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23324ae1 FM |
1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
2 | // Name: dataobj.h | |
b321b61c | 3 | // Purpose: interface of wx*DataObject |
23324ae1 FM |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows license | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | @class wxCustomDataObject | |
7c913512 | 11 | |
b321b61c BP |
12 | wxCustomDataObject is a specialization of wxDataObjectSimple for some |
13 | application-specific data in arbitrary (either custom or one of the | |
14 | standard ones). The only restriction is that it is supposed that this data | |
15 | can be copied bitwise (i.e. with @c memcpy()), so it would be a bad idea to | |
16 | make it contain a C++ object (though C struct is fine). | |
7c913512 | 17 | |
b321b61c BP |
18 | By default, wxCustomDataObject stores the data inside in a buffer. To put |
19 | the data into the buffer you may use either SetData() or TakeData() | |
20 | depending on whether you want the object to make a copy of data or not. | |
7c913512 | 21 | |
b321b61c BP |
22 | This class may be used as is, but if you don't want store the data inside |
23 | the object but provide it on demand instead, you should override GetSize(), | |
24 | GetData() and SetData() (or may be only the first two or only the last one | |
25 | if you only allow reading/writing the data). | |
7c913512 | 26 | |
23324ae1 FM |
27 | @library{wxcore} |
28 | @category{dnd} | |
7c913512 | 29 | |
e54c96f1 | 30 | @see wxDataObject |
23324ae1 FM |
31 | */ |
32 | class wxCustomDataObject : public wxDataObjectSimple | |
33 | { | |
34 | public: | |
35 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
36 | The constructor accepts a @a format argument which specifies the |
37 | (single) format supported by this object. If it isn't set here, | |
38 | wxDataObjectSimple::SetFormat() should be used. | |
23324ae1 FM |
39 | */ |
40 | wxCustomDataObject(const wxDataFormat& format = wxFormatInvalid); | |
41 | ||
42 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
43 | The destructor will free the data held by the object. Notice that |
44 | although it calls the virtual Free() function, the base class version | |
45 | will always be called (C++ doesn't allow calling virtual functions from | |
46 | constructors or destructors), so if you override Free(), you should | |
47 | override the destructor in your class as well (which would probably | |
48 | just call the derived class' version of Free()). | |
23324ae1 | 49 | */ |
b321b61c | 50 | virtual ~wxCustomDataObject(); |
23324ae1 FM |
51 | |
52 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
53 | This function is called to allocate @a size bytes of memory from |
54 | SetData(). The default version just uses the operator new. | |
23324ae1 | 55 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 56 | virtual void* Alloc(size_t size); |
23324ae1 FM |
57 | |
58 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
59 | This function is called when the data is freed, you may override it to |
60 | anything you want (or may be nothing at all). The default version calls | |
61 | operator delete[] on the data. | |
23324ae1 FM |
62 | */ |
63 | virtual void Free(); | |
64 | ||
65 | /** | |
66 | Returns a pointer to the data. | |
67 | */ | |
328f5751 | 68 | virtual void* GetData() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
69 | |
70 | /** | |
71 | Returns the data size in bytes. | |
72 | */ | |
328f5751 | 73 | virtual size_t GetSize() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
74 | |
75 | /** | |
76 | Set the data. The data object will make an internal copy. | |
b321b61c BP |
77 | |
78 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
79 | This method expects a string in wxPython. You can pass nearly any | |
80 | object by pickling it first. | |
81 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
23324ae1 | 82 | */ |
408776d0 | 83 | virtual bool SetData(size_t size, const void* data); |
23324ae1 FM |
84 | |
85 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
