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23324ae1 FM |
1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
2 | // Name: utils.h | |
e54c96f1 | 3 | // Purpose: interface of wxWindowDisabler |
23324ae1 FM |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows license | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | @class wxWindowDisabler | |
11 | @wxheader{utils.h} | |
7c913512 | 12 | |
23324ae1 FM |
13 | This class disables all windows of the application (may be with the exception |
14 | of one of them) in its constructor and enables them back in its destructor. | |
15 | This comes in handy when you want to indicate to the user that the application | |
16 | is currently busy and cannot respond to user input. | |
7c913512 | 17 | |
23324ae1 FM |
18 | @library{wxcore} |
19 | @category{FIXME} | |
7c913512 | 20 | |
e54c96f1 | 21 | @see wxBusyCursor |
23324ae1 | 22 | */ |
7c913512 | 23 | class wxWindowDisabler |
23324ae1 FM |
24 | { |
25 | public: | |
26 | /** | |
7c913512 | 27 | Disables all top level windows of the applications with the exception of |
4cc4bfaf | 28 | @a winToSkip if it is not @NULL. |
23324ae1 | 29 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 30 | wxWindowDisabler(wxWindow* winToSkip = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
31 | |
32 | /** | |
33 | Reenables back the windows disabled by the constructor. | |
34 | */ | |
35 | ~wxWindowDisabler(); | |
36 | }; | |
37 | ||
38 | ||
e54c96f1 | 39 | |
23324ae1 FM |
40 | /** |
41 | @class wxBusyCursor | |
42 | @wxheader{utils.h} | |
7c913512 | 43 | |
23324ae1 FM |
44 | This class makes it easy to tell your user that the program is temporarily busy. |
45 | Just create a wxBusyCursor object on the stack, and within the current scope, | |
46 | the hourglass will be shown. | |
7c913512 | 47 | |
23324ae1 | 48 | For example: |
7c913512 | 49 | |
23324ae1 FM |
50 | @code |
51 | wxBusyCursor wait; | |
7c913512 | 52 | |
23324ae1 FM |
53 | for (int i = 0; i 100000; i++) |
54 | DoACalculation(); | |
55 | @endcode | |
7c913512 | 56 | |
e54c96f1 FM |
57 | It works by calling wxBeginBusyCursor() in the constructor, |
58 | and wxEndBusyCursor() in the destructor. | |
7c913512 | 59 | |
23324ae1 FM |
60 | @library{wxcore} |
61 | @category{FIXME} | |
7c913512 | 62 | |
e54c96f1 | 63 | @see wxBeginBusyCursor(), wxEndBusyCursor(), wxWindowDisabler |
23324ae1 | 64 | */ |
7c913512 | 65 | class wxBusyCursor |
23324ae1 FM |
66 | { |
67 | public: | |
68 | /** | |
e54c96f1 | 69 | Constructs a busy cursor object, calling wxBeginBusyCursor(). |
23324ae1 FM |
70 | */ |
71 | wxBusyCursor(wxCursor* cursor = wxHOURGLASS_CURSOR); | |
72 | ||
73 | /** | |
e54c96f1 | 74 | Destroys the busy cursor object, calling wxEndBusyCursor(). |
23324ae1 FM |
75 | */ |
76 | ~wxBusyCursor(); | |
77 | }; | |
78 | ||
79 | ||
e54c96f1 | 80 | |
23324ae1 FM |
81 | // ============================================================================ |
82 | // Global functions/macros | |
83 | // ============================================================================ | |
84 | ||
85 | /** | |
86 | Returns the type of power source as one of @c wxPOWER_SOCKET, | |
87 | @c wxPOWER_BATTERY or @c wxPOWER_UNKNOWN. | |
88 | @c wxPOWER_UNKNOWN is also the default on platforms where this | |
89 | feature is not implemented (currently everywhere but MS Windows). | |
90 | */ | |
91 | wxPowerType wxGetPowerType(); | |
92 | ||
93 | //@{ | |
94 | /** | |
95 | This function returns the "user id" also known as "login name" under Unix i.e. | |
96 | something like "jsmith". It uniquely identifies the current user (on this | |
97 | system). | |
23324ae1 FM |
98 | Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the environment |
99 | variables USER and LOGNAME; if neither of these is found, the entry @b UserId | |
100 | in the @b wxWidgets section of the WIN.INI file is tried. | |
23324ae1 FM |
101 | The first variant of this function returns the login name if successful or an |
