at critical points,
1932 for example when a dialog is about to be shown, in case the user sees a slight
1933 delay before windows are updated.
3c4f71cc 1934
42013f4c
FM
1935 Note that although events are sent in idle time, defining a wxIdleEvent handler
1936 for a window does not affect this because the events are sent from wxWindow::OnInternalIdle
1937 which is always called in idle time.
23324ae1 1938
42013f4c
FM
1939 wxWidgets tries to optimize update events on some platforms.
1940 On Windows and GTK+, events for menubar items are only sent when the menu is about
1941 to be shown, and not in idle time.
23324ae1 1942
23324ae1 1943
42013f4c 1944 @beginEventTable{wxUpdateUIEvent}
8c6791e4 1945 @event{EVT_UPDATE_UI(id, func)}
3051a44a 1946 Process a @c wxEVT_UPDATE_UI event for the command with the given id.
8c6791e4 1947 @event{EVT_UPDATE_UI_RANGE(id1, id2, func)}
3051a44a 1948 Process a @c wxEVT_UPDATE_UI event for any command with id included in the given range.
42013f4c 1949 @endEventTable
23324ae1 1950
42013f4c
FM
1951 @library{wxcore}
1952 @category{events}
23324ae1 1953
3e083d65 1954 @see @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
1955*/
1956class wxUpdateUIEvent : public wxCommandEvent
1957{
1958public:
23324ae1 1959 /**
42013f4c 1960 Constructor.
23324ae1 1961 */
42013f4c 1962 wxUpdateUIEvent(wxWindowID commandId = 0);
23324ae1
FM
1963
1964 /**
42013f4c
FM
1965 Returns @true if it is appropriate to update (send UI update events to)
1966 this window.
23324ae1 1967
42013f4c
FM
1968 This function looks at the mode used (see wxUpdateUIEvent::SetMode),
1969 the wxWS_EX_PROCESS_UI_UPDATES flag in @a window, the time update events
1970 were last sent in idle time, and the update interval, to determine whether
1971 events should be sent to this window now. By default this will always
1972 return @true because the update mode is initially wxUPDATE_UI_PROCESS_ALL
1973 and the interval is set to 0; so update events will be sent as often as
1974 possible. You can reduce the frequency that events are sent by changing the
1975 mode and/or setting an update interval.
23324ae1 1976
42013f4c 1977 @see ResetUpdateTime(), SetUpdateInterval(), SetMode()
23324ae1 1978 */
42013f4c 1979 static bool CanUpdate(wxWindow* window);
23324ae1
FM
1980
1981 /**
42013f4c 1982 Check or uncheck the UI element.
23324ae1 1983 */
42013f4c 1984 void Check(bool check);
23324ae1
FM
1985
1986 /**
42013f4c 1987 Enable or disable the UI element.
23324ae1 1988 */
42013f4c 1989 void Enable(bool enable);
23324ae1
FM
1990
1991 /**
42013f4c 1992 Returns @true if the UI element should be checked.
23324ae1 1993 */
42013f4c 1994 bool GetChecked() const;
23324ae1
FM
1995
1996 /**
42013f4c 1997 Returns @true if the UI element should be enabled.
23324ae1 1998 */
42013f4c 1999 bool GetEnabled() const;
23324ae1
FM
2000
2001 /**
42013f4c
FM
2002 Static function returning a value specifying how wxWidgets will send update
2003 events: to all windows, or only to those which specify that they will process
2004 the events.
23324ae1 2005
42013f4c 2006 @see SetMode()
23324ae1 2007 */
42013f4c 2008 static wxUpdateUIMode GetMode();
23324ae1
FM
2009
2010 /**
42013f4c
FM
2011 Returns @true if the application has called Check().
2012 For wxWidgets internal use only.
23324ae1 2013 */
42013f4c 2014 bool GetSetChecked() const;
23324ae1
FM
2015
2016 /**
42013f4c
FM
2017 Returns @true if the application has called Enable().
2018 For wxWidgets internal use only.
23324ae1 2019 */
42013f4c 2020 bool GetSetEnabled() const;
23324ae1
FM
2021
2022 /**
42013f4c
FM
2023 Returns @true if the application has called Show().
2024 For wxWidgets internal use only.
23324ae1 2025 */
42013f4c 2026 bool GetSetShown() const;
23324ae1
FM
2027
2028 /**
42013f4c
FM
2029 Returns @true if the application has called SetText().
2030 For wxWidgets internal use only.
23324ae1 2031 */
42013f4c 2032 bool GetSetText() const;
23324ae1
FM
2033
2034 /**
42013f4c 2035 Returns @true if the UI element should be shown.
23324ae1 2036 */
42013f4c 2037 bool GetShown() const;
23324ae1
FM
2038
2039 /**
42013f4c 2040 Returns the text that should be set for the UI element.
23324ae1 2041 */
42013f4c 2042 wxString GetText() const;
23324ae1
FM
2043
2044 /**
42013f4c
FM
2045 Returns the current interval between updates in milliseconds.
2046 The value -1 disables updates, 0 updates as frequently as possible.
23324ae1 2047
42013f4c 2048 @see SetUpdateInterval().
23324ae1 2049 */
42013f4c 2050 static long GetUpdateInterval();
23324ae1
FM
2051
2052 /**
42013f4c 2053 Used internally to reset the last-updated time to the current time.
23324ae1 2054
42013f4c
FM
2055 It is assumed that update events are normally sent in idle time, so this
2056 is called at the end of idle processing.
23324ae1 2057
42013f4c 2058 @see CanUpdate(), SetUpdateInterval(), SetMode()
23324ae1 2059 */
42013f4c 2060 static void ResetUpdateTime();
23324ae1
FM
2061
2062 /**
42013f4c
FM
2063 Specify how wxWidgets will send update events: to all windows, or only to
2064 those which specify that they will process the events.
23324ae1 2065
42013f4c
FM
2066 @param mode
2067 this parameter may be one of the ::wxUpdateUIMode enumeration values.
2068 The default mode is wxUPDATE_UI_PROCESS_ALL.
23324ae1 2069 */
42013f4c 2070 static void SetMode(wxUpdateUIMode mode);
23324ae1
FM
2071
2072 /**
42013f4c 2073 Sets the text for this UI element.
23324ae1 2074 */
42013f4c 2075 void SetText(const wxString& text);
23324ae1
FM
2076
2077 /**
42013f4c 2078 Sets the interval between updates in milliseconds.
23324ae1 2079
42013f4c
FM
2080 Set to -1 to disable updates, or to 0 to update as frequently as possible.
2081 The default is 0.
23324ae1 2082
42013f4c
FM
2083 Use this to reduce the overhead of UI update events if your application
2084 has a lot of windows. If you set the value to -1 or greater than 0,
2085 you may also need to call wxWindow::UpdateWindowUI at appropriate points
2086 in your application, such as when a dialog is about to be shown.
23324ae1 2087 */
42013f4c 2088 static void SetUpdateInterval(long updateInterval);
23324ae1
FM
2089
2090 /**
42013f4c 2091 Show or hide the UI element.
23324ae1 2092 */
42013f4c
FM
2093 void Show(bool show);
2094};
23324ae1
FM
2095
2096
23324ae1 2097
42013f4c
FM
2098/**
2099 @class wxClipboardTextEvent
23324ae1 2100
42013f4c
FM
2101 This class represents the events generated by a control (typically a
2102 wxTextCtrl but other windows can generate these events as well) when its
2103 content gets copied or cut to, or pasted from the clipboard.
23324ae1 2104
3a194bda
SL
2105 There are three types of corresponding events @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_COPY,
2106 @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_CUT and @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_PASTE.
23324ae1 2107
42013f4c
FM
2108 If any of these events is processed (without being skipped) by an event
2109 handler, the corresponding operation doesn't take place which allows to
2110 prevent the text from being copied from or pasted to a control. It is also
2111 possible to examine the clipboard contents in the PASTE event handler and
2112 transform it in some way before inserting in a control -- for example,
2113 changing its case or removing invalid characters.
23324ae1 2114
42013f4c
FM
2115 Finally notice that a CUT event is always preceded by the COPY event which
2116 makes it possible to only process the latter if it doesn't matter if the
2117 text was copied or cut.
23324ae1 2118
42013f4c
FM
2119 @note
2120 These events are currently only generated by wxTextCtrl under GTK+.
2121 They are generated by all controls under Windows.
23324ae1 2122
42013f4c 2123 @beginEventTable{wxClipboardTextEvent}
8c6791e4 2124 @event{EVT_TEXT_COPY(id, func)}
42013f4c 2125 Some or all of the controls content was copied to the clipboard.
8c6791e4 2126 @event{EVT_TEXT_CUT(id, func)}
42013f4c
FM
2127 Some or all of the controls content was cut (i.e. copied and
2128 deleted).
8c6791e4 2129 @event{EVT_TEXT_PASTE(id, func)}
42013f4c
FM
2130 Clipboard content was pasted into the control.
2131 @endEventTable
23324ae1 2132
23324ae1 2133
42013f4c
FM
2134 @library{wxcore}
2135 @category{events}
23324ae1 2136
42013f4c
FM
2137 @see wxClipboard
2138*/
2139class wxClipboardTextEvent : public wxCommandEvent
2140{
2141public:
23324ae1 2142 /**
42013f4c 2143 Constructor.
23324ae1 2144 */
42013f4c 2145 wxClipboardTextEvent(wxEventType commandType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
2146};
2147
2148
e54c96f1 2149
23324ae1 2150/**
42013f4c 2151 @class wxMouseEvent
7c913512 2152
42013f4c
FM
2153 This event class contains information about the events generated by the mouse:
2154 they include mouse buttons press and release events and mouse move events.
7c913512 2155
42013f4c
FM
2156 All mouse events involving the buttons use @c wxMOUSE_BTN_LEFT for the
2157 left mouse button, @c wxMOUSE_BTN_MIDDLE for the middle one and
2158 @c wxMOUSE_BTN_RIGHT for the right one. And if the system supports more
2159 buttons, the @c wxMOUSE_BTN_AUX1 and @c wxMOUSE_BTN_AUX2 events
2160 can also be generated. Note that not all mice have even a middle button so a
2161 portable application should avoid relying on the events from it (but the right
2162 button click can be emulated using the left mouse button with the control key
2163 under Mac platforms with a single button mouse).
2164
2165 For the @c wxEVT_ENTER_WINDOW and @c wxEVT_LEAVE_WINDOW events
2166 purposes, the mouse is considered to be inside the window if it is in the
2167 window client area and not inside one of its children. In other words, the
2168 parent window receives @c wxEVT_LEAVE_WINDOW event not only when the
2169 mouse leaves the window entirely but also when it enters one of its children.
2170
92dbce73
VZ
2171 The position associated with a mouse event is expressed in the window
2172 coordinates of the window which generated the event, you can use
2173 wxWindow::ClientToScreen() to convert it to screen coordinates and possibly
2174 call wxWindow::ScreenToClient() next to convert it to window coordinates of
2175 another window.
2176
42013f4c
FM
2177 @note Note that under Windows CE mouse enter and leave events are not natively
2178 supported by the system but are generated by wxWidgets itself. This has several
2179 drawbacks: the LEAVE_WINDOW event might be received some time after the mouse
2180 left the window and the state variables for it may have changed during this time.
2181
2182 @note Note the difference between methods like wxMouseEvent::LeftDown and
ab826fd8
VZ
2183 the inherited wxMouseState::LeftIsDown: the former returns @true when
2184 the event corresponds to the left mouse button click while the latter
2185 returns @true if the left mouse button is currently being pressed.
2186 For example, when the user is dragging the mouse you can use
2187 wxMouseEvent::LeftIsDown to test whether the left mouse button is
2188 (still) depressed. Also, by convention, if wxMouseEvent::LeftDown
2189 returns @true, wxMouseEvent::LeftIsDown will also return @true in
2190 wxWidgets whatever the underlying GUI behaviour is (which is
2191 platform-dependent). The same applies, of course, to other mouse
2192 buttons as well.
42013f4c
FM
2193
2194
2195 @beginEventTable{wxMouseEvent}
8c6791e4 2196 @event{EVT_LEFT_DOWN(func)}
3051a44a 2197 Process a @c wxEVT_LEFT_DOWN event. The handler of this event should normally
42013f4c
FM
2198 call event.Skip() to allow the default processing to take place as otherwise
2199 the window under mouse wouldn't get the focus.
8c6791e4 2200 @event{EVT_LEFT_UP(func)}
3051a44a 2201 Process a @c wxEVT_LEFT_UP event.
8c6791e4 2202 @event{EVT_LEFT_DCLICK(func)}
3051a44a 2203 Process a @c wxEVT_LEFT_DCLICK event.
8c6791e4 2204 @event{EVT_MIDDLE_DOWN(func)}
3051a44a 2205 Process a @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_DOWN event.
8c6791e4 2206 @event{EVT_MIDDLE_UP(func)}
3051a44a 2207 Process a @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_UP event.
8c6791e4 2208 @event{EVT_MIDDLE_DCLICK(func)}
3051a44a 2209 Process a @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_DCLICK event.
8c6791e4 2210 @event{EVT_RIGHT_DOWN(func)}
3051a44a 2211 Process a @c wxEVT_RIGHT_DOWN event.
8c6791e4 2212 @event{EVT_RIGHT_UP(func)}
3051a44a 2213 Process a @c wxEVT_RIGHT_UP event.
8c6791e4 2214 @event{EVT_RIGHT_DCLICK(func)}
3051a44a 2215 Process a @c wxEVT_RIGHT_DCLICK event.
8c6791e4 2216 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX1_DOWN(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2217 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX1_DOWN event.