86 | Like SetData(), but doesn't copy the data - instead the object takes |
87 | ownership of the pointer. | |
88 | ||
89 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
90 | This method expects a string in wxPython. You can pass nearly any | |
91 | object by pickling it first. | |
92 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
23324ae1 | 93 | */ |
b91c4601 | 94 | void TakeData(size_t size, void* data); |
23324ae1 FM |
95 | }; |
96 | ||
97 | ||
e54c96f1 | 98 | |
23324ae1 FM |
99 | /** |
100 | @class wxDataObjectComposite | |
7c913512 | 101 | |
b321b61c BP |
102 | wxDataObjectComposite is the simplest wxDataObject derivation which may be |
103 | used to support multiple formats. It contains several wxDataObjectSimple | |
104 | objects and supports any format supported by at least one of them. Only one | |
105 | of these data objects is @e preferred (the first one if not explicitly | |
106 | changed by using the second parameter of Add()) and its format determines | |
23324ae1 | 107 | the preferred format of the composite data object as well. |
7c913512 | 108 | |
b321b61c BP |
109 | See wxDataObject documentation for the reasons why you might prefer to use |
110 | wxDataObject directly instead of wxDataObjectComposite for efficiency | |
111 | reasons. | |
7c913512 | 112 | |
23324ae1 | 113 | @library{wxcore} |
b321b61c | 114 | @category{dnd} |
7c913512 | 115 | |
b321b61c BP |
116 | @see @ref overview_dnd, wxDataObject, wxDataObjectSimple, wxFileDataObject, |
117 | wxTextDataObject, wxBitmapDataObject | |
23324ae1 FM |
118 | */ |
119 | class wxDataObjectComposite : public wxDataObject | |
120 | { | |
121 | public: | |
122 | /** | |
123 | The default constructor. | |
124 | */ | |
125 | wxDataObjectComposite(); | |
126 | ||
127 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
128 | Adds the @a dataObject to the list of supported objects and it becomes |
129 | the preferred object if @a preferred is @true. | |
23324ae1 | 130 | */ |
b91c4601 | 131 | void Add(wxDataObjectSimple* dataObject, bool preferred = false); |
23324ae1 FM |
132 | |
133 | /** | |
b321b61c | 134 | Report the format passed to the SetData() method. This should be the |
23324ae1 FM |
135 | format of the data object within the composite that recieved data from |
136 | the clipboard or the DnD operation. You can use this method to find | |
137 | out what kind of data object was recieved. | |
138 | */ | |
328f5751 | 139 | wxDataFormat GetReceivedFormat() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
140 | }; |
141 | ||
142 | ||
e54c96f1 | 143 | |
23324ae1 FM |
144 | /** |
145 | @class wxDataObjectSimple | |
7c913512 | 146 | |
b321b61c BP |
147 | This is the simplest possible implementation of the wxDataObject class. The |
148 | data object of (a class derived from) this class only supports one format, | |
149 | so the number of virtual functions to be implemented is reduced. | |
7c913512 | 150 | |
b321b61c BP |
151 | Notice that this is still an abstract base class and cannot be used |
152 | directly, it must be derived. The objects supporting rendering the data | |
153 | must override GetDataSize() and GetDataHere() while the objects which may | |
154 | be set must override SetData(). Of course, the objects supporting both | |
155 | operations must override all three methods. | |
7c913512 | 156 | |
b321b61c BP |
157 | @beginWxPythonOnly |
158 | If you wish to create a derived wxDataObjectSimple class in wxPython you | |
159 | should derive the class from wxPyDataObjectSimple in order to get | |
160 | Python-aware capabilities for the various virtual methods. | |
161 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
7c913512 | 162 | |
b321b61c BP |
163 | @beginWxPerlOnly |
164 | In wxPerl, you need to derive your data object class from | |
165 | Wx::PlDataObjectSimple. | |
166 | @endWxPerlOnly | |
7c913512 | 167 | |
23324ae1 | 168 | @library{wxcore} |
b321b61c | 169 | @category{dnd} |
7c913512 | 170 | |
b321b61c BP |
171 | @see @ref overview_dnd, @ref page_samples_dnd, wxFileDataObject, |
172 | wxTextDataObject, wxBitmapDataObject | |
23324ae1 FM |
173 | */ |