102 | empty string otherwise. The second (deprecated) function returns @true | |
103 | if successful, @false otherwise. | |
7c913512 | 104 | |
e54c96f1 | 105 | @see wxGetUserName() |
23324ae1 FM |
106 | */ |
107 | wxString wxGetUserId(); | |
4cc4bfaf | 108 | bool wxGetUserId(char* buf, int sz); |
23324ae1 FM |
109 | //@} |
110 | ||
111 | /** | |
112 | @b NB: This function is now obsolete, please use | |
e54c96f1 | 113 | wxLogFatalError() instead. |
4cc4bfaf | 114 | Displays @a msg and exits. This writes to standard error under Unix, |
23324ae1 | 115 | and pops up a message box under Windows. Used for fatal internal |
e54c96f1 | 116 | wxWidgets errors. See also wxError(). |
23324ae1 FM |
117 | */ |
118 | void wxFatalError(const wxString& msg, | |
119 | const wxString& title = "wxWidgets Fatal Error"); | |
120 | ||
121 | /** | |
122 | Returns battery state as one of @c wxBATTERY_NORMAL_STATE, | |
123 | @c wxBATTERY_LOW_STATE, @c wxBATTERY_CRITICAL_STATE, | |
124 | @c wxBATTERY_SHUTDOWN_STATE or @c wxBATTERY_UNKNOWN_STATE. | |
125 | @c wxBATTERY_UNKNOWN_STATE is also the default on platforms where | |
126 | this feature is not implemented (currently everywhere but MS Windows). | |
127 | */ | |
128 | wxBatteryState wxGetBatteryState(); | |
129 | ||
130 | /** | |
131 | @b NB: This function is obsolete, please use | |
132 | wxWindow::FindWindowByName instead. | |
23324ae1 FM |
133 | Find a window by its name (as given in a window constructor or @b Create |
134 | function call). | |
4cc4bfaf | 135 | If @a parent is @NULL, the search will start from all top-level |
23324ae1 FM |
136 | frames and dialog boxes; if non-@NULL, the search will be limited to the given |
137 | window hierarchy. | |
138 | The search is recursive in both cases. | |
23324ae1 FM |
139 | If no such named window is found, @b wxFindWindowByLabel is called. |
140 | */ | |
4cc4bfaf FM |
141 | wxWindow* wxFindWindowByName(const wxString& name, |
142 | wxWindow* parent = NULL); | |
23324ae1 FM |
143 | |
144 | /** | |
145 | Changes the cursor back to the original cursor, for all windows in the | |
146 | application. | |
e54c96f1 FM |
147 | Use with wxBeginBusyCursor(). |
148 | See also wxIsBusy(), wxBusyCursor. | |
23324ae1 FM |
149 | */ |
150 | void wxEndBusyCursor(); | |
151 | ||
152 | /** | |
153 | This function is deprecated as the ids generated by it can conflict with the | |
154 | ids defined by the user code, use @c wxID_ANY to assign ids which are | |
155 | guaranteed to not conflict with the user-defined ids for the controls and menu | |
156 | items you create instead of using this function. | |
4cc4bfaf | 157 | |
23324ae1 FM |
158 | Generates an integer identifier unique to this run of the program. |
159 | */ | |
160 | long wxNewId(); | |
161 | ||
162 | /** | |
163 | Ensures that ids subsequently generated by @b NewId do not clash with | |
164 | the given @b id. | |
165 | */ | |
166 | void wxRegisterId(long id); | |
167 | ||
168 | /** | |
169 | @b NB: This function is now obsolete, replaced by Log | |
e54c96f1 | 170 | functions() and wxLogDebug() in particular. |
23324ae1 FM |
171 | Display a debugging message; under Windows, this will appear on the |
172 | debugger command window, and under Unix, it will be written to standard | |
173 | error. | |
23324ae1 FM |
174 | The syntax is identical to @b printf: pass a format string and a |
175 | variable list of arguments. | |
23324ae1 FM |
176 | @b Tip: under Windows, if your application crashes before the |
177 | message appears in the debugging window, put a wxYield call after | |
178 | each wxDebugMsg call. wxDebugMsg seems to be broken under WIN32s | |
179 | (at least for Watcom C++): preformat your messages and use OutputDebugString | |
180 | instead. | |
181 | */ | |
182 | void wxDebugMsg(const wxString& fmt, ... ); | |
183 | ||
184 | /** | |
185 | For normal keys, returns @true if the specified key is currently down. | |