8c6791e4 2218 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX1_UP(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2219 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX1_UP event.
8c6791e4 2220 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX1_DCLICK(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2221 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX1_DCLICK event.
8c6791e4 2222 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX2_DOWN(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2223 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX2_DOWN event.
8c6791e4 2224 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX2_UP(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2225 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX2_UP event.
8c6791e4 2226 @event{EVT_MOUSE_AUX2_DCLICK(func)}
7f4f5e8c 2227 Process a @c wxEVT_AUX2_DCLICK event.
8c6791e4 2228 @event{EVT_MOTION(func)}
3051a44a 2229 Process a @c wxEVT_MOTION event.
8c6791e4 2230 @event{EVT_ENTER_WINDOW(func)}
3051a44a 2231 Process a @c wxEVT_ENTER_WINDOW event.
8c6791e4 2232 @event{EVT_LEAVE_WINDOW(func)}
3051a44a 2233 Process a @c wxEVT_LEAVE_WINDOW event.
8c6791e4 2234 @event{EVT_MOUSEWHEEL(func)}
3051a44a 2235 Process a @c wxEVT_MOUSEWHEEL event.
8c6791e4 2236 @event{EVT_MOUSE_EVENTS(func)}
42013f4c
FM
2237 Process all mouse events.
2238 @endEventTable
7c913512 2239
23324ae1
FM
2240 @library{wxcore}
2241 @category{events}
7c913512 2242
0e097789 2243 @see wxKeyEvent
23324ae1 2244*/
0e097789
VZ
2245class wxMouseEvent : public wxEvent,
2246 public wxMouseState
23324ae1
FM
2247{
2248public:
2249 /**
42013f4c 2250 Constructor. Valid event types are:
23324ae1 2251
3a194bda
SL
2252 @li @c wxEVT_ENTER_WINDOW
2253 @li @c wxEVT_LEAVE_WINDOW
2254 @li @c wxEVT_LEFT_DOWN
2255 @li @c wxEVT_LEFT_UP
2256 @li @c wxEVT_LEFT_DCLICK
2257 @li @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_DOWN
2258 @li @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_UP
2259 @li @c wxEVT_MIDDLE_DCLICK
2260 @li @c wxEVT_RIGHT_DOWN
2261 @li @c wxEVT_RIGHT_UP
2262 @li @c wxEVT_RIGHT_DCLICK
31a9fc93
VZ
2263 @li @c wxEVT_AUX1_DOWN
2264 @li @c wxEVT_AUX1_UP
2265 @li @c wxEVT_AUX1_DCLICK
2266 @li @c wxEVT_AUX2_DOWN
2267 @li @c wxEVT_AUX2_UP
2268 @li @c wxEVT_AUX2_DCLICK
3a194bda
SL
2269 @li @c wxEVT_MOTION
2270 @li @c wxEVT_MOUSEWHEEL
42013f4c
FM
2271 */
2272 wxMouseEvent(wxEventType mouseEventType = wxEVT_NULL);
23324ae1 2273
23324ae1 2274 /**
42013f4c 2275 Returns @true if the event was a first extra button double click.
23324ae1 2276 */
42013f4c 2277 bool Aux1DClick() const;
23324ae1
FM
2278
2279 /**
42013f4c 2280 Returns @true if the first extra button mouse button changed to down.
23324ae1 2281 */
42013f4c 2282 bool Aux1Down() const;
7c913512 2283
23324ae1 2284 /**
42013f4c 2285 Returns @true if the first extra button mouse button changed to up.
23324ae1 2286 */
42013f4c 2287 bool Aux1Up() const;
23324ae1
FM
2288
2289 /**
42013f4c 2290 Returns @true if the event was a second extra button double click.
23324ae1 2291 */
42013f4c 2292 bool Aux2DClick() const;
23324ae1
FM
2293
2294 /**
42013f4c 2295 Returns @true if the second extra button mouse button changed to down.
23324ae1 2296 */
42013f4c 2297 bool Aux2Down() const;
23324ae1 2298
23324ae1 2299 /**
42013f4c 2300 Returns @true if the second extra button mouse button changed to up.
23324ae1 2301 */
42013f4c 2302 bool Aux2Up() const;
23324ae1
FM
2303
2304 /**
ab826fd8 2305 Returns @true if the event was generated by the specified button.
42013f4c 2306
ab826fd8 2307 @see wxMouseState::ButtoinIsDown()
23324ae1 2308 */
ab826fd8 2309 bool Button(wxMouseButton but) const;
23324ae1
FM
2310
2311 /**
42013f4c
FM
2312 If the argument is omitted, this returns @true if the event was a mouse
2313 double click event. Otherwise the argument specifies which double click event
2314 was generated (see Button() for the possible values).
23324ae1 2315 */
ab826fd8 2316 bool ButtonDClick(wxMouseButton but = wxMOUSE_BTN_ANY) const;
23324ae1
FM
2317
2318 /**
42013f4c
FM
2319 If the argument is omitted, this returns @true if the event was a mouse
2320 button down event. Otherwise the argument specifies which button-down event
2321 was generated (see Button() for the possible values).
23324ae1 2322 */
ab826fd8 2323 bool ButtonDown(wxMouseButton but = wxMOUSE_BTN_ANY) const;
23324ae1
FM
2324
2325 /**
42013f4c
FM
2326 If the argument is omitted, this returns @true if the event was a mouse
2327 button up event. Otherwise the argument specifies which button-up event
2328 was generated (see Button() for the possible values).
23324ae1 2329 */
ab826fd8 2330 bool ButtonUp(wxMouseButton but = wxMOUSE_BTN_ANY) const;
23324ae1 2331
23324ae1 2332 /**
42013f4c
FM
2333 Returns @true if this was a dragging event (motion while a button is depressed).
2334
2335 @see Moving()
23324ae1 2336 */
42013f4c 2337 bool Dragging() const;
23324ae1
FM
2338
2339 /**
42013f4c
FM
2340 Returns @true if the mouse was entering the window.
2341
2342 @see Leaving()
23324ae1 2343 */
42013f4c 2344 bool Entering() const;
23324ae1
FM
2345
2346 /**
42013f4c
FM
2347 Returns the mouse button which generated this event or @c wxMOUSE_BTN_NONE
2348 if no button is involved (for mouse move, enter or leave event, for example).
2349 Otherwise @c wxMOUSE_BTN_LEFT is returned for the left button down, up and
2350 double click events, @c wxMOUSE_BTN_MIDDLE and @c wxMOUSE_BTN_RIGHT
2351 for the same events for the middle and the right buttons respectively.
23324ae1 2352 */
42013f4c 2353 int GetButton() const;
e54c96f1 2354
42013f4c
FM
2355 /**
2356 Returns the number of mouse clicks for this event: 1 for a simple click, 2
2357 for a double-click, 3 for a triple-click and so on.
7c913512 2358
42013f4c
FM
2359 Currently this function is implemented only in wxMac and returns -1 for the
2360 other platforms (you can still distinguish simple clicks from double-clicks as
2361 they generate different kinds of events however).
7c913512 2362
1e24c2af 2363 @since 2.9.0
42013f4c
FM
2364 */
2365 int GetClickCount() const;
7c913512 2366
23324ae1 2367 /**
42013f4c
FM
2368 Returns the configured number of lines (or whatever) to be scrolled per
2369 wheel action. Defaults to three.
23324ae1 2370 */
42013f4c 2371 int GetLinesPerAction() const;
23324ae1
FM
2372
2373 /**
42013f4c
FM
2374 Returns the logical mouse position in pixels (i.e. translated according to the
2375 translation set for the DC, which usually indicates that the window has been
2376 scrolled).
23324ae1 2377 */
42013f4c 2378 wxPoint GetLogicalPosition(const wxDC& dc) const;
23324ae1 2379
42013f4c
FM
2380 /**
2381 Get wheel delta, normally 120.
7c913512 2382
42013f4c
FM
2383 This is the threshold for action to be taken, and one such action
2384 (for example, scrolling one increment) should occur for each delta.
2385 */
2386 int GetWheelDelta() const;
7c913512 2387
42013f4c
FM
2388 /**
2389 Get wheel rotation, positive or negative indicates direction of rotation.
7c913512 2390
42013f4c
FM
2391 Current devices all send an event when rotation is at least +/-WheelDelta, but
2392 finer resolution devices can be created in the future.
7c913512 2393
42013f4c
FM
2394 Because of this you shouldn't assume that one event is equal to 1 line, but you
2395 should be able to either do partial line scrolling or wait until several
2396 events accumulate before scrolling.
23324ae1 2397 */
42013f4c 2398 int GetWheelRotation() const;
23324ae1 2399
ec6278a1
FM
2400 /**
2401 Gets the axis the wheel operation concerns; @c 0 is the Y axis as on
2402 most mouse wheels, @c 1 is the X axis.
2403
2404 Note that only some models of mouse have horizontal wheel axis.
2405 */
2406 int GetWheelAxis() const;
2407
23324ae1 2408 /**
42013f4c
FM
2409 Returns @true if the event was a mouse button event (not necessarily a button
2410 down event - that may be tested using ButtonDown()).
23324ae1 2411 */
42013f4c 2412 bool IsButton() const;
23324ae1
FM
2413
2414 /**
42013f4c
FM
2415 Returns @true if the system has been setup to do page scrolling with
2416 the mouse wheel instead of line scrolling.
23324ae1 2417 */
42013f4c 2418 bool IsPageScroll() const;
7c913512 2419
42013f4c
FM
2420 /**
2421 Returns @true if the mouse was leaving the window.
7c913512 2422
42013f4c
FM
2423 @see Entering().
2424 */
2425 bool Leaving() const;
7c913512 2426
23324ae1 2427 /**
42013f4c 2428 Returns @true if the event was a left double click.
23324ae1 2429 */
42013f4c 2430 bool LeftDClick() const;
23324ae1
FM
2431
2432 /**
42013f4c 2433 Returns @true if the left mouse button changed to down.
23324ae1 2434 */
42013f4c 2435 bool LeftDown() const;
7c913512 2436
42013f4c
FM
2437 /**
2438 Returns @true if the left mouse button changed to up.
2439 */
2440 bool LeftUp() const;
7c913512 2441
23324ae1 2442 /**
42013f4c
FM
2443 Returns @true if the Meta key was down at the time of the event.
2444 */
2445 bool MetaDown() const;
3c4f71cc 2446
42013f4c
FM
2447 /**
2448 Returns @true if the event was a middle double click.
23324ae1 2449 */
42013f4c 2450 bool MiddleDClick() const;
23324ae1
FM
2451
2452 /**
42013f4c 2453 Returns @true if the middle mouse button changed to down.
23324ae1 2454 */
42013f4c 2455 bool MiddleDown() const;
23324ae1 2456
42013f4c
FM
2457 /**
2458 Returns @true if the middle mouse button changed to up.
2459 */
2460 bool MiddleUp() const;
e54c96f1 2461
42013f4c
FM
2462 /**
2463 Returns @true if this was a motion event and no mouse buttons were pressed.
2464 If any mouse button is held pressed, then this method returns @false and
2465 Dragging() returns @true.
2466 */
2467 bool Moving() const;
7c913512 2468
42013f4c
FM
2469 /**
2470 Returns @true if the event was a right double click.
2471 */
2472 bool RightDClick() const;
7c913512 2473
42013f4c
FM
2474 /**
2475 Returns @true if the right mouse button changed to down.
2476 */
2477 bool RightDown() const;
7c913512 2478
42013f4c
FM
2479 /**
2480 Returns @true if the right mouse button changed to up.
2481 */
2482 bool RightUp() const;
23324ae1
FM
2483};
2484
2485
e54c96f1 2486
23324ae1 2487/**
42013f4c 2488 @class wxDropFilesEvent
7c913512 2489
42013f4c
FM
2490 This class is used for drop files events, that is, when files have been dropped
2491 onto the window. This functionality is currently only available under Windows.
7c913512 2492
42013f4c
FM
2493 The window must have previously been enabled for dropping by calling
2494 wxWindow::DragAcceptFiles().
2495
2496 Important note: this is a separate implementation to the more general drag and drop
2497 implementation documented in the @ref overview_dnd. It uses the older, Windows
2498 message-based approach of dropping files.
2499
2500 @beginEventTable{wxDropFilesEvent}
8c6791e4 2501 @event{EVT_DROP_FILES(func)}
3051a44a 2502 Process a @c wxEVT_DROP_FILES event.
42013f4c
FM
2503 @endEventTable
2504
2505 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
7c913512 2506
23324ae1
FM
2507 @library{wxcore}
2508 @category{events}
7c913512 2509
3e083d65 2510 @see @ref overview_events
23324ae1 2511*/
42013f4c 2512class wxDropFilesEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2513{
2514public:
2515 /**
42013f4c 2516 Constructor.
23324ae1 2517 */
42013f4c
FM
2518 wxDropFilesEvent(wxEventType id = 0, int noFiles = 0,
2519 wxString* files = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
2520
2521 /**
42013f4c 2522 Returns an array of filenames.
23324ae1 2523 */
42013f4c 2524 wxString* GetFiles() const;
23324ae1
FM
2525
2526 /**
42013f4c 2527 Returns the number of files dropped.
23324ae1 2528 */
42013f4c 2529 int GetNumberOfFiles() const;
23324ae1
FM
2530
2531 /**
42013f4c
FM
2532 Returns the position at which the files were dropped.
2533 Returns an array of filenames.
23324ae1 2534 */
42013f4c 2535 wxPoint GetPosition() const;
23324ae1
FM
2536};
2537
2538
e54c96f1 2539
23324ae1 2540/**
42013f4c 2541 @class wxCommandEvent
7c913512 2542
42013f4c
FM
2543 This event class contains information about command events, which originate
2544 from a variety of simple controls.