174 | class wxDataObjectSimple : public wxDataObject | |
175 | { | |
176 | public: | |
177 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
178 | Constructor accepts the supported format (none by default) which may |
179 | also be set later with SetFormat(). | |
23324ae1 FM |
180 | */ |
181 | wxDataObjectSimple(const wxDataFormat& format = wxFormatInvalid); | |
182 | ||
183 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
184 | Copy the data to the buffer, return @true on success. Must be |
185 | implemented in the derived class if the object supports rendering its | |
186 | data. | |
187 | ||
188 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
189 | When implementing this method in wxPython, no additional parameters are | |
190 | required and the data should be returned from the method as a string. | |
191 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
23324ae1 | 192 | */ |
50ec54b6 | 193 | virtual bool GetDataHere(void* buf) const; |
23324ae1 FM |
194 | |
195 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
196 | Gets the size of our data. Must be implemented in the derived class if |
197 | the object supports rendering its data. | |
23324ae1 | 198 | */ |
328f5751 | 199 | virtual size_t GetDataSize() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
200 | |
201 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
202 | Returns the (one and only one) format supported by this object. It is |
203 | assumed that the format is supported in both directions. | |
23324ae1 | 204 | */ |
b91c4601 | 205 | const wxDataFormat& GetFormat() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
206 | |
207 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
208 | Copy the data from the buffer, return @true on success. Must be |
209 | implemented in the derived class if the object supports setting its | |
210 | data. | |
211 | ||
212 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
213 | When implementing this method in wxPython, the data comes as a single | |
214 | string parameter rather than the two shown here. | |
215 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
23324ae1 | 216 | */ |
50ec54b6 | 217 | virtual bool SetData(size_t len, const void* buf); |
23324ae1 FM |
218 | |
219 | /** | |
220 | Sets the supported format. | |
221 | */ | |
222 | void SetFormat(const wxDataFormat& format); | |
223 | }; | |
224 | ||
225 | ||
e54c96f1 | 226 | |
23324ae1 FM |
227 | /** |
228 | @class wxBitmapDataObject | |
7c913512 | 229 | |
b321b61c BP |
230 | wxBitmapDataObject is a specialization of wxDataObject for bitmap data. It |
231 | can be used without change to paste data into the wxClipboard or a | |
232 | wxDropSource. A user may wish to derive a new class from this class for | |
233 | providing a bitmap on-demand in order to minimize memory consumption when | |
234 | offering data in several formats, such as a bitmap and GIF. | |
7c913512 | 235 | |
b321b61c BP |
236 | This class may be used as is, but GetBitmap() may be overridden to increase |
237 | efficiency. | |
238 | ||
239 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
240 | If you wish to create a derived wxBitmapDataObject class in wxPython you | |
241 | should derive the class from wxPyBitmapDataObject in order to get | |
242 | Python-aware capabilities for the various virtual methods. | |
243 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
7c913512 | 244 | |
23324ae1 FM |
245 | @library{wxcore} |
246 | @category{dnd} | |
7c913512 | 247 | |
b321b61c BP |
248 | @see @ref overview_dnd, wxDataObject, wxDataObjectSimple, wxFileDataObject, |
249 | wxTextDataObject, wxDataObject | |
23324ae1 FM |
250 | */ |
251 | class wxBitmapDataObject : public wxDataObjectSimple | |
252 | { | |
253 | public: | |
254 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
255 | Constructor, optionally passing a bitmap (otherwise use SetBitmap() |
256 | later). | |
23324ae1 FM |
257 | */ |
258 | wxBitmapDataObject(const wxBitmap& bitmap = wxNullBitmap); | |
259 | ||
260 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
261 | Returns the bitmap associated with the data object. You may wish to |