23324ae1 FM |
186 | For togglable keys (Caps Lock, Num Lock and Scroll Lock), returns |
187 | @true if the key is toggled such that its LED indicator is lit. There is | |
188 | currently no way to test whether togglable keys are up or down. | |
23324ae1 FM |
189 | Even though there are virtual key codes defined for mouse buttons, they |
190 | cannot be used with this function currently. | |
191 | */ | |
192 | bool wxGetKeyState(wxKeyCode key); | |
193 | ||
194 | /** | |
195 | Returns the string containing the description of the current platform in a | |
196 | user-readable form. For example, this function may return strings like | |
197 | @c Windows NT Version 4.0 or @c Linux 2.2.2 i386. | |
7c913512 | 198 | |
4cc4bfaf | 199 | @see ::wxGetOsVersion |
23324ae1 FM |
200 | */ |
201 | wxString wxGetOsDescription(); | |
202 | ||
203 | /** | |
204 | Return the (current) user's home directory. | |
7c913512 | 205 | |
e54c96f1 | 206 | @see wxGetUserHome(), wxStandardPaths |
23324ae1 FM |
207 | */ |
208 | wxString wxGetHomeDir(); | |
209 | ||
210 | /** | |
211 | Sleeps for the specified number of milliseconds. Notice that usage of this | |
212 | function is encouraged instead of calling usleep(3) directly because the | |
213 | standard usleep() function is not MT safe. | |
214 | */ | |
215 | void wxMilliSleep(unsigned long milliseconds); | |
216 | ||
217 | /** | |
218 | Sleeps for the specified number of microseconds. The microsecond resolution may | |
219 | not, in fact, be available on all platforms (currently only Unix platforms with | |
220 | nanosleep(2) may provide it) in which case this is the same as | |
e54c96f1 | 221 | wxMilliSleep()(@e microseconds/1000). |
23324ae1 FM |
222 | */ |
223 | void wxMicroSleep(unsigned long microseconds); | |
224 | ||
225 | /** | |
226 | Shows a message box with the information about the wxWidgets build used, | |
227 | including its version, most important build parameters and the version of the | |
228 | underlying GUI toolkit. This is mainly used for diagnostic purposes and can be | |
229 | invoked by Ctrl-Alt-middle clicking on any wxWindow which doesn't otherwise | |
230 | handle this event. | |
e54c96f1 FM |
231 | |
232 | @wxsince{2.9.0} | |
23324ae1 | 233 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 234 | void wxInfoMessageBox(wxWindow ( parent = NULL); |
23324ae1 | 235 | |
39fb8056 FM |
236 | /** |
237 | Find a menu item identifier associated with the given frame's menu bar. | |
238 | */ | |
239 | int wxFindMenuItemId(wxFrame* frame, const wxString& menuString, | |
240 | const wxString& itemString); | |
241 | ||
242 | /** | |
243 | This function enables or disables all top level windows. It is used by | |
244 | ::wxSafeYield. | |
245 | */ | |
246 | void wxEnableTopLevelWindows(bool enable = true); | |
247 | ||
248 | /** | |
249 | Strips any menu codes from @a str and returns the result. | |
250 | By default, the functions strips both the mnemonics character (@c '') | |
251 | which is used to indicate a keyboard shortkey, and the accelerators, which are | |
252 | used only in the menu items and are separated from the main text by the | |
253 | @c \t (TAB) character. By using @a flags of | |
254 | @c wxStrip_Mnemonics or @c wxStrip_Accel to strip only the former | |
255 | or the latter part, respectively. | |
256 | Notice that in most cases | |
257 | wxMenuItem::GetLabelFromText or | |
258 | wxControl::GetLabelText can be used instead. | |
259 | */ | |
260 | wxString wxStripMenuCodes(const wxString& str, | |
261 | int flags = wxStrip_All); | |
262 | ||
263 | /** | |
264 | @b NB: This function is now obsolete, please use wxLogError() | |
265 | instead. | |
266 | Displays @a msg and continues. This writes to standard error under | |
267 | Unix, and pops up a message box under Windows. Used for internal | |
268 | wxWidgets errors. See also wxFatalError(). | |
269 | */ | |
270 | void wxError(const wxString& msg, | |