2545
3a567740
FM
2546 Note that wxCommandEvents and wxCommandEvent-derived event classes by default
2547 and unlike other wxEvent-derived classes propagate upward from the source
2548 window (the window which emits the event) up to the first parent which processes
2549 the event. Be sure to read @ref overview_events_propagation.
2550
42013f4c
FM
2551 More complex controls, such as wxTreeCtrl, have separate command event classes.
2552
2553 @beginEventTable{wxCommandEvent}
8c6791e4 2554 @event{EVT_COMMAND(id, event, func)}
42013f4c
FM
2555 Process a command, supplying the window identifier, command event identifier,
2556 and member function.
8c6791e4 2557 @event{EVT_COMMAND_RANGE(id1, id2, event, func)}
42013f4c
FM
2558 Process a command for a range of window identifiers, supplying the minimum and
2559 maximum window identifiers, command event identifier, and member function.
8c6791e4 2560 @event{EVT_BUTTON(id, func)}
b476cde6 2561 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_BUTTON_CLICKED command, which is generated by a wxButton control.
8c6791e4 2562 @event{EVT_CHECKBOX(id, func)}
b476cde6 2563 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_CHECKBOX_CLICKED command, which is generated by a wxCheckBox control.
8c6791e4 2564 @event{EVT_CHOICE(id, func)}
b476cde6 2565 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_CHOICE_SELECTED command, which is generated by a wxChoice control.
8c6791e4 2566 @event{EVT_COMBOBOX(id, func)}
b476cde6 2567 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_COMBOBOX_SELECTED command, which is generated by a wxComboBox control.
8c6791e4 2568 @event{EVT_LISTBOX(id, func)}
b476cde6 2569 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_LISTBOX_SELECTED command, which is generated by a wxListBox control.
8c6791e4 2570 @event{EVT_LISTBOX_DCLICK(id, func)}
b476cde6 2571 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_LISTBOX_DOUBLECLICKED command, which is generated by a wxListBox control.
51fbe4cc
RR
2572 @event{EVT_CHECKLISTBOX(id, func)}
2573 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_CHECKLISTBOX_TOGGLED command, which is generated by a wxCheckListBox control.
8c6791e4 2574 @event{EVT_MENU(id, func)}
b476cde6 2575 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_MENU_SELECTED command, which is generated by a menu item.
8c6791e4 2576 @event{EVT_MENU_RANGE(id1, id2, func)}
b476cde6 2577 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_MENU_RANGE command, which is generated by a range of menu items.
8c6791e4 2578 @event{EVT_CONTEXT_MENU(func)}
42013f4c
FM
2579 Process the event generated when the user has requested a popup menu to appear by
2580 pressing a special keyboard key (under Windows) or by right clicking the mouse.
8c6791e4 2581 @event{EVT_RADIOBOX(id, func)}
b476cde6 2582 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_RADIOBOX_SELECTED command, which is generated by a wxRadioBox control.
8c6791e4 2583 @event{EVT_RADIOBUTTON(id, func)}
b476cde6 2584 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_RADIOBUTTON_SELECTED command, which is generated by a wxRadioButton control.
8c6791e4 2585 @event{EVT_SCROLLBAR(id, func)}
b476cde6 2586 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_SCROLLBAR_UPDATED command, which is generated by a wxScrollBar
42013f4c
FM
2587 control. This is provided for compatibility only; more specific scrollbar event macros
2588 should be used instead (see wxScrollEvent).
8c6791e4 2589 @event{EVT_SLIDER(id, func)}
b476cde6 2590 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_SLIDER_UPDATED command, which is generated by a wxSlider control.
8c6791e4 2591 @event{EVT_TEXT(id, func)}
b476cde6 2592 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_UPDATED command, which is generated by a wxTextCtrl control.
8c6791e4 2593 @event{EVT_TEXT_ENTER(id, func)}
b476cde6 2594 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_ENTER command, which is generated by a wxTextCtrl control.
42013f4c
FM
2595 Note that you must use wxTE_PROCESS_ENTER flag when creating the control if you want it
2596 to generate such events.
8c6791e4 2597 @event{EVT_TEXT_MAXLEN(id, func)}
b476cde6 2598 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_MAXLEN command, which is generated by a wxTextCtrl control
42013f4c
FM
2599 when the user tries to enter more characters into it than the limit previously set
2600 with SetMaxLength().
8c6791e4 2601 @event{EVT_TOGGLEBUTTON(id, func)}
b476cde6 2602 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOGGLEBUTTON_CLICKED event.
8c6791e4 2603 @event{EVT_TOOL(id, func)}
b476cde6 2604 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_CLICKED event (a synonym for @c wxEVT_COMMAND_MENU_SELECTED).
42013f4c 2605 Pass the id of the tool.
8c6791e4 2606 @event{EVT_TOOL_RANGE(id1, id2, func)}
b476cde6 2607 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_CLICKED event for a range of identifiers. Pass the ids of the tools.
8c6791e4 2608 @event{EVT_TOOL_RCLICKED(id, func)}
e431dd05 2609 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_RCLICKED event. Pass the id of the tool. (Not available on wxOSX.)
8c6791e4 2610 @event{EVT_TOOL_RCLICKED_RANGE(id1, id2, func)}
e431dd05 2611 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_RCLICKED event for a range of ids. Pass the ids of the tools. (Not available on wxOSX.)
8c6791e4 2612 @event{EVT_TOOL_ENTER(id, func)}
b476cde6 2613 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_ENTER event. Pass the id of the toolbar itself.
42013f4c 2614 The value of wxCommandEvent::GetSelection() is the tool id, or -1 if the mouse cursor
e431dd05 2615 has moved off a tool. (Not available on wxOSX.)
8c6791e4 2616 @event{EVT_COMMAND_LEFT_CLICK(id, func)}
b476cde6 2617 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_LEFT_CLICK command, which is generated by a control (wxMSW only).
8c6791e4 2618 @event{EVT_COMMAND_LEFT_DCLICK(id, func)}
b476cde6 2619 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_LEFT_DCLICK command, which is generated by a control (wxMSW only).
8c6791e4 2620 @event{EVT_COMMAND_RIGHT_CLICK(id, func)}
b476cde6 2621 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_RIGHT_CLICK command, which is generated by a control (wxMSW only).
8c6791e4 2622 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SET_FOCUS(id, func)}
b476cde6 2623 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_SET_FOCUS command, which is generated by a control (wxMSW only).
8c6791e4 2624 @event{EVT_COMMAND_KILL_FOCUS(id, func)}
b476cde6 2625 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_KILL_FOCUS command, which is generated by a control (wxMSW only).
8c6791e4 2626 @event{EVT_COMMAND_ENTER(id, func)}
b476cde6 2627 Process a @c wxEVT_COMMAND_ENTER command, which is generated by a control.
42013f4c 2628 @endEventTable
7c913512 2629
23324ae1 2630 @library{wxcore}
1f1d2182 2631 @category{events}
23324ae1 2632*/
42013f4c 2633class wxCommandEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2634{
2635public:
2636 /**
2637 Constructor.
2638 */
408776d0 2639 wxCommandEvent(wxEventType commandEventType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
2640
2641 /**
42013f4c
FM
2642 Returns client data pointer for a listbox or choice selection event
2643 (not valid for a deselection).
2644 */
2645 void* GetClientData() const;
3c4f71cc 2646
42013f4c
FM
2647 /**
2648 Returns client object pointer for a listbox or choice selection event
2649 (not valid for a deselection).
2650 */
2651 wxClientData* GetClientObject() const;
3c4f71cc 2652
42013f4c
FM
2653 /**
2654 Returns extra information dependant on the event objects type.
3c4f71cc 2655
42013f4c
FM
2656 If the event comes from a listbox selection, it is a boolean
2657 determining whether the event was a selection (@true) or a
2658 deselection (@false). A listbox deselection only occurs for
2659 multiple-selection boxes, and in this case the index and string values
2660 are indeterminate and the listbox must be examined by the application.
2661 */
2662 long GetExtraLong() const;
3c4f71cc 2663
42013f4c
FM
2664 /**
2665 Returns the integer identifier corresponding to a listbox, choice or
2666 radiobox selection (only if the event was a selection, not a deselection),
2667 or a boolean value representing the value of a checkbox.
e23e368b
VZ
2668
2669 For a menu item, this method returns -1 if the item is not checkable or
2670 a boolean value (true or false) for checkable items indicating the new
2671 state of the item.
42013f4c
FM
2672 */
2673 int GetInt() const;
3c4f71cc 2674
42013f4c
FM
2675 /**
2676 Returns item index for a listbox or choice selection event (not valid for
2677 a deselection).
23324ae1 2678 */
42013f4c 2679 int GetSelection() const;
23324ae1
FM
2680
2681 /**
85339748
RR
2682 Returns item string for a listbox or choice selection event. If one
2683 or several items have been deselected, returns the index of the first
2684 deselected item. If some items have been selected and others deselected
2685 at the same time, it will return the index of the first selected item.
23324ae1 2686 */
42013f4c 2687 wxString GetString() const;
23324ae1
FM
2688
2689 /**
42013f4c
FM
2690 This method can be used with checkbox and menu events: for the checkboxes, the
2691 method returns @true for a selection event and @false for a deselection one.
2692 For the menu events, this method indicates if the menu item just has become
2693 checked or unchecked (and thus only makes sense for checkable menu items).
3c4f71cc 2694
57ab6f23 2695 Notice that this method cannot be used with wxCheckListBox currently.
23324ae1 2696 */
42013f4c 2697 bool IsChecked() const;
23324ae1
FM
2698
2699 /**
85339748
RR
2700 For a listbox or similar event, returns @true if it is a selection, @false
2701 if it is a deselection. If some items have been selected and others deselected
2702 at the same time, it will return @true.
23324ae1 2703 */
42013f4c 2704 bool IsSelection() const;
e54c96f1 2705
42013f4c
FM
2706 /**
2707 Sets the client data for this event.
2708 */
2709 void SetClientData(void* clientData);
7c913512 2710
42013f4c
FM
2711 /**
2712 Sets the client object for this event. The client object is not owned by the
2713 event object and the event object will not delete the client object in its destructor.
7c913512 2714
42013f4c
FM
2715 The client object must be owned and deleted by another object (e.g. a control)
2716 that has longer life time than the event object.
2717 */
2718 void SetClientObject(wxClientData* clientObject);
7c913512 2719
23324ae1 2720 /**
42013f4c 2721 Sets the @b m_extraLong member.
23324ae1 2722 */
42013f4c 2723 void SetExtraLong(long extraLong);
23324ae1
FM
2724
2725 /**
42013f4c 2726 Sets the @b m_commandInt member.
23324ae1 2727 */
42013f4c 2728 void SetInt(int intCommand);
23324ae1
FM
2729
2730 /**
42013f4c 2731 Sets the @b m_commandString member.
23324ae1 2732 */
42013f4c 2733 void SetString(const wxString& string);
23324ae1
FM
2734};
2735
2736
e54c96f1 2737
23324ae1 2738/**
42013f4c 2739 @class wxActivateEvent
7c913512 2740
42013f4c
FM
2741 An activate event is sent when a window or application is being activated
2742 or deactivated.
7c913512 2743
42013f4c 2744 @beginEventTable{wxActivateEvent}
8c6791e4 2745 @event{EVT_ACTIVATE(func)}
3051a44a 2746 Process a @c wxEVT_ACTIVATE event.
8c6791e4 2747 @event{EVT_ACTIVATE_APP(func)}
3051a44a
FM
2748 Process a @c wxEVT_ACTIVATE_APP event.
2749 This event is received by the wxApp-derived instance only.
8c6791e4 2750 @event{EVT_HIBERNATE(func)}
42013f4c
FM
2751 Process a hibernate event, supplying the member function. This event applies
2752 to wxApp only, and only on Windows SmartPhone and PocketPC.
2753 It is generated when the system is low on memory; the application should free
2754 up as much memory as possible, and restore full working state when it receives
3a194bda 2755 a @c wxEVT_ACTIVATE or @c wxEVT_ACTIVATE_APP event.
42013f4c
FM
2756 @endEventTable
2757
42013f4c 2758 @library{wxcore}
23324ae1 2759 @category{events}
7c913512 2760
3e083d65 2761 @see @ref overview_events, wxApp::IsActive
23324ae1 2762*/
42013f4c 2763class wxActivateEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2764{
2765public:
2766 /**
2767 Constructor.
2768 */
42013f4c
FM
2769 wxActivateEvent(wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL, bool active = true,
2770 int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
2771
2772 /**
42013f4c 2773 Returns @true if the application or window is being activated, @false otherwise.
23324ae1 2774 */
42013f4c 2775 bool GetActive() const;
23324ae1
FM
2776};
2777
2778
e54c96f1 2779
23324ae1 2780/**
42013f4c 2781 @class wxContextMenuEvent
7c913512 2782
42013f4c 2783 This class is used for context menu events, sent to give
3051a44a 2784 the application a chance to show a context (popup) menu for a wxWindow.
42013f4c
FM
2785
2786 Note that if wxContextMenuEvent::GetPosition returns wxDefaultPosition, this
2787 means that the event originated from a keyboard context button event, and you
2788 should compute a suitable position yourself, for example by calling wxGetMousePosition().
2789
2790 When a keyboard context menu button is pressed on Windows, a right-click event
2791 with default position is sent first, and if this event is not processed, the
2792 context menu event is sent. So if you process mouse events and you find your
2793 context menu event handler is not being called, you could call wxEvent::Skip()
2794 for mouse right-down events.