262 | override this method when offering data on-demand, but this is not | |
263 | required by wxWidgets' internals. Use this method to get data in bitmap | |
264 | form from the wxClipboard. | |
23324ae1 | 265 | */ |
328f5751 | 266 | virtual wxBitmap GetBitmap() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
267 | |
268 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
269 | Sets the bitmap associated with the data object. This method is called |
270 | when the data object receives data. Usually there will be no reason to | |
271 | override this function. | |
23324ae1 FM |
272 | */ |
273 | virtual void SetBitmap(const wxBitmap& bitmap); | |
274 | }; | |
275 | ||
276 | ||
e54c96f1 | 277 | |
04e7bc9f FM |
278 | /** |
279 | @class wxURLDataObject | |
280 | ||
281 | wxURLDataObject is a wxDataObject containing an URL and can be used e.g. | |
282 | when you need to put an URL on or retrieve it from the clipboard: | |
283 | ||
284 | @code | |
285 | wxTheClipboard->SetData(new wxURLDataObject(url)); | |
286 | @endcode | |
287 | ||
288 | @note This class is derived from wxDataObjectComposite on Windows rather | |
289 | than wxTextDataObject on all other platforms. | |
290 | ||
291 | @library{wxcore} | |
292 | @category{dnd} | |
293 | ||
294 | @see @ref overview_dnd, wxDataObject | |
295 | */ | |
296 | class wxURLDataObject: public wxTextDataObject | |
297 | { | |
298 | public: | |
299 | /** | |
300 | Constructor, may be used to initialize the URL. If @a url is empty, | |
301 | SetURL() can be used later. | |
302 | */ | |
303 | wxURLDataObject(const wxString& url = wxEmptyString); | |
304 | ||
305 | /** | |
306 | Returns the URL stored by this object, as a string. | |
307 | */ | |
308 | wxString GetURL() const; | |
309 | ||
310 | /** | |
311 | Sets the URL stored by this object. | |
312 | */ | |
313 | void SetURL(const wxString& url); | |
314 | }; | |
315 | ||
316 | ||
317 | /** | |
318 | @class wxTextDataObject | |
319 | ||
320 | wxTextDataObject is a specialization of wxDataObject for text data. It can | |
321 | be used without change to paste data into the wxClipboard or a | |
322 | wxDropSource. A user may wish to derive a new class from this class for | |
323 | providing text on-demand in order to minimize memory consumption when | |
324 | offering data in several formats, such as plain text and RTF because by | |
325 | default the text is stored in a string in this class, but it might as well | |
326 | be generated when requested. For this, GetTextLength() and GetText() will | |
327 | have to be overridden. | |
328 | ||
329 | Note that if you already have the text inside a string, you will not | |
330 | achieve any efficiency gain by overriding these functions because copying | |
331 | wxStrings is already a very efficient operation (data is not actually | |
332 | copied because wxStrings are reference counted). | |
333 | ||
334 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
335 | If you wish to create a derived wxTextDataObject class in wxPython you | |
336 | should derive the class from wxPyTextDataObject in order to get | |
337 | Python-aware capabilities for the various virtual methods. | |
338 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
339 | ||
340 | @library{wxcore} | |
341 | @category{dnd} | |
342 | ||
343 | @see @ref overview_dnd, wxDataObject, wxDataObjectSimple, wxFileDataObject, | |
344 | wxBitmapDataObject | |
345 | */ | |
346 | class wxTextDataObject : public wxDataObjectSimple | |
347 | { | |
348 | public: | |
349 | /** | |
350 | Constructor, may be used to initialise the text (otherwise SetText() | |
351 | should be used later). | |
352 | */ | |
353 | wxTextDataObject(const wxString& text = wxEmptyString); | |
354 | ||
355 | /** | |
356 | Returns the text associated with the data object. You may wish to | |
357 | override this method when offering data on-demand, but this is not | |
358 | required by wxWidgets' internals. Use this method to get data in text | |
359 | form from the wxClipboard. | |
360 | */ | |
361 | virtual wxString GetText() const; | |
362 | ||