271 | const wxString& title = "wxWidgets Internal Error"); | |
272 | ||
273 | /** | |
274 | Open the @a url in user's default browser. If @a flags parameter contains | |
275 | @c wxBROWSER_NEW_WINDOW flag, a new window is opened for the URL | |
276 | (currently this is only supported under Windows). The @a url may also be a | |
277 | local file path (with or without @c file:// prefix), if it doesn't | |
278 | correspond to an existing file and the URL has no scheme @c http:// is | |
279 | prepended to it by default. | |
280 | Returns @true if the application was successfully launched. | |
281 | Note that for some configurations of the running user, the application which | |
282 | is launched to open the given URL may be URL-dependent (e.g. a browser may be | |
283 | used for | |
284 | local URLs while another one may be used for remote URLs). | |
285 | */ | |
286 | bool wxLaunchDefaultBrowser(const wxString& url, int flags = 0); | |
287 | ||
288 | /** | |
289 | Executes a command in an interactive shell window. If no command is | |
290 | specified, then just the shell is spawned. | |
291 | See also wxExecute(), @ref overview_sampleexec "Exec sample". | |
292 | */ | |
293 | bool wxShell(const wxString& command = NULL); | |
294 | ||
295 | /** | |
296 | Gets the version and the operating system ID for currently running OS. | |
297 | See wxPlatformInfo for more details about wxOperatingSystemId. | |
298 | ||
299 | @see ::wxGetOsDescription, wxPlatformInfo | |
300 | */ | |
301 | wxOperatingSystemId wxGetOsVersion(int* major = NULL, | |
302 | int* minor = NULL); | |
303 | ||
304 | /** | |
305 | Returns the FQDN (fully qualified domain host name) or an empty string on | |
306 | error. | |
307 | ||
308 | @see wxGetHostName() | |
309 | */ | |
310 | wxString wxGetFullHostName(); | |
311 | ||
312 | /** | |
313 | Changes the cursor to the given cursor for all windows in the application. | |
314 | Use wxEndBusyCursor() to revert the cursor back | |
315 | to its previous state. These two calls can be nested, and a counter | |
316 | ensures that only the outer calls take effect. | |
317 | See also wxIsBusy(), wxBusyCursor. | |
318 | */ | |
319 | void wxBeginBusyCursor(wxCursor* cursor = wxHOURGLASS_CURSOR); | |
320 | ||
321 | /** | |
322 | Tells the system to delete the specified object when | |
323 | all other events have been processed. In some environments, it is | |
324 | necessary to use this instead of deleting a frame directly with the | |
325 | delete operator, because some GUIs will still send events to a deleted window. | |
326 | Now obsolete: use wxWindow::Close instead. | |
327 | */ | |
328 | void wxPostDelete(wxObject* object); | |
329 | ||
330 | /** | |
331 | @b NB: This function is obsolete, please use | |
332 | wxWindow::FindWindowByLabel instead. | |
333 | Find a window by its label. Depending on the type of window, the label may be a | |
334 | window title | |
335 | or panel item label. If @a parent is @NULL, the search will start from all | |
336 | top-level | |
337 | frames and dialog boxes; if non-@NULL, the search will be limited to the given | |
338 | window hierarchy. | |
339 | The search is recursive in both cases. | |
340 | */ | |
341 | wxWindow* wxFindWindowByLabel(const wxString& label, | |
342 | wxWindow* parent = NULL); | |
343 | ||
344 | ||
345 | /** | |
346 | Returns the mouse position in screen coordinates. | |
347 | */ | |
348 | wxPoint wxGetMousePosition(); | |
349 | ||
350 | /** | |
351 | Loads a user-defined Windows resource as a string. If the resource is found, | |
352 | the function creates | |
353 | a new character array and copies the data into it. A pointer to this data is | |
354 | returned. If unsuccessful, @NULL is returned. | |
355 | The resource must be defined in the @c .rc file using the following syntax: | |
356 | ||
357 | @code | |
358 | myResource TEXT file.ext | |
359 | @endcode | |
360 | ||
361 | where @c file.ext is a file that the resource compiler can find. | |