2795
2796 @beginEventTable{wxContextMenuEvent}
8c6791e4 2797 @event{EVT_CONTEXT_MENU(func)}
42013f4c
FM
2798 A right click (or other context menu command depending on platform) has been detected.
2799 @endEventTable
2800
7c913512 2801
23324ae1
FM
2802 @library{wxcore}
2803 @category{events}
7c913512 2804
3e083d65 2805 @see wxCommandEvent, @ref overview_events
23324ae1 2806*/
42013f4c 2807class wxContextMenuEvent : public wxCommandEvent
23324ae1
FM
2808{
2809public:
2810 /**
2811 Constructor.
2812 */
a90e69f7 2813 wxContextMenuEvent(wxEventType type = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0,
42013f4c
FM
2814 const wxPoint& pos = wxDefaultPosition);
2815
2816 /**
2817 Returns the position in screen coordinates at which the menu should be shown.
2818 Use wxWindow::ScreenToClient to convert to client coordinates.
2819
2820 You can also omit a position from wxWindow::PopupMenu in order to use
2821 the current mouse pointer position.
2822
2823 If the event originated from a keyboard event, the value returned from this
2824 function will be wxDefaultPosition.
2825 */
2826 const wxPoint& GetPosition() const;
2827
2828 /**
2829 Sets the position at which the menu should be shown.
2830 */
2831 void SetPosition(const wxPoint& point);
23324ae1
FM
2832};
2833
2834
e54c96f1 2835
23324ae1 2836/**
42013f4c 2837 @class wxEraseEvent
7c913512 2838
42013f4c 2839 An erase event is sent when a window's background needs to be repainted.
7c913512 2840
42013f4c
FM
2841 On some platforms, such as GTK+, this event is simulated (simply generated just
2842 before the paint event) and may cause flicker. It is therefore recommended that
2843 you set the text background colour explicitly in order to prevent flicker.
2844 The default background colour under GTK+ is grey.
2845
2846 To intercept this event, use the EVT_ERASE_BACKGROUND macro in an event table
2847 definition.
2848
2849 You must call wxEraseEvent::GetDC and use the returned device context if it is
2850 non-@NULL. If it is @NULL, create your own temporary wxClientDC object.
2851
2852 @remarks
2853 Use the device context returned by GetDC to draw on, don't create
2854 a wxPaintDC in the event handler.
7c913512 2855
42013f4c 2856 @beginEventTable{wxEraseEvent}
8c6791e4 2857 @event{EVT_ERASE_BACKGROUND(func)}
3051a44a 2858 Process a @c wxEVT_ERASE_BACKGROUND event.
42013f4c 2859 @endEventTable
7c913512 2860
23324ae1
FM
2861 @library{wxcore}
2862 @category{events}
7c913512 2863
3e083d65 2864 @see @ref overview_events
23324ae1 2865*/
42013f4c 2866class wxEraseEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2867{
2868public:
2869 /**
2870 Constructor.
2871 */
42013f4c
FM
2872 wxEraseEvent(int id = 0, wxDC* dc = NULL);
2873
2874 /**
2875 Returns the device context associated with the erase event to draw on.
2876 */
2877 wxDC* GetDC() const;
23324ae1
FM
2878};
2879
2880
e54c96f1 2881
23324ae1 2882/**
42013f4c 2883 @class wxFocusEvent
7c913512 2884
42013f4c
FM
2885 A focus event is sent when a window's focus changes. The window losing focus
2886 receives a "kill focus" event while the window gaining it gets a "set focus" one.
7c913512 2887
42013f4c
FM
2888 Notice that the set focus event happens both when the user gives focus to the
2889 window (whether using the mouse or keyboard) and when it is done from the
2890 program itself using wxWindow::SetFocus.
2891
2892 @beginEventTable{wxFocusEvent}
8c6791e4 2893 @event{EVT_SET_FOCUS(func)}
3051a44a 2894 Process a @c wxEVT_SET_FOCUS event.
8c6791e4 2895 @event{EVT_KILL_FOCUS(func)}
3051a44a 2896 Process a @c wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS event.
42013f4c 2897 @endEventTable
7c913512 2898
23324ae1
FM
2899 @library{wxcore}
2900 @category{events}
7c913512 2901
3e083d65 2902 @see @ref overview_events
23324ae1 2903*/
42013f4c 2904class wxFocusEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2905{
2906public:
23324ae1
FM
2907 /**
2908 Constructor.
2909 */
42013f4c 2910 wxFocusEvent(wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
2911
2912 /**
42013f4c
FM
2913 Returns the window associated with this event, that is the window which had the
2914 focus before for the @c wxEVT_SET_FOCUS event and the window which is
2915 going to receive focus for the @c wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS one.
23324ae1 2916
42013f4c 2917 Warning: the window pointer may be @NULL!
23324ae1 2918 */
42013f4c 2919 wxWindow *GetWindow() const;
a90e69f7
RD
2920
2921 void SetWindow(wxWindow *win);
42013f4c 2922};
23324ae1 2923
23324ae1 2924
23324ae1 2925
42013f4c
FM
2926/**
2927 @class wxChildFocusEvent
23324ae1 2928
42013f4c
FM
2929 A child focus event is sent to a (parent-)window when one of its child windows
2930 gains focus, so that the window could restore the focus back to its corresponding
2931 child if it loses it now and regains later.
23324ae1 2932
42013f4c 2933 Notice that child window is the direct child of the window receiving event.
57ab6f23 2934 Use wxWindow::FindFocus() to retrieve the window which is actually getting focus.
42013f4c
FM
2935
2936 @beginEventTable{wxChildFocusEvent}
8c6791e4 2937 @event{EVT_CHILD_FOCUS(func)}
3051a44a 2938 Process a @c wxEVT_CHILD_FOCUS event.
42013f4c
FM
2939 @endEventTable
2940
2941 @library{wxcore}
2942 @category{events}
23324ae1 2943
3e083d65 2944 @see @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
2945*/
2946class wxChildFocusEvent : public wxCommandEvent
2947{
2948public:
23324ae1 2949 /**
42013f4c
FM
2950 Constructor.
2951
2952 @param win
2953 The direct child which is (or which contains the window which is) receiving
2954 the focus.
23324ae1 2955 */
42013f4c 2956 wxChildFocusEvent(wxWindow* win = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
2957
2958 /**
42013f4c
FM
2959 Returns the direct child which receives the focus, or a (grand-)parent of the
2960 control receiving the focus.
2961
2962 To get the actually focused control use wxWindow::FindFocus.
23324ae1 2963 */
42013f4c 2964 wxWindow *GetWindow() const;
23324ae1
FM
2965};
2966
2967
e54c96f1 2968
23324ae1 2969/**
42013f4c 2970 @class wxMouseCaptureLostEvent
7c913512 2971
0af4bd16
VZ
2972 A mouse capture lost event is sent to a window that had obtained mouse capture,
2973 which was subsequently lost due to an "external" event (for example, when a dialog
2974 box is shown or if another application captures the mouse).
42013f4c 2975
0af4bd16 2976 If this happens, this event is sent to all windows that are on the capture stack
42013f4c
FM
2977 (i.e. called CaptureMouse, but didn't call ReleaseMouse yet). The event is
2978 not sent if the capture changes because of a call to CaptureMouse or
2979 ReleaseMouse.
2980
2981 This event is currently emitted under Windows only.
2982
2983 @beginEventTable{wxMouseCaptureLostEvent}
8c6791e4 2984 @event{EVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_LOST(func)}
3051a44a 2985 Process a @c wxEVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_LOST event.
42013f4c 2986 @endEventTable
7c913512 2987
42013f4c 2988 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
7c913512 2989
23324ae1
FM
2990 @library{wxcore}
2991 @category{events}
7c913512 2992
3e083d65 2993 @see wxMouseCaptureChangedEvent, @ref overview_events,
3051a44a 2994 wxWindow::CaptureMouse, wxWindow::ReleaseMouse, wxWindow::GetCapture
23324ae1 2995*/
42013f4c 2996class wxMouseCaptureLostEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
2997{
2998public:
2999 /**
3000 Constructor.
3001 */
42013f4c 3002 wxMouseCaptureLostEvent(wxWindowID windowId = 0);
23324ae1
FM
3003};
3004
3005
e54c96f1 3006
a90e69f7
RD
3007class wxDisplayChangedEvent : public wxEvent
3008{
3009public:
3010 wxDisplayChangedEvent();
3011};
3012
3013
3014class wxPaletteChangedEvent : public wxEvent
3015{
3016public:
3017 wxPaletteChangedEvent(wxWindowID winid = 0);
3018
3019 void SetChangedWindow(wxWindow* win);
3020 wxWindow* GetChangedWindow() const;
3021};
3022
3023
3024class wxQueryNewPaletteEvent : public wxEvent
3025{
3026public:
3027 wxQueryNewPaletteEvent(wxWindowID winid = 0);
3028
3029 void SetPaletteRealized(bool realized);
3030 bool GetPaletteRealized();
3031};
3032
3033
3034
3035
23324ae1 3036/**
42013f4c 3037 @class wxNotifyEvent
7c913512 3038
42013f4c 3039 This class is not used by the event handlers by itself, but is a base class
3e97a905 3040 for other event classes (such as wxBookCtrlEvent).
7c913512 3041
42013f4c
FM
3042 It (or an object of a derived class) is sent when the controls state is being
3043 changed and allows the program to wxNotifyEvent::Veto() this change if it wants
3044 to prevent it from happening.
7c913512 3045
23324ae1
FM
3046 @library{wxcore}
3047 @category{events}
7c913512 3048
3e97a905 3049 @see wxBookCtrlEvent
23324ae1 3050*/
42013f4c 3051class wxNotifyEvent : public wxCommandEvent
23324ae1
FM
3052{
3053public:
3054 /**
42013f4c 3055 Constructor (used internally by wxWidgets only).
23324ae1 3056 */
42013f4c 3057 wxNotifyEvent(wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
3058
3059 /**
42013f4c
FM
3060 This is the opposite of Veto(): it explicitly allows the event to be processed.
3061 For most events it is not necessary to call this method as the events are allowed
3062 anyhow but some are forbidden by default (this will be mentioned in the corresponding
3063 event description).
23324ae1 3064 */
42013f4c 3065 void Allow();
23324ae1
FM
3066
3067 /**
42013f4c
FM
3068 Returns @true if the change is allowed (Veto() hasn't been called) or @false
3069 otherwise (if it was).
23324ae1 3070 */
42013f4c 3071 bool IsAllowed() const;
23324ae1
FM
3072
3073 /**
42013f4c 3074 Prevents the change announced by this event from happening.
23324ae1 3075
42013f4c
FM
3076 It is in general a good idea to notify the user about the reasons for vetoing
3077 the change because otherwise the applications behaviour (which just refuses to
3078 do what the user wants) might be quite surprising.
23324ae1 3079 */
42013f4c
FM
3080 void Veto();
3081};
3082
23324ae1 3083
d48b06bd
FM
3084/**
3085 @class wxThreadEvent
23324ae1 3086
5d4a0504
VZ
3087 This class adds some simple functionality to wxEvent to facilitate
3088 inter-thread communication.
23324ae1 3089
5d4a0504
VZ
3090 This event is not natively emitted by any control/class: it is just
3091 a helper class for the user.
3a567740 3092 Its most important feature is the GetEventCategory() implementation which
5d4a0504 3093 allows thread events @b NOT to be processed by wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor calls
3a567740
FM
3094 (unless the @c wxEVT_CATEGORY_THREAD is specified - which is never in wx code).
3095
d48b06bd 3096 @library{wxcore}
3c99e2fd 3097 @category{events,threading}
d48b06bd 3098
dde19c21 3099 @see @ref overview_thread, wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor
c1b293bb
VS
3100
3101 @since 2.9.0
d48b06bd 3102*/
c1b293bb 3103class wxThreadEvent : public wxEvent
42013f4c 3104{
d48b06bd
FM
3105public:
3106 /**
3107 Constructor.
d48b06bd 3108 */
c1b293bb 3109 wxThreadEvent(wxEventType eventType = wxEVT_THREAD, int id = wxID_ANY);
23324ae1 3110
d48b06bd
FM
3111 /**
3112 Clones this event making sure that all internal members which use
3113 COW (only @c m_commandString for now; see @ref overview_refcount)
3114 are unshared (see wxObject::UnShare).
3115 */
3116 virtual wxEvent *Clone() const;
3117
3118 /**
3119 Returns @c wxEVT_CATEGORY_THREAD.
3120
74d60f66 3121 This is important to avoid unwanted processing of thread events
dde19c21 3122 when calling wxEventLoopBase::YieldFor().
d48b06bd
FM
3123 */
3124 virtual wxEventCategory GetEventCategory() const;
dae60aee
VS
3125
3126 /**
3127 Sets custom data payload.
3128
3129 The @a payload argument may be of any type that wxAny can handle
3130 (i.e. pretty much anything). Note that T's copy constructor must be
3131 thread-safe, i.e. create a copy that doesn't share anything with
3132 the original (see Clone()).
3133
3134 @note This method is not available with Visual C++ 6.
3135
3136 @since 2.9.1
3137
3138 @see GetPayload(), wxAny
3139 */
3140 template<typename T>
3141 void SetPayload(const T& payload);
3142
3143 /**
3144 Get custom data payload.
3145
3146 Correct type is checked in debug builds.
3147
3148 @note This method is not available with Visual C++ 6.