363 | /** | |
364 | Returns the data size. By default, returns the size of the text data | |
365 | set in the constructor or using SetText(). This can be overridden to | |
366 | provide text size data on-demand. It is recommended to return the text | |
367 | length plus 1 for a trailing zero, but this is not strictly required. | |
368 | */ | |
369 | virtual size_t GetTextLength() const; | |
370 | ||
371 | /** | |
372 | Sets the text associated with the data object. This method is called | |
373 | when the data object receives the data and, by default, copies the text | |
374 | into the member variable. If you want to process the text on the fly | |
375 | you may wish to override this function. | |
376 | */ | |
377 | virtual void SetText(const wxString& strText); | |
378 | }; | |
379 | ||
380 | ||
381 | ||
382 | /** | |
383 | @class wxFileDataObject | |
384 | ||
385 | wxFileDataObject is a specialization of wxDataObject for file names. The | |
386 | program works with it just as if it were a list of absolute file names, but | |
387 | internally it uses the same format as Explorer and other compatible | |
388 | programs under Windows or GNOME/KDE filemanager under Unix which makes it | |
389 | possible to receive files from them using this class. | |
390 | ||
391 | @warning Under all non-Windows platforms this class is currently | |
392 | "input-only", i.e. you can receive the files from another | |
393 | application, but copying (or dragging) file(s) from a wxWidgets | |
394 | application is not currently supported. PS: GTK2 should work as | |
395 | well. | |
396 | ||
397 | @library{wxcore} | |
398 | @category{dnd} | |
399 | ||
400 | @see wxDataObject, wxDataObjectSimple, wxTextDataObject, | |
401 | wxBitmapDataObject, wxDataObject | |
402 | */ | |
403 | class wxFileDataObject : public wxDataObjectSimple | |
404 | { | |
405 | public: | |
406 | /** | |
407 | Constructor. | |
408 | */ | |
409 | wxFileDataObject(); | |
410 | ||
411 | /** | |
7323ff1a | 412 | Adds a file to the file list represented by this data object (Windows only). |
04e7bc9f FM |
413 | */ |
414 | void AddFile(const wxString& file); | |
415 | ||
416 | /** | |
417 | Returns the array of file names. | |
418 | */ | |
419 | const wxArrayString& GetFilenames() const; | |
420 | }; | |
421 | ||
422 | ||
423 | ||
23324ae1 FM |
424 | /** |
425 | @class wxDataFormat | |
7c913512 | 426 | |
b321b61c BP |
427 | A wxDataFormat is an encapsulation of a platform-specific format handle |
428 | which is used by the system for the clipboard and drag and drop operations. | |
429 | The applications are usually only interested in, for example, pasting data | |
430 | from the clipboard only if the data is in a format the program understands | |
431 | and a data format is something which uniquely identifies this format. | |
7c913512 | 432 | |
23324ae1 FM |
433 | On the system level, a data format is usually just a number (@c CLIPFORMAT |
434 | under Windows or @c Atom under X11, for example) and the standard formats | |
435 | are, indeed, just numbers which can be implicitly converted to wxDataFormat. | |
436 | The standard formats are: | |
7c913512 | 437 | |
b321b61c BP |
438 | @beginDefList |
439 | @itemdef{wxDF_INVALID, | |
440 | An invalid format - used as default argument for functions taking | |
441 | a wxDataFormat argument sometimes.} | |
442 | @itemdef{wxDF_TEXT, | |
443 | Text format (wxString).} | |
444 | @itemdef{wxDF_BITMAP, | |
445 | A bitmap (wxBitmap).} | |
446 | @itemdef{wxDF_METAFILE, | |
447 | A metafile (wxMetafile, Windows only).} | |
448 | @itemdef{wxDF_FILENAME, | |
449 | A list of filenames.} | |
450 | @itemdef{wxDF_HTML, | |
451 | An HTML string. This is only valid when passed to | |
452 | wxSetClipboardData when compiled with Visual C++ in non-Unicode | |
453 | mode.} | |
454 | @endDefList | |
455 | ||
456 | As mentioned above, these standard formats may be passed to any function | |
457 | taking wxDataFormat argument because wxDataFormat has an implicit | |
458 | conversion from them (or, to be precise from the type | |
459 | @c wxDataFormat::NativeFormat which is the type used by the underlying | |