3149
3150 @since 2.9.1
3151
3152 @see SetPayload(), wxAny
3153 */
3154 template<typename T>
3155 T GetPayload() const;
c1b293bb
VS
3156
3157 /**
3158 Returns extra information integer value.
3159 */
3160 long GetExtraLong() const;
3161
3162 /**
3163 Returns stored integer value.
3164 */
3165 int GetInt() const;
3166
3167 /**
3168 Returns stored string value.
3169 */
3170 wxString GetString() const;
3171
3172
3173 /**
3174 Sets the extra information value.
3175 */
3176 void SetExtraLong(long extraLong);
3177
3178 /**
3179 Sets the integer value.
3180 */
3181 void SetInt(int intCommand);
3182
3183 /**
3184 Sets the string value.
3185 */
3186 void SetString(const wxString& string);
42013f4c 3187};
e54c96f1 3188
d48b06bd 3189
23324ae1 3190/**
42013f4c 3191 @class wxHelpEvent
7c913512 3192
42013f4c
FM
3193 A help event is sent when the user has requested context-sensitive help.
3194 This can either be caused by the application requesting context-sensitive help mode
3195 via wxContextHelp, or (on MS Windows) by the system generating a WM_HELP message when
3196 the user pressed F1 or clicked on the query button in a dialog caption.
7c913512 3197
42013f4c
FM
3198 A help event is sent to the window that the user clicked on, and is propagated
3199 up the window hierarchy until the event is processed or there are no more event
3200 handlers.
3201
3202 The application should call wxEvent::GetId to check the identity of the
3203 clicked-on window, and then either show some suitable help or call wxEvent::Skip()
3204 if the identifier is unrecognised.
3205
3206 Calling Skip is important because it allows wxWidgets to generate further
3207 events for ancestors of the clicked-on window. Otherwise it would be impossible to
3208 show help for container windows, since processing would stop after the first window
3209 found.
3210
3211 @beginEventTable{wxHelpEvent}
8c6791e4 3212 @event{EVT_HELP(id, func)}
3051a44a 3213 Process a @c wxEVT_HELP event.
8c6791e4 3214 @event{EVT_HELP_RANGE(id1, id2, func)}
3051a44a 3215 Process a @c wxEVT_HELP event for a range of ids.
42013f4c 3216 @endEventTable
7c913512 3217
23324ae1
FM
3218 @library{wxcore}
3219 @category{events}
7c913512 3220
3e083d65 3221 @see wxContextHelp, wxDialog, @ref overview_events
23324ae1 3222*/
42013f4c 3223class wxHelpEvent : public wxCommandEvent
23324ae1
FM
3224{
3225public:
a44f3b5a
FM
3226 /**
3227 Indicates how a wxHelpEvent was generated.
3228 */
3229 enum Origin
3230 {
3231 Origin_Unknown, /**< unrecognized event source. */
3232 Origin_Keyboard, /**< event generated from F1 key press. */
3233
3234 /** event generated by wxContextHelp or from the [?] button on
3235 the title bar (Windows). */
3236 Origin_HelpButton
3237 };
3238
23324ae1
FM
3239 /**
3240 Constructor.
3241 */
42013f4c
FM
3242 wxHelpEvent(wxEventType type = wxEVT_NULL,
3243 wxWindowID winid = 0,
3244 const wxPoint& pt = wxDefaultPosition,
a44f3b5a 3245 wxHelpEvent::Origin origin = Origin_Unknown);
42013f4c
FM
3246
3247 /**
3248 Returns the origin of the help event which is one of the ::wxHelpEventOrigin
3249 values.
3250
3251 The application may handle events generated using the keyboard or mouse
3252 differently, e.g. by using wxGetMousePosition() for the mouse events.
3253
3254 @see SetOrigin()
3255 */
43c48e1e 3256 wxHelpEvent::Origin GetOrigin() const;
23324ae1
FM
3257
3258 /**
42013f4c
FM
3259 Returns the left-click position of the mouse, in screen coordinates.
3260 This allows the application to position the help appropriately.
23324ae1 3261 */
42013f4c 3262 const wxPoint& GetPosition() const;
23324ae1
FM
3263
3264 /**
42013f4c
FM
3265 Set the help event origin, only used internally by wxWidgets normally.
3266
3267 @see GetOrigin()
23324ae1 3268 */
43c48e1e 3269 void SetOrigin(wxHelpEvent::Origin origin);
23324ae1
FM
3270
3271 /**
42013f4c 3272 Sets the left-click position of the mouse, in screen coordinates.
23324ae1 3273 */
42013f4c 3274 void SetPosition(const wxPoint& pt);
23324ae1
FM
3275};
3276
3277
e54c96f1 3278
23324ae1 3279/**
42013f4c 3280 @class wxScrollEvent
7c913512 3281
42013f4c
FM
3282 A scroll event holds information about events sent from stand-alone
3283 scrollbars (see wxScrollBar) and sliders (see wxSlider).
7c913512 3284
42013f4c
FM
3285 Note that scrolled windows send the wxScrollWinEvent which does not derive from
3286 wxCommandEvent, but from wxEvent directly - don't confuse these two kinds of
3287 events and use the event table macros mentioned below only for the scrollbar-like
3288 controls.
7c913512 3289
3a74a290 3290 @section scrollevent_diff The difference between EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE and EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED
7c913512 3291
42013f4c
FM
3292 The EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE event is only emitted when actually dragging the thumb
3293 using the mouse and releasing it (This EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE event is also followed
3294 by an EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED event).
7c913512 3295
42013f4c
FM
3296 The EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED event also occurs when using the keyboard to change the thumb
3297 position, and when clicking next to the thumb (In all these cases the EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE
3298 event does not happen).
7c913512 3299
42013f4c
FM
3300 In short, the EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED event is triggered when scrolling/ moving has finished
3301 independently of the way it had started. Please see the widgets sample ("Slider" page)
3302 to see the difference between EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE and EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED in action.
3303
3304 @remarks
3305 Note that unless specifying a scroll control identifier, you will need to test for scrollbar
3306 orientation with wxScrollEvent::GetOrientation, since horizontal and vertical scroll events
3307 are processed using the same event handler.
3308
3309 @beginEventTable{wxScrollEvent}
3310 You can use EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL... macros with window IDs for when intercepting
3311 scroll events from controls, or EVT_SCROLL... macros without window IDs for
3312 intercepting scroll events from the receiving window -- except for this, the
3313 macros behave exactly the same.
8c6791e4 3314 @event{EVT_SCROLL(func)}
42013f4c 3315 Process all scroll events.
8c6791e4 3316 @event{EVT_SCROLL_TOP(func)}
3a194bda 3317 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_TOP scroll-to-top events (minimum position).
8c6791e4 3318 @event{EVT_SCROLL_BOTTOM(func)}
3a194bda 3319 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_BOTTOM scroll-to-bottom events (maximum position).
8c6791e4 3320 @event{EVT_SCROLL_LINEUP(func)}
3a194bda 3321 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEUP line up events.
8c6791e4 3322 @event{EVT_SCROLL_LINEDOWN(func)}
3a194bda 3323 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEDOWN line down events.
8c6791e4 3324 @event{EVT_SCROLL_PAGEUP(func)}
3a194bda 3325 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEUP page up events.
8c6791e4 3326 @event{EVT_SCROLL_PAGEDOWN(func)}
3a194bda 3327 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEDOWN page down events.
8c6791e4 3328 @event{EVT_SCROLL_THUMBTRACK(func)}
3a194bda 3329 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBTRACK thumbtrack events (frequent events sent as the
42013f4c 3330 user drags the thumbtrack).
8c6791e4 3331 @event{EVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE(func)}
3a194bda 3332 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE thumb release events.
8c6791e4 3333 @event{EVT_SCROLL_CHANGED(func)}
3a194bda 3334 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_CHANGED end of scrolling events (MSW only).
8c6791e4 3335 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL(id, func)}
42013f4c 3336 Process all scroll events.
8c6791e4 3337 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_TOP(id, func)}
3a194bda 3338 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_TOP scroll-to-top events (minimum position).
8c6791e4 3339 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_BOTTOM(id, func)}
3a194bda 3340 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_BOTTOM scroll-to-bottom events (maximum position).
8c6791e4 3341 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_LINEUP(id, func)}
3a194bda 3342 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEUP line up events.
8c6791e4 3343 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_LINEDOWN(id, func)}
3a194bda 3344 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEDOWN line down events.
8c6791e4 3345 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_PAGEUP(id, func)}
3a194bda 3346 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEUP page up events.
8c6791e4 3347 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_PAGEDOWN(id, func)}
3a194bda 3348 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEDOWN page down events.
8c6791e4 3349 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_THUMBTRACK(id, func)}
3a194bda 3350 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBTRACK thumbtrack events (frequent events sent
42013f4c 3351 as the user drags the thumbtrack).
8c6791e4 3352 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE(func)}
3a194bda 3353 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE thumb release events.
8c6791e4 3354 @event{EVT_COMMAND_SCROLL_CHANGED(func)}
3a194bda 3355 Process @c wxEVT_SCROLL_CHANGED end of scrolling events (MSW only).
42013f4c 3356 @endEventTable
7c913512 3357
23324ae1 3358 @library{wxcore}
1f1d2182 3359 @category{events}
7c913512 3360
3e083d65 3361 @see wxScrollBar, wxSlider, wxSpinButton, wxScrollWinEvent, @ref overview_events
23324ae1 3362*/
42013f4c 3363class wxScrollEvent : public wxCommandEvent
23324ae1
FM
3364{
3365public:
3366 /**
42013f4c 3367 Constructor.
23324ae1 3368 */
42013f4c
FM
3369 wxScrollEvent(wxEventType commandType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0, int pos = 0,
3370 int orientation = 0);
23324ae1
FM
3371
3372 /**
42013f4c
FM
3373 Returns wxHORIZONTAL or wxVERTICAL, depending on the orientation of the
3374 scrollbar.
23324ae1 3375 */
42013f4c 3376 int GetOrientation() const;
23324ae1
FM
3377
3378 /**
42013f4c 3379 Returns the position of the scrollbar.
23324ae1 3380 */
42013f4c 3381 int GetPosition() const;
a90e69f7
RD
3382
3383
3384 void SetOrientation(int orient);
3385 void SetPosition(int pos);
23324ae1
FM
3386};
3387
42013f4c
FM
3388/**
3389 See wxIdleEvent::SetMode() for more info.
3390*/
3391enum wxIdleMode
3392{
3393 /** Send idle events to all windows */
3394 wxIDLE_PROCESS_ALL,
3395
3396 /** Send idle events to windows that have the wxWS_EX_PROCESS_IDLE flag specified */
3397 wxIDLE_PROCESS_SPECIFIED
3398};
23324ae1 3399
e54c96f1 3400
23324ae1 3401/**
42013f4c 3402 @class wxIdleEvent
7c913512 3403
42013f4c
FM
3404 This class is used for idle events, which are generated when the system becomes
3405 idle. Note that, unless you do something specifically, the idle events are not
3406 sent if the system remains idle once it has become it, e.g. only a single idle
3407 event will be generated until something else resulting in more normal events
3408 happens and only then is the next idle event sent again.
3409
3410 If you need to ensure a continuous stream of idle events, you can either use
3411 wxIdleEvent::RequestMore method in your handler or call wxWakeUpIdle() periodically
3412 (for example from a timer event handler), but note that both of these approaches
3413 (and especially the first one) increase the system load and so should be avoided
3414 if possible.
3415
3416 By default, idle events are sent to all windows (and also wxApp, as usual).
3417 If this is causing a significant overhead in your application, you can call
3418 wxIdleEvent::SetMode with the value wxIDLE_PROCESS_SPECIFIED, and set the
3419 wxWS_EX_PROCESS_IDLE extra window style for every window which should receive
3420 idle events.
3421
3422 @beginEventTable{wxIdleEvent}
8c6791e4 3423 @event{EVT_IDLE(func)}
3051a44a 3424 Process a @c wxEVT_IDLE event.
42013f4c 3425 @endEventTable
7c913512 3426
23324ae1 3427 @library{wxbase}
1f1d2182 3428 @category{events}
7c913512 3429
3e083d65 3430 @see @ref overview_events, wxUpdateUIEvent, wxWindow::OnInternalIdle
23324ae1 3431*/
42013f4c 3432class wxIdleEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
3433{
3434public:
3435 /**
3436 Constructor.
3437 */
42013f4c 3438 wxIdleEvent();
23324ae1 3439
23324ae1 3440 /**
42013f4c
FM
3441 Static function returning a value specifying how wxWidgets will send idle
3442 events: to all windows, or only to those which specify that they
3443 will process the events.
3c4f71cc 3444
42013f4c 3445 @see SetMode().
23324ae1 3446 */
42013f4c 3447 static wxIdleMode GetMode();
23324ae1 3448
23324ae1 3449 /**
42013f4c
FM
3450 Returns @true if the OnIdle function processing this event requested more
3451 processing time.
3c4f71cc 3452
42013f4c 3453 @see RequestMore()
23324ae1 3454 */
42013f4c 3455 bool MoreRequested() const;
23324ae1
FM
3456
3457 /**
42013f4c 3458 Tells wxWidgets that more processing is required.
3c4f71cc 3459
42013f4c
FM
3460 This function can be called by an OnIdle handler for a window or window event
3461 handler to indicate that wxApp::OnIdle should forward the OnIdle event once
3462 more to the application windows.
3c4f71cc 3463
42013f4c
FM
3464 If no window calls this function during OnIdle, then the application will
3465 remain in a passive event loop (not calling OnIdle) until a new event is
3466 posted to the application by the windowing system.
3467
3468 @see MoreRequested()
23324ae1 3469 */
42013f4c 3470 void RequestMore(bool needMore = true);
23324ae1
FM
3471
3472 /**
42013f4c
FM
3473 Static function for specifying how wxWidgets will send idle events: to
3474 all windows, or only to those which specify that they will process the events.
3c4f71cc 3475
42013f4c
FM
3476 @param mode
3477 Can be one of the ::wxIdleMode values.
3478 The default is wxIDLE_PROCESS_ALL.
23324ae1 3479 */
42013f4c
FM
3480 static void SetMode(wxIdleMode mode);
3481};
23324ae1 3482
3c4f71cc 3483
23324ae1 3484
42013f4c
FM
3485/**
3486 @class wxInitDialogEvent
3c4f71cc 3487
42013f4c
FM
3488 A wxInitDialogEvent is sent as a dialog or panel is being initialised.
3489 Handlers for this event can transfer data to the window.
23324ae1 3490
42013f4c 3491 The default handler calls wxWindow::TransferDataToWindow.
3c4f71cc 3492
42013f4c 3493 @beginEventTable{wxInitDialogEvent}
8c6791e4 3494 @event{EVT_INIT_DIALOG(func)}
3051a44a 3495 Process a @c wxEVT_INIT_DIALOG event.
42013f4c
FM
3496 @endEventTable
3497
3498 @library{wxcore}
3499 @category{events}
23324ae1 3500
3e083d65 3501 @see @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
3502*/
3503class wxInitDialogEvent : public wxEvent
3504{
3505public:
23324ae1 3506 /**
42013f4c
FM
3507 Constructor.
3508 */
3509 wxInitDialogEvent(int id = 0);
3510};
3c4f71cc 3511
3c4f71cc 3512
3c4f71cc 3513
42013f4c
FM
3514/**
3515 @class wxWindowDestroyEvent
3c4f71cc 3516
a79a6671
VZ
3517 This event is sent as early as possible during the window destruction
3518 process.
3519
3520 For the top level windows, as early as possible means that this is done by
3521 wxFrame or wxDialog destructor, i.e. after the destructor of the derived
3522 class was executed and so any methods specific to the derived class can't
3523 be called any more from this event handler. If you need to do this, you
3524 must call wxWindow::SendDestroyEvent() from your derived class destructor.
23324ae1 3525
a79a6671
VZ
3526 For the child windows, this event is generated just before deleting the
3527 window from wxWindow::Destroy() (which is also called when the parent
3528 window is deleted) or from the window destructor if operator @c delete was
3529 used directly (which is not recommended for this very reason).
3c4f71cc 3530
a79a6671
VZ
3531 It is usually pointless to handle this event in the window itself but it ca
3532 be very useful to receive notifications about the window destruction in the
3533 parent window or in any other object interested in this window.
3c4f71cc 3534
42013f4c
FM
3535 @library{wxcore}
3536 @category{events}
3c4f71cc 3537
3e083d65 3538 @see @ref overview_events, wxWindowCreateEvent
42013f4c
FM
3539*/
3540class wxWindowDestroyEvent : public wxCommandEvent
3541{
3542public:
3543 /**
3544 Constructor.
23324ae1 3545 */
42013f4c 3546 wxWindowDestroyEvent(wxWindow* win = NULL);
a79a6671 3547
57ab6f23 3548 /// Return the window being destroyed.
a79a6671 3549 wxWindow *GetWindow() const;
42013f4c 3550};
23324ae1 3551
3c4f71cc 3552
42013f4c
FM
3553/**
3554 @class wxNavigationKeyEvent
3c4f71cc 3555
42013f4c
FM
3556 This event class contains information about navigation events,
3557 generated by navigation keys such as tab and page down.
23324ae1 3558
42013f4c
FM
3559 This event is mainly used by wxWidgets implementations.
3560 A wxNavigationKeyEvent handler is automatically provided by wxWidgets
90230407
VZ
3561 when you enable keyboard navigation inside a window by inheriting it from
3562 wxNavigationEnabled<>.
3c4f71cc 3563
42013f4c 3564 @beginEventTable{wxNavigationKeyEvent}
8c6791e4 3565 @event{EVT_NAVIGATION_KEY(func)}
42013f4c
FM
3566 Process a navigation key event.
3567 @endEventTable
3c4f71cc 3568
42013f4c
FM
3569 @library{wxcore}
3570 @category{events}
3c4f71cc 3571
42013f4c
FM
3572 @see wxWindow::Navigate, wxWindow::NavigateIn
3573*/
3574class wxNavigationKeyEvent : public wxEvent
3575{
3576public:
3051a44a
FM
3577 /**
3578 Flags which can be used with wxNavigationKeyEvent.
3579 */
3580 enum wxNavigationKeyEventFlags
3581 {
3582 IsBackward = 0x0000,
3583 IsForward = 0x0001,
3584 WinChange = 0x0002,
3585 FromTab = 0x0004
3586 };
3587
42013f4c
FM
3588 wxNavigationKeyEvent();
3589 wxNavigationKeyEvent(const wxNavigationKeyEvent& event);
23324ae1
FM
3590
3591 /**
42013f4c 3592 Returns the child that has the focus, or @NULL.
23324ae1 3593 */
42013f4c 3594 wxWindow* GetCurrentFocus() const;
23324ae1
FM
3595
3596 /**
42013f4c
FM
3597 Returns @true if the navigation was in the forward direction.
3598 */
3599 bool GetDirection() const;
3c4f71cc 3600
42013f4c
FM
3601 /**
3602 Returns @true if the navigation event was from a tab key.
3603 This is required for proper navigation over radio buttons.
3604 */
3605 bool IsFromTab() const;
3c4f71cc 3606
42013f4c
FM
3607 /**
3608 Returns @true if the navigation event represents a window change
3609 (for example, from Ctrl-Page Down in a notebook).
23324ae1 3610 */
42013f4c 3611 bool IsWindowChange() const;
23324ae1
FM
3612
3613 /**
42013f4c
FM
3614 Sets the current focus window member.
3615 */
3616 void SetCurrentFocus(wxWindow* currentFocus);
3c4f71cc 3617
42013f4c
FM
3618 /**
3619 Sets the direction to forward if @a direction is @true, or backward
3620 if @false.
3621 */
3622 void SetDirection(bool direction);
3c4f71cc 3623
42013f4c
FM
3624 /**
3625 Sets the flags for this event.
3626 The @a flags can be a combination of the ::wxNavigationKeyEventFlags values.
23324ae1 3627 */
42013f4c 3628 void SetFlags(long flags);
23324ae1
FM
3629
3630 /**
42013f4c
FM
3631 Marks the navigation event as from a tab key.
3632 */
3633 void SetFromTab(bool fromTab);
3c4f71cc 3634
42013f4c
FM
3635 /**
3636 Marks the event as a window change event.
23324ae1 3637 */
42013f4c 3638 void SetWindowChange(bool windowChange);
23324ae1
FM
3639};
3640
3641
e54c96f1 3642
23324ae1 3643/**
42013f4c 3644 @class wxMouseCaptureChangedEvent
7c913512 3645
42013f4c 3646 An mouse capture changed event is sent to a window that loses its
3051a44a 3647 mouse capture. This is called even if wxWindow::ReleaseMouse
42013f4c
FM
3648 was called by the application code. Handling this event allows
3649 an application to cater for unexpected capture releases which
3650 might otherwise confuse mouse handling code.
7c913512 3651
42013f4c
FM
3652 @onlyfor{wxmsw}
3653
3654 @beginEventTable{wxMouseCaptureChangedEvent}
8c6791e4 3655 @event{EVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_CHANGED(func)}
3051a44a 3656 Process a @c wxEVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_CHANGED event.
42013f4c 3657 @endEventTable
7c913512 3658
23324ae1
FM
3659 @library{wxcore}
3660 @category{events}
7c913512 3661
3e083d65 3662 @see wxMouseCaptureLostEvent, @ref overview_events,
3051a44a 3663 wxWindow::CaptureMouse, wxWindow::ReleaseMouse, wxWindow::GetCapture
23324ae1 3664*/
42013f4c 3665class wxMouseCaptureChangedEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
3666{
3667public:
3668 /**
3669 Constructor.
3670 */
42013f4c
FM
3671 wxMouseCaptureChangedEvent(wxWindowID windowId = 0,
3672 wxWindow* gainedCapture = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
3673
3674 /**
42013f4c
FM
3675 Returns the window that gained the capture, or @NULL if it was a
3676 non-wxWidgets window.
23324ae1 3677 */
42013f4c 3678 wxWindow* GetCapturedWindow() const;
23324ae1
FM
3679};
3680
3681
e54c96f1 3682
23324ae1 3683/**
42013f4c 3684 @class wxCloseEvent
7c913512 3685
42013f4c
FM
3686 This event class contains information about window and session close events.
3687
3688 The handler function for EVT_CLOSE is called when the user has tried to close a
3689 a frame or dialog box using the window manager (X) or system menu (Windows).
3690 It can also be invoked by the application itself programmatically, for example by
3691 calling the wxWindow::Close function.
3692
3693 You should check whether the application is forcing the deletion of the window
3694 using wxCloseEvent::CanVeto. If this is @false, you @e must destroy the window
3695 using wxWindow::Destroy.
3696
3697 If the return value is @true, it is up to you whether you respond by destroying
3698 the window.
3699
3700 If you don't destroy the window, you should call wxCloseEvent::Veto to
3701 let the calling code know that you did not destroy the window.
3702 This allows the wxWindow::Close function to return @true or @false depending
3703 on whether the close instruction was honoured or not.
3704
195be56d
FM
3705 Example of a wxCloseEvent handler:
3706
3707 @code
3708 void MyFrame::OnClose(wxCloseEvent& event)
3709 {
3710 if ( event.CanVeto() && m_bFileNotSaved )
3711 {
3712 if ( wxMessageBox("The file has not been saved... continue closing?",
3713 "Please confirm",
3714 wxICON_QUESTION | wxYES_NO) != wxYES )
3715 {
3716 event.Veto();
3717 return;
3718 }
3719 }
3720
3721 Destroy(); // you may also do: event.Skip();
3722 // since the default event handler does call Destroy(), too
3723 }
3724 @endcode
3725
9fb99466
VZ
3726 The EVT_END_SESSION event is slightly different as it is sent by the system
3727 when the user session is ending (e.g. because of log out or shutdown) and
3728 so all windows are being forcefully closed. At least under MSW, after the
3729 handler for this event is executed the program is simply killed by the
3730 system. Because of this, the default handler for this event provided by
3731 wxWidgets calls all the usual cleanup code (including wxApp::OnExit()) so
3732 that it could still be executed and exit()s the process itself, without
3733 waiting for being killed. If this behaviour is for some reason undesirable,
3734 make sure that you define a handler for this event in your wxApp-derived
3735 class and do not call @c event.Skip() in it (but be aware that the system
3736 will still kill your application).
3737
42013f4c 3738 @beginEventTable{wxCloseEvent}
8c6791e4 3739 @event{EVT_CLOSE(func)}
869aa92d 3740 Process a @c wxEVT_CLOSE_WINDOW command event, supplying the member function.
42013f4c 3741 This event applies to wxFrame and wxDialog classes.
8c6791e4 3742 @event{EVT_QUERY_END_SESSION(func)}
869aa92d 3743 Process a @c wxEVT_QUERY_END_SESSION session event, supplying the member function.
9fb99466 3744 This event can be handled in wxApp-derived class only.
8c6791e4 3745 @event{EVT_END_SESSION(func)}
869aa92d 3746 Process a @c wxEVT_END_SESSION session event, supplying the member function.
9fb99466 3747 This event can be handled in wxApp-derived class only.
42013f4c 3748 @endEventTable
7c913512 3749
23324ae1
FM
3750 @library{wxcore}
3751 @category{events}
7c913512 3752
42013f4c 3753 @see wxWindow::Close, @ref overview_windowdeletion
23324ae1 3754*/
42013f4c 3755class wxCloseEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
3756{
3757public:
3758 /**
3759 Constructor.
3760 */
42013f4c 3761 wxCloseEvent(wxEventType commandEventType = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
3762
3763 /**
42013f4c
FM
3764 Returns @true if you can veto a system shutdown or a window close event.
3765 Vetoing a window close event is not possible if the calling code wishes to
3766 force the application to exit, and so this function must be called to check this.
23324ae1 3767 */
42013f4c
FM
3768 bool CanVeto() const;
3769
3770 /**
3771 Returns @true if the user is just logging off or @false if the system is
3772 shutting down. This method can only be called for end session and query end
3773 session events, it doesn't make sense for close window event.
3774 */
3775 bool GetLoggingOff() const;
3776
3777 /**
3778 Sets the 'can veto' flag.
3779 */
3780 void SetCanVeto(bool canVeto);
3781
42013f4c
FM
3782 /**
3783 Sets the 'logging off' flag.
3784 */
3785 void SetLoggingOff(bool loggingOff);
3786
3787 /**
3788 Call this from your event handler to veto a system shutdown or to signal
3789 to the calling application that a window close did not happen.
3790
3791 You can only veto a shutdown if CanVeto() returns @true.
3792 */
3793 void Veto(bool veto = true);
23324ae1
FM
3794};
3795
3796
e54c96f1 3797
23324ae1 3798/**
42013f4c 3799 @class wxMenuEvent
7c913512 3800
42013f4c
FM
3801 This class is used for a variety of menu-related events. Note that
3802 these do not include menu command events, which are
3803 handled using wxCommandEvent objects.
7c913512 3804
b476cde6 3805 The default handler for @c wxEVT_MENU_HIGHLIGHT displays help
42013f4c 3806 text in the first field of the status bar.