460 | platform for data formats). | |
461 | ||
462 | Aside the standard formats, the application may also use custom formats | |
463 | which are identified by their names (strings) and not numeric identifiers. | |
464 | Although internally custom format must be created (or @e registered) first, | |
465 | you shouldn't care about it because it is done automatically the first time | |
466 | the wxDataFormat object corresponding to a given format name is created. | |
467 | The only implication of this is that you should avoid having global | |
468 | wxDataFormat objects with non-default constructor because their | |
469 | constructors are executed before the program has time to perform all | |
470 | necessary initialisations and so an attempt to do clipboard format | |
471 | registration at this time will usually lead to a crash! | |
7c913512 | 472 | |
23324ae1 FM |
473 | @library{wxbase} |
474 | @category{dnd} | |
7c913512 | 475 | |
b321b61c | 476 | @see @ref overview_dnd, @ref page_samples_dnd, wxDataObject |
23324ae1 | 477 | */ |
7c913512 | 478 | class wxDataFormat |
23324ae1 FM |
479 | { |
480 | public: | |
481 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
482 | Constructs a data format object for one of the standard data formats or |
483 | an empty data object (use SetType() or SetId() later in this case). | |
484 | */ | |
9f5737d7 FM |
485 | wxDataFormat(wxDataFormatId format = wxDF_INVALID); |
486 | ||
b321b61c BP |
487 | /** |
488 | Constructs a data format object for a custom format identified by its | |
489 | name @a format. | |
23324ae1 | 490 | */ |
7323ff1a | 491 | wxDataFormat(const wxString& format); |
23324ae1 FM |
492 | |
493 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
494 | Returns the name of a custom format (this function will fail for a |
495 | standard format). | |
23324ae1 | 496 | */ |
328f5751 | 497 | wxString GetId() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
498 | |
499 | /** | |
500 | Returns the platform-specific number identifying the format. | |
501 | */ | |
b91c4601 | 502 | wxDataFormatId GetType() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
503 | |
504 | /** | |
505 | Sets the format to be the custom format identified by the given name. | |
506 | */ | |
7323ff1a | 507 | void SetId(const wxString& format); |
23324ae1 FM |
508 | |
509 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
510 | Sets the format to the given value, which should be one of wxDF_XXX |
511 | constants. | |
23324ae1 | 512 | */ |
b91c4601 | 513 | void SetType(wxDataFormatId type); |
23324ae1 FM |
514 | |
515 | /** | |
516 | Returns @true if the formats are different. | |
517 | */ | |
7323ff1a | 518 | bool operator !=(wxDataFormatId format) const; |
23324ae1 FM |
519 | |
520 | /** | |
521 | Returns @true if the formats are equal. | |
522 | */ | |
7323ff1a | 523 | bool operator ==(wxDataFormatId format) const; |
23324ae1 FM |
524 | }; |
525 | ||
526 | ||
e54c96f1 | 527 | |
23324ae1 FM |
528 | /** |
529 | @class wxDataObject | |
7c913512 | 530 | |
b321b61c BP |
531 | A wxDataObject represents data that can be copied to or from the clipboard, |
532 | or dragged and dropped. The important thing about wxDataObject is that this | |
533 | is a 'smart' piece of data unlike 'dumb' data containers such as memory | |
534 | buffers or files. Being 'smart' here means that the data object itself | |
535 | should know what data formats it supports and how to render itself in each | |
536 | of its supported formats. | |
7c913512 | 537 | |
b321b61c BP |
538 | A supported format, incidentally, is exactly the format in which the data |
539 | can be requested from a data object or from which the data object may be | |
540 | set. In the general case, an object may support different formats on | |
541 | 'input' and 'output', i.e. it may be able to render itself in a given | |
542 | format but not be created from data on this format or vice versa. | |
543 | wxDataObject defines an enumeration type which distinguishes between them: | |
7c913512 | 544 | |
23324ae1 FM |
545 | @code |