7c913512 3807
42013f4c 3808 @beginEventTable{wxMenuEvent}
8c6791e4 3809 @event{EVT_MENU_OPEN(func)}
42013f4c
FM
3810 A menu is about to be opened. On Windows, this is only sent once for each
3811 navigation of the menubar (up until all menus have closed).
8c6791e4 3812 @event{EVT_MENU_CLOSE(func)}
42013f4c 3813 A menu has been just closed.
8c6791e4 3814 @event{EVT_MENU_HIGHLIGHT(id, func)}
42013f4c
FM
3815 The menu item with the specified id has been highlighted: used to show
3816 help prompts in the status bar by wxFrame
8c6791e4 3817 @event{EVT_MENU_HIGHLIGHT_ALL(func)}
42013f4c
FM
3818 A menu item has been highlighted, i.e. the currently selected menu item has changed.
3819 @endEventTable
7c913512 3820
42013f4c 3821 @library{wxcore}
23324ae1 3822 @category{events}
7c913512 3823
3e083d65 3824 @see wxCommandEvent, @ref overview_events
23324ae1 3825*/
42013f4c 3826class wxMenuEvent : public wxEvent
23324ae1
FM
3827{
3828public:
3829 /**
42013f4c 3830 Constructor.
23324ae1 3831 */
a90e69f7 3832 wxMenuEvent(wxEventType type = wxEVT_NULL, int id = 0, wxMenu* menu = NULL);
23324ae1
FM
3833
3834 /**
42013f4c
FM
3835 Returns the menu which is being opened or closed. This method should only be
3836 used with the @c OPEN and @c CLOSE events and even for them the
3837 returned pointer may be @NULL in some ports.
23324ae1 3838 */
42013f4c 3839 wxMenu* GetMenu() const;
23324ae1
FM
3840
3841 /**
42013f4c
FM
3842 Returns the menu identifier associated with the event.
3843 This method should be only used with the @c HIGHLIGHT events.
23324ae1 3844 */
42013f4c 3845 int GetMenuId() const;
23324ae1
FM
3846
3847 /**
42013f4c
FM
3848 Returns @true if the menu which is being opened or closed is a popup menu,
3849 @false if it is a normal one.
23324ae1 3850
42013f4c 3851 This method should only be used with the @c OPEN and @c CLOSE events.
23324ae1 3852 */
42013f4c
FM
3853 bool IsPopup() const;
3854};
23324ae1 3855
d317fdeb
VZ
3856/**
3857 @class wxShowEvent
d317fdeb
VZ
3858
3859 An event being sent when the window is shown or hidden.
a183ec70
VZ
3860 The event is triggered by calls to wxWindow::Show(), and any user
3861 action showing a previously hidden window or vice versa (if allowed by
3862 the current platform and/or window manager).
3863 Notice that the event is not triggered when the application is iconized
3864 (minimized) or restored under wxMSW.
d317fdeb 3865
d317fdeb
VZ
3866 @onlyfor{wxmsw,wxgtk,wxos2}
3867
3868 @beginEventTable{wxShowEvent}
3869 @event{EVT_SHOW(func)}
3051a44a 3870 Process a @c wxEVT_SHOW event.
d317fdeb
VZ
3871 @endEventTable
3872
3873 @library{wxcore}
3874 @category{events}
3875
3e083d65 3876 @see @ref overview_events, wxWindow::Show,
d317fdeb
VZ
3877 wxWindow::IsShown
3878*/
3879
3880class wxShowEvent : public wxEvent
3881{
3882public:
3883 /**
3884 Constructor.
3885 */
3886 wxShowEvent(int winid = 0, bool show = false);
3887
3888 /**
3889 Set whether the windows was shown or hidden.
3890 */
3891 void SetShow(bool show);
3892
3893 /**
3894 Return @true if the window has been shown, @false if it has been
3895 hidden.
3896 */
3897 bool IsShown() const;
3898
3899 /**
3900 @deprecated This function is deprecated in favour of IsShown().
3901 */
3902 bool GetShow() const;
3903};
3904
3905
23324ae1 3906
42013f4c
FM
3907/**
3908 @class wxIconizeEvent
23324ae1 3909
42013f4c 3910 An event being sent when the frame is iconized (minimized) or restored.
23324ae1 3911
42013f4c 3912 Currently only wxMSW and wxGTK generate such events.
23324ae1 3913
42013f4c 3914 @onlyfor{wxmsw,wxgtk}
23324ae1 3915
42013f4c 3916 @beginEventTable{wxIconizeEvent}
8c6791e4 3917 @event{EVT_ICONIZE(func)}
3051a44a 3918 Process a @c wxEVT_ICONIZE event.
42013f4c 3919 @endEventTable
23324ae1 3920
42013f4c
FM
3921 @library{wxcore}
3922 @category{events}
23324ae1 3923
3e083d65 3924 @see @ref overview_events, wxTopLevelWindow::Iconize,
42013f4c
FM
3925 wxTopLevelWindow::IsIconized
3926*/
3927class wxIconizeEvent : public wxEvent
3928{
3929public:
23324ae1 3930 /**
42013f4c 3931 Constructor.
23324ae1 3932 */
42013f4c 3933 wxIconizeEvent(int id = 0, bool iconized = true);
23324ae1
FM
3934
3935 /**
42013f4c
FM
3936 Returns @true if the frame has been iconized, @false if it has been
3937 restored.
23324ae1 3938 */
d317fdeb
VZ
3939 bool IsIconized() const;
3940
3941 /**
3942 @deprecated This function is deprecated in favour of IsIconized().
3943 */
42013f4c
FM
3944 bool Iconized() const;
3945};
23324ae1 3946
23324ae1 3947
42013f4c
FM
3948
3949/**
3950 @class wxMoveEvent
42013f4c 3951
3051a44a 3952 A move event holds information about wxTopLevelWindow move change events.
42013f4c 3953
77211166
VZ
3954 These events are currently only generated by wxMSW port.
3955
42013f4c 3956 @beginEventTable{wxMoveEvent}
8c6791e4 3957 @event{EVT_MOVE(func)}
3051a44a 3958 Process a @c wxEVT_MOVE event, which is generated when a window is moved.
8c6791e4 3959 @event{EVT_MOVE_START(func)}
3051a44a 3960 Process a @c wxEVT_MOVE_START event, which is generated when the user starts
42013f4c 3961 to move or size a window. wxMSW only.
8c6791e4 3962 @event{EVT_MOVE_END(func)}
3051a44a 3963 Process a @c wxEVT_MOVE_END event, which is generated when the user stops
42013f4c
FM
3964 moving or sizing a window. wxMSW only.
3965 @endEventTable
3966
3967 @library{wxcore}
3968 @category{events}
3969
3e083d65 3970 @see wxPoint, @ref overview_events
42013f4c
FM
3971*/
3972class wxMoveEvent : public wxEvent
3973{
3974public:
23324ae1 3975 /**
42013f4c 3976 Constructor.
23324ae1 3977 */
42013f4c 3978 wxMoveEvent(const wxPoint& pt, int id = 0);
23324ae1
FM
3979
3980 /**
42013f4c 3981 Returns the position of the window generating the move change event.
23324ae1 3982 */
42013f4c 3983 wxPoint GetPosition() const;
a90e69f7
RD
3984
3985 wxRect GetRect() const;
3986 void SetRect(const wxRect& rect);
3987 void SetPosition(const wxPoint& pos);
23324ae1
FM
3988};
3989
3990
3991/**
3992 @class wxSizeEvent
7c913512 3993
3051a44a 3994 A size event holds information about size change events of wxWindow.
7c913512 3995
23324ae1 3996 The EVT_SIZE handler function will be called when the window has been resized.
7c913512 3997
42013f4c 3998 You may wish to use this for frames to resize their child windows as appropriate.
7c913512 3999
0ddf0ac6 4000 Note that the size passed is of the whole window: call wxWindow::GetClientSize()
42013f4c 4001 for the area which may be used by the application.
7c913512 4002
23324ae1 4003 When a window is resized, usually only a small part of the window is damaged
42013f4c
FM
4004 and you may only need to repaint that area. However, if your drawing depends on the
4005 size of the window, you may need to clear the DC explicitly and repaint the whole window.
4006 In which case, you may need to call wxWindow::Refresh to invalidate the entire window.
4007
b0162e32
SC
4008 @b Important : Sizers ( see @ref overview_sizer ) rely on size events to function
4009 correctly. Therefore, in a sizer-based layout, do not forget to call Skip on all
4010 size events you catch (and don't catch size events at all when you don't need to).
4011
42013f4c 4012 @beginEventTable{wxSizeEvent}
8c6791e4 4013 @event{EVT_SIZE(func)}
3051a44a 4014 Process a @c wxEVT_SIZE event.
42013f4c 4015 @endEventTable
7c913512 4016
23324ae1
FM
4017 @library{wxcore}
4018 @category{events}
7c913512 4019
3e083d65 4020 @see wxSize, @ref overview_events
23324ae1
FM
4021*/
4022class wxSizeEvent : public wxEvent
4023{
4024public:
4025 /**
4026 Constructor.
4027 */
4028 wxSizeEvent(const wxSize& sz, int id = 0);
4029
4030 /**
4031 Returns the entire size of the window generating the size change event.
0ddf0ac6
VZ
4032
4033 This is the new total size of the window, i.e. the same size as would
4034 be returned by wxWindow::GetSize() if it were called now. Use
4035 wxWindow::GetClientSize() if you catch this event in a top level window
4036 such as wxFrame to find the size available for the window contents.
23324ae1 4037 */
328f5751 4038 wxSize GetSize() const;
a90e69f7
RD
4039 void SetSize(wxSize size);
4040
4041 wxRect GetRect() const;
4042 void SetRect(wxRect rect);
23324ae1
FM
4043};
4044
4045
e54c96f1 4046
23324ae1
FM
4047/**
4048 @class wxSetCursorEvent
7c913512 4049
3051a44a
FM
4050 A wxSetCursorEvent is generated from wxWindow when the mouse cursor is about
4051 to be set as a result of mouse motion.
42013f4c
FM
4052
4053 This event gives the application the chance to perform specific mouse cursor
4054 processing based on the current position of the mouse within the window.
4055 Use wxSetCursorEvent::SetCursor to specify the cursor you want to be displayed.
4056
4057 @beginEventTable{wxSetCursorEvent}
8c6791e4 4058 @event{EVT_SET_CURSOR(func)}
3051a44a 4059 Process a @c wxEVT_SET_CURSOR event.
42013f4c 4060 @endEventTable
7c913512 4061
23324ae1 4062 @library{wxcore}
1f1d2182 4063 @category{events}
7c913512 4064
e54c96f1 4065 @see ::wxSetCursor, wxWindow::wxSetCursor
23324ae1
FM
4066*/
4067class wxSetCursorEvent : public wxEvent
4068{
4069public:
4070 /**
4071 Constructor, used by the library itself internally to initialize the event
4072 object.
4073 */
4074 wxSetCursorEvent(wxCoord x = 0, wxCoord y = 0);
4075
4076 /**
4077 Returns a reference to the cursor specified by this event.
4078 */
a6052817 4079 const wxCursor& GetCursor() const;
23324ae1
FM
4080
4081 /**
4082 Returns the X coordinate of the mouse in client coordinates.
4083 */
328f5751 4084 wxCoord GetX() const;
23324ae1
FM
4085
4086 /**
4087 Returns the Y coordinate of the mouse in client coordinates.
4088 */
328f5751 4089 wxCoord GetY() const;
23324ae1
FM
4090
4091 /**
4092 Returns @true if the cursor specified by this event is a valid cursor.
3c4f71cc 4093
23324ae1 4094 @remarks You cannot specify wxNullCursor with this event, as it is not
4cc4bfaf 4095 considered a valid cursor.
23324ae1 4096 */
328f5751 4097 bool HasCursor() const;
23324ae1
FM
4098
4099 /**
4100 Sets the cursor associated with this event.
4101 */
4102 void SetCursor(const wxCursor& cursor);
4103};
e54c96f1 4104
39fb8056
FM
4105
4106
7fa7088e
BP
4107// ============================================================================
4108// Global functions/macros
4109// ============================================================================
4110
b21126db 4111/** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_events */
7fa7088e
BP
4112//@{
4113
c0c5bfad 4114/**
3e083d65
VZ
4115 A value uniquely identifying the type of the event.
4116
4117 The values of this type should only be created using wxNewEventType().
c0c5bfad 4118
6496345c
FM
4119 See the macro DEFINE_EVENT_TYPE() for more info.
4120
3e083d65 4121 @see @ref overview_events_introduction
6496345c
FM
4122*/
4123typedef int wxEventType;
4124
3e083d65
VZ
4125/**
4126 A special event type usually used to indicate that some wxEvent has yet
4127 no type assigned.
4128*/
4129wxEventType wxEVT_NULL;
4130
a90e69f7
RD
4131wxEventType wxEVT_ANY;
4132
6496345c
FM
4133/**
4134 Generates a new unique event type.
4475b410
VZ
4135
4136 Usually this function is only used by wxDEFINE_EVENT() and not called
4137 directly.
6496345c
FM
4138*/
4139wxEventType wxNewEventType();
4140
4475b410
VZ
4141/**
4142 Define a new event type associated with the specified event class.
4143
4144 This macro defines a new unique event type @a name associated with the
4145 event class @a cls.
4146
4147 For example:
4148 @code
4149 wxDEFINE_EVENT(MY_COMMAND_EVENT, wxCommandEvent);
4150
4151 class MyCustomEvent : public wxEvent { ... };
4152 wxDEFINE_EVENT(MY_CUSTOM_EVENT, MyCustomEvent);
4153 @endcode
4154
4155 @see wxDECLARE_EVENT(), @ref overview_events_custom
4156 */
4157#define wxDEFINE_EVENT(name, cls) \
4158 const wxEventTypeTag< cls > name(wxNewEventType())
4159
4160/**
4161 Declares a custom event type.
4162
4163 This macro declares a variable called @a name which must be defined
4164 elsewhere using wxDEFINE_EVENT().
4165
4166 The class @a cls must be the wxEvent-derived class associated with the
4167 events of this type and its full declaration must be visible from the point
4168 of use of this macro.
ff3fd98a
VZ
4169
4170 For example:
4171 @code
4172 wxDECLARE_EVENT(MY_COMMAND_EVENT, wxCommandEvent);
4173
4174 class MyCustomEvent : public wxEvent { ... };
4175 wxDECLARE_EVENT(MY_CUSTOM_EVENT, MyCustomEvent);
4176 @endcode
4475b410
VZ
4177 */
4178#define wxDECLARE_EVENT(name, cls) \
4179 wxDECLARE_EXPORTED_EVENT(wxEMPTY_PARAMETER_VALUE, name, cls)
4180
4181/**
4182 Variant of wxDECLARE_EVENT() used for event types defined inside a shared
4183 library.
4184
4185 This is mostly used by wxWidgets internally, e.g.
4186 @code
4187 wxDECLARE_EXPORTED_EVENT(WXDLLIMPEXP_CORE, wxEVT_COMMAND_BUTTON_CLICKED, wxCommandEvent)
4188 @endcode
4189 */
4190#define wxDECLARE_EXPORTED_EVENT( expdecl, name, cls ) \
4191 extern const expdecl wxEventTypeTag< cls > name;
4192
4193/**
4194 Helper macro for definition of custom event table macros.
4195
4196 This macro must only be used if wxEVENTS_COMPATIBILITY_2_8 is 1, otherwise
4197 it is better and more clear to just use the address of the function
4198 directly as this is all this macro does in this case. However it needs to
4199 explicitly cast @a func to @a functype, which is the type of wxEvtHandler
4200 member function taking the custom event argument when
4201 wxEVENTS_COMPATIBILITY_2_8 is 0.
4202
4203 See wx__DECLARE_EVT0 for an example of use.
4204
4205 @see @ref overview_events_custom_ownclass
4206 */
4207#define wxEVENT_HANDLER_CAST(functype, func) (&func)
4208
4475b410 4209/**
d455444a 4210 This macro is used to define event table macros for handling custom
4475b410
VZ
4211 events.
4212
4213 Example of use:
4214 @code
4215 class MyEvent : public wxEvent { ... };
4216
4217 // note that this is not necessary unless using old compilers: for the
4218 // reasonably new ones just use &func instead of MyEventHandler(func)
4219 typedef void (wxEvtHandler::*MyEventFunction)(MyEvent&);
4220 #define MyEventHandler(func) wxEVENT_HANDLER_CAST(MyEventFunction, func)
4221
4222 wxDEFINE_EVENT(MY_EVENT_TYPE, MyEvent);
4223
4224 #define EVT_MY(id, func) \
4225 wx__DECLARE_EVT1(MY_EVENT_TYPE, id, MyEventHandler(func))
4226
4227 ...
4228
a0e9a5df 4229 wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(MyFrame, wxFrame)
4475b410 4230 EVT_MY(wxID_ANY, MyFrame::OnMyEvent)
a0e9a5df 4231 wxEND_EVENT_TABLE()
4475b410
VZ
4232 @endcode
4233
4234 @param evt
4235 The event type to handle.
4236 @param id
4237 The identifier of events to handle.
4475b410
VZ
4238 @param fn
4239 The event handler method.
4240 */
4475b410
VZ
4241#define wx__DECLARE_EVT1(evt, id, fn) \
4242 wx__DECLARE_EVT2(evt, id, wxID_ANY, fn)
d455444a
FM
4243
4244/**
4245 Generalized version of the wx__DECLARE_EVT1() macro taking a range of
4246 IDs instead of a single one.
4247 Argument @a id1 is the first identifier of the range, @a id2 is the
4248 second identifier of the range.
4249*/
4250#define wx__DECLARE_EVT2(evt, id1, id2, fn) \
4251 DECLARE_EVENT_TABLE_ENTRY(evt, id1, id2, fn, NULL),
4252
4253/**
4254 Simplified version of the wx__DECLARE_EVT1() macro, to be used when the
4255 event type must be handled regardless of the ID associated with the
4256 specific event instances.
4257*/
4475b410
VZ
4258#define wx__DECLARE_EVT0(evt, fn) \
4259 wx__DECLARE_EVT1(evt, wxID_ANY, fn)
4475b410 4260
6496345c
FM
4261/**
4262 Use this macro inside a class declaration to declare a @e static event table
4263 for that class.
4264
a0e9a5df
FM
4265 In the implementation file you'll need to use the wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE()
4266 and the wxEND_EVENT_TABLE() macros, plus some additional @c EVT_xxx macro
6496345c 4267 to capture events.
a0e9a5df
FM
4268
4269 Note that this macro requires a final semicolon.
6496345c 4270
3e083d65 4271 @see @ref overview_events_eventtables
6496345c 4272*/
a0e9a5df 4273#define wxDECLARE_EVENT_TABLE()
6496345c
FM
4274
4275/**
4276 Use this macro in a source file to start listing @e static event handlers
4277 for a specific class.
4278
a0e9a5df 4279 Use wxEND_EVENT_TABLE() to terminate the event-declaration block.
6496345c 4280
3e083d65 4281 @see @ref overview_events_eventtables
6496345c 4282*/
a0e9a5df 4283#define wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(theClass, baseClass)
6496345c
FM
4284
4285/**
4286 Use this macro in a source file to end listing @e static event handlers
4287 for a specific class.
4288
a0e9a5df 4289 Use wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE() to start the event-declaration block.
6496345c 4290
3e083d65 4291 @see @ref overview_events_eventtables
6496345c 4292*/
a0e9a5df 4293#define wxEND_EVENT_TABLE()
6496345c 4294
39fb8056
FM
4295/**
4296 In a GUI application, this function posts @a event to the specified @e dest
7fa7088e
BP
4297 object using wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent().
4298
4299 Otherwise, it dispatches @a event immediately using
4300 wxEvtHandler::ProcessEvent(). See the respective documentation for details
c3f94162
VZ
4301 (and caveats). Because of limitation of wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent()
4302 this function is not thread-safe for event objects having wxString fields,
4303 use wxQueueEvent() instead.
39fb8056 4304
7fa7088e 4305 @header{wx/event.h}
39fb8056 4306*/
c3f94162
VZ
4307void wxPostEvent(wxEvtHandler* dest, const wxEvent& event);
4308
4309/**
4310 Queue an event for processing on the given object.
4311
4312 This is a wrapper around wxEvtHandler::QueueEvent(), see its documentation
4313 for more details.
4314
4315 @header{wx/event.h}
4316
4317 @param dest
4318 The object to queue the event on, can't be @c NULL.
4319 @param event
4320 The heap-allocated and non-@c NULL event to queue, the function takes
4321 ownership of it.
4322 */
4323void wxQueueEvent(wxEvtHandler* dest, wxEvent *event);
7fa7088e 4324
a90e69f7
RD
4325
4326
4327wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_BUTTON_CLICKED;
4328wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_CHECKBOX_CLICKED;
4329wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_CHOICE_SELECTED;
4330wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_LISTBOX_SELECTED;
4331wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_LISTBOX_DOUBLECLICKED;
4332wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_CHECKLISTBOX_TOGGLED;
4333wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_MENU_SELECTED;
4334wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_SLIDER_UPDATED;
4335wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_RADIOBOX_SELECTED;
4336wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_RADIOBUTTON_SELECTED;
4337wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_SCROLLBAR_UPDATED;
4338wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_VLBOX_SELECTED;
4339wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_COMBOBOX_SELECTED;
4340wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_RCLICKED;
4341wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_DROPDOWN_CLICKED;
4342wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_ENTER;
4343wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_COMBOBOX_DROPDOWN;
4344wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_COMBOBOX_CLOSEUP;
c1b293bb 4345wxEventType wxEVT_THREAD;
a90e69f7
RD
4346wxEventType wxEVT_LEFT_DOWN;
4347wxEventType wxEVT_LEFT_UP;
4348wxEventType wxEVT_MIDDLE_DOWN;
4349wxEventType wxEVT_MIDDLE_UP;
4350wxEventType wxEVT_RIGHT_DOWN;
4351wxEventType wxEVT_RIGHT_UP;
4352wxEventType wxEVT_MOTION;
4353wxEventType wxEVT_ENTER_WINDOW;
4354wxEventType wxEVT_LEAVE_WINDOW;
4355wxEventType wxEVT_LEFT_DCLICK;
4356wxEventType wxEVT_MIDDLE_DCLICK;
4357wxEventType wxEVT_RIGHT_DCLICK;
4358wxEventType wxEVT_SET_FOCUS;
4359wxEventType wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS;
4360wxEventType wxEVT_CHILD_FOCUS;
4361wxEventType wxEVT_MOUSEWHEEL;
4362wxEventType wxEVT_AUX1_DOWN;
4363wxEventType wxEVT_AUX1_UP;
4364wxEventType wxEVT_AUX1_DCLICK;
4365wxEventType wxEVT_AUX2_DOWN;
4366wxEventType wxEVT_AUX2_UP;
4367wxEventType wxEVT_AUX2_DCLICK;
4368wxEventType wxEVT_CHAR;
4369wxEventType wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK;
4370wxEventType wxEVT_NAVIGATION_KEY;
4371wxEventType wxEVT_KEY_DOWN;
4372wxEventType wxEVT_KEY_UP;
4373wxEventType wxEVT_HOTKEY;
4374wxEventType wxEVT_SET_CURSOR;
4375wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_TOP;
4376wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_BOTTOM;
4377wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEUP;
4378wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_LINEDOWN;
4379wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEUP;
4380wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_PAGEDOWN;
4381wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBTRACK;
4382wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_THUMBRELEASE;
4383wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLL_CHANGED;
4384wxEventType wxEVT_SPIN_UP;
4385wxEventType wxEVT_SPIN_DOWN;
4386wxEventType wxEVT_SPIN;
4387wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_TOP;
4388wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_BOTTOM;
4389wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEUP;
4390wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_LINEDOWN;
4391wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEUP;
4392wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_PAGEDOWN;
4393wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBTRACK;
4394wxEventType wxEVT_SCROLLWIN_THUMBRELEASE;
4395wxEventType wxEVT_SIZE;
4396wxEventType wxEVT_MOVE;
4397wxEventType wxEVT_CLOSE_WINDOW;
4398wxEventType wxEVT_END_SESSION;
4399wxEventType wxEVT_QUERY_END_SESSION;
4400wxEventType wxEVT_ACTIVATE_APP;
4401wxEventType wxEVT_ACTIVATE;
4402wxEventType wxEVT_CREATE;
4403wxEventType wxEVT_DESTROY;
4404wxEventType wxEVT_SHOW;
4405wxEventType wxEVT_ICONIZE;
4406wxEventType wxEVT_MAXIMIZE;
4407wxEventType wxEVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_CHANGED;
4408wxEventType wxEVT_MOUSE_CAPTURE_LOST;
4409wxEventType wxEVT_PAINT;
4410wxEventType wxEVT_ERASE_BACKGROUND;
4411wxEventType wxEVT_NC_PAINT;
4412wxEventType wxEVT_MENU_OPEN;
4413wxEventType wxEVT_MENU_CLOSE;
4414wxEventType wxEVT_MENU_HIGHLIGHT;
4415wxEventType wxEVT_CONTEXT_MENU;
4416wxEventType wxEVT_SYS_COLOUR_CHANGED;
4417wxEventType wxEVT_DISPLAY_CHANGED;
4418wxEventType wxEVT_QUERY_NEW_PALETTE;
4419wxEventType wxEVT_PALETTE_CHANGED;
4420wxEventType wxEVT_JOY_BUTTON_DOWN;
4421wxEventType wxEVT_JOY_BUTTON_UP;
4422wxEventType wxEVT_JOY_MOVE;
4423wxEventType wxEVT_JOY_ZMOVE;
4424wxEventType wxEVT_DROP_FILES;
4425wxEventType wxEVT_INIT_DIALOG;
4426wxEventType wxEVT_IDLE;
4427wxEventType wxEVT_UPDATE_UI;
4428wxEventType wxEVT_SIZING;
4429wxEventType wxEVT_MOVING;
4430wxEventType wxEVT_MOVE_START;
4431wxEventType wxEVT_MOVE_END;
4432wxEventType wxEVT_HIBERNATE;
4433wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_COPY;
4434wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_CUT;
4435wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_PASTE;
4436wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_LEFT_CLICK;
4437wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_LEFT_DCLICK;
4438wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_RIGHT_CLICK;
4439wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_RIGHT_DCLICK;
4440wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_SET_FOCUS;
4441wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_KILL_FOCUS;
4442wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_ENTER;
4443wxEventType wxEVT_HELP;
4444wxEventType wxEVT_DETAILED_HELP;
4445wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TEXT_UPDATED;
4446wxEventType wxEVT_COMMAND_TOOL_CLICKED;
ea8fa3c4 4447wxEventType wxEVT_WINDOW_MODAL_DIALOG_CLOSED;
a90e69f7
RD
4448
4449
4450
7fa7088e
BP
4451//@}
4452