546 | enum Direction | |
547 | { | |
548 | Get = 0x01, // format is supported by GetDataHere() | |
549 | Set = 0x02 // format is supported by SetData() | |
8c33ee25 | 550 | Both = 0x03 // format is supported by both (unused currently) |
23324ae1 FM |
551 | }; |
552 | @endcode | |
7c913512 | 553 | |
b321b61c | 554 | See wxDataFormat documentation for more about formats. |
7c913512 | 555 | |
b321b61c BP |
556 | Not surprisingly, being 'smart' comes at a price of added complexity. This |
557 | is reasonable for the situations when you really need to support multiple | |
558 | formats, but may be annoying if you only want to do something simple like | |
559 | cut and paste text. | |
7c913512 | 560 | |
23324ae1 | 561 | To provide a solution for both cases, wxWidgets has two predefined classes |
7c913512 | 562 | which derive from wxDataObject: wxDataObjectSimple and |
b321b61c BP |
563 | wxDataObjectComposite. wxDataObjectSimple is the simplest wxDataObject |
564 | possible and only holds data in a single format (such as HTML or text) and | |
565 | wxDataObjectComposite is the simplest way to implement a wxDataObject that | |
566 | does support multiple formats because it achieves this by simply holding | |
567 | several wxDataObjectSimple objects. | |
568 | ||
569 | So, you have several solutions when you need a wxDataObject class (and you | |
570 | need one as soon as you want to transfer data via the clipboard or drag and | |
571 | drop): | |
572 | ||
573 | -# Use one of the built-in classes. | |
574 | - You may use wxTextDataObject, wxBitmapDataObject or wxFileDataObject | |
575 | in the simplest cases when you only need to support one format and | |
576 | your data is either text, bitmap or list of files. | |
577 | -# Use wxDataObjectSimple | |
578 | - Deriving from wxDataObjectSimple is the simplest solution for custom | |
579 | data - you will only support one format and so probably won't be able | |
580 | to communicate with other programs, but data transfer will work in | |
581 | your program (or between different copies of it). | |
582 | -# Use wxDataObjectComposite | |
583 | - This is a simple but powerful solution which allows you to support | |
584 | any number of formats (either standard or custom if you combine it | |
585 | with the previous solution). | |
586 | -# Use wxDataObject Directly | |
587 | - This is the solution for maximal flexibility and efficiency, but it | |
588 | is also the most difficult to implement. | |
589 | ||
590 | Please note that the easiest way to use drag and drop and the clipboard | |
591 | with multiple formats is by using wxDataObjectComposite, but it is not the | |
592 | most efficient one as each wxDataObjectSimple would contain the whole data | |
593 | in its respective formats. Now imagine that you want to paste 200 pages of | |
594 | text in your proprietary format, as well as Word, RTF, HTML, Unicode and | |
595 | plain text to the clipboard and even today's computers are in trouble. For | |
596 | this case, you will have to derive from wxDataObject directly and make it | |
597 | enumerate its formats and provide the data in the requested format on | |
598 | demand. | |
599 | ||
600 | Note that neither the GTK+ data transfer mechanisms for clipboard and drag | |
601 | and drop, nor OLE data transfer, copy any data until another application | |
602 | actually requests the data. This is in contrast to the 'feel' offered to | |
603 | the user of a program who would normally think that the data resides in the | |
604 | clipboard after having pressed 'Copy' - in reality it is only declared to | |
605 | be available. | |
7c913512 | 606 | |
23324ae1 | 607 | There are several predefined data object classes derived from |
b321b61c BP |
608 | wxDataObjectSimple: wxFileDataObject, wxTextDataObject, wxBitmapDataObject |
609 | and wxURLDataObject which can be used without change. | |
610 | ||
611 | You may also derive your own data object classes from wxCustomDataObject | |
612 | for user-defined types. The format of user-defined data is given as a | |
613 | mime-type string literal, such as "application/word" or "image/png". These | |
614 | strings are used as they are under Unix (so far only GTK+) to identify a | |
615 | format and are translated into their Windows equivalent under Win32 (using | |
616 | the OLE IDataObject for data exchange to and from the clipboard and for | |
617 | drag and drop). Note that the format string translation under Windows is | |
618 | not yet finished. | |
619 | ||
620 | Each class derived directly from wxDataObject must override and implement | |
621 | all of its functions which are pure virtual in the base class. The data | |
622 | objects which only render their data or only set it (i.e. work in only one | |
623 | direction), should return 0 from GetFormatCount(). | |
624 | ||
625 | @beginWxPythonOnly | |
626 | At this time this class is not directly usable from wxPython. Derive a | |
627 | class from wxPyDataObjectSimple() instead. | |
628 | @endWxPythonOnly | |
629 | ||
630 | @beginWxPerlOnly | |
631 | This class is not currently usable from wxPerl; you may use | |
632 | Wx::PlDataObjectSimple instead. | |
633 | @endWxPerlOnly | |
7c913512 | 634 | |
23324ae1 FM |
635 | @library{wxcore} |
636 | @category{dnd} | |
7c913512 | 637 | |
b321b61c BP |
638 | @see @ref overview_dnd, @ref page_samples_dnd, wxFileDataObject, |
639 | wxTextDataObject, wxBitmapDataObject, wxCustomDataObject, | |
640 | wxDropTarget, wxDropSource, wxTextDropTarget, wxFileDropTarget | |
23324ae1 | 641 | */ |
7c913512 | 642 | class wxDataObject |
23324ae1 FM |
643 | { |
644 | public: | |
8c33ee25 RR |
645 | enum Direction |
646 | { | |
647 | /** Format is supported by GetDataHere() */ | |
648 | Get = 0x01, | |
649 | /** Format is supported by SetData() */ | |
650 | Set = 0x02, | |
651 | }; | |
652 | ||
23324ae1 FM |
653 | /** |
654 | Constructor. | |
655 | */ | |
656 | wxDataObject(); | |
657 | ||
658 | /** | |
659 | Destructor. | |
660 | */ | |
adaaa686 | 661 | virtual ~wxDataObject(); |
23324ae1 FM |
662 | |
663 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
664 | Copy all supported formats in the given direction to the array pointed |
665 | to by @a formats. There is enough space for GetFormatCount(dir) formats | |
666 | in it. | |
23324ae1 | 667 | */ |
50ec54b6 FM |
668 | virtual void GetAllFormats(wxDataFormat* formats, |
669 | Direction dir = Get) const = 0; | |
23324ae1 FM |
670 | |
671 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
672 | The method will write the data of the format @a format in the buffer |
673 | @a buf and return @true on success, @false on failure. | |
23324ae1 | 674 | */ |
b91c4601 | 675 | virtual bool GetDataHere(const wxDataFormat& format, void* buf) const = 0; |
23324ae1 FM |
676 | |
677 | /** | |
b321b61c | 678 | Returns the data size of the given format @a format. |
23324ae1 | 679 | */ |
b91c4601 | 680 | virtual size_t GetDataSize(const wxDataFormat& format) const = 0; |
23324ae1 FM |
681 | |
682 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
683 | Returns the number of available formats for rendering or setting the |
684 | data. | |
23324ae1 | 685 | */ |
b91c4601 | 686 | virtual size_t GetFormatCount(Direction dir = Get) const = 0; |
23324ae1 FM |
687 | |
688 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
689 | Returns the preferred format for either rendering the data (if @a dir |
690 | is @c Get, its default value) or for setting it. Usually this will be | |
691 | the native format of the wxDataObject. | |
23324ae1 | 692 | */ |
b91c4601 | 693 | virtual wxDataFormat GetPreferredFormat(Direction dir = Get) const = 0; |
23324ae1 FM |
694 | |
695 | /** | |
b321b61c BP |
696 | Set the data in the format @a format of the length @a len provided in |
697 | the buffer @a buf. | |
698 | ||
d29a9a8a | 699 | @return @true on success, @false on failure. |
23324ae1 | 700 | */ |
7323ff1a | 701 | virtual bool SetData(const wxDataFormat& format, size_t len, const void* buf); |
8c33ee25 RR |
702 | |
703 | /** | |
704 | Returns true if this format is supported. | |
705 | */ | |
706 | bool IsSupported(const wxDataFormat& format, Direction dir = Get) const; | |
23324ae1 FM |
707 | }; |
708 |