362 | This function is available under Windows only. | |
363 | */ | |
364 | wxString wxLoadUserResource(const wxString& resourceName, | |
365 | const wxString& resourceType = "TEXT"); | |
366 | ||
367 | /** | |
368 | Returns the amount of free memory in bytes under environments which | |
369 | support it, and -1 if not supported or failed to perform measurement. | |
370 | */ | |
371 | wxMemorySize wxGetFreeMemory(); | |
372 | ||
373 | /** | |
374 | This is a macro defined as @c getenv() or its wide char version in Unicode | |
375 | mode. | |
376 | Note that under Win32 it may not return correct value for the variables set | |
377 | with wxSetEnv(), use wxGetEnv() function | |
378 | instead. | |
379 | */ | |
380 | wxChar* wxGetEnv(const wxString& var); | |
23324ae1 FM |
381 | |
382 | //@{ | |
39fb8056 FM |
383 | /** |
384 | Copies the current host machine's name into the supplied buffer. Please note | |
385 | that the returned name is @e not fully qualified, i.e. it does not include | |
386 | the domain name. | |
387 | Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the environment | |
388 | variable SYSTEM_NAME; if this is not found, the entry @b HostName | |
389 | in the @b wxWidgets section of the WIN.INI file is tried. | |
390 | The first variant of this function returns the hostname if successful or an | |
391 | empty string otherwise. The second (deprecated) function returns @true | |
392 | if successful, @false otherwise. | |
393 | ||
394 | @see wxGetFullHostName() | |
395 | */ | |
396 | wxString wxGetHostName(); | |
397 | bool wxGetHostName(char* buf, int sz); | |
23324ae1 FM |
398 | //@} |
399 | ||
39fb8056 FM |
400 | /** |
401 | Returns the current value of the environment variable @a var in @e value. | |
402 | @a value may be @NULL if you just want to know if the variable exists | |
403 | and are not interested in its value. | |
404 | Returns @true if the variable exists, @false otherwise. | |
405 | */ | |
406 | bool wxGetEnv(const wxString& var, wxString* value); | |
407 | ||
408 | /** | |
409 | Under X only, returns the current display name. See also wxSetDisplayName(). | |
410 | */ | |
411 | wxString wxGetDisplayName(); | |
412 | ||
413 | /** | |
414 | Ring the system bell. | |
415 | Note that this function is categorized as a GUI one and so is not thread-safe. | |
416 | */ | |
417 | void wxBell(); | |
418 | ||
419 | /** | |
420 | Returns the home directory for the given user. If the @a user is empty | |
421 | (default value), this function behaves like | |
422 | wxGetHomeDir() i.e. returns the current user home | |
423 | directory. | |
424 | If the home directory couldn't be determined, an empty string is returned. | |
425 | */ | |
426 | wxString wxGetUserHome(const wxString& user = ""); | |
23324ae1 FM |
427 | |
428 | //@{ | |
39fb8056 FM |
429 | /** |
430 | @b wxPerl note: In wxPerl this function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdoutStderr | |
431 | and it only takes the @c command argument, | |
432 | and returns a 3-element list @c ( status, output, errors ), where | |
433 | @c output and @c errors are array references. | |
434 | Executes another program in Unix or Windows. | |
435 | The first form takes a command string, such as @c "emacs file.txt". | |
436 | The second form takes an array of values: a command, any number of | |
437 | arguments, terminated by @NULL. | |
438 | The semantics of the third and fourth versions is different from the first two | |
439 | and is described in more details below. | |
440 | If @a flags parameter contains @c wxEXEC_ASYNC flag (the default), flow | |
441 | of control immediately returns. If it contains @c wxEXEC_SYNC, the current | |
442 | application waits until the other program has terminated. | |
443 | In the case of synchronous execution, the return value is the exit code of | |
444 | the process (which terminates by the moment the function returns) and will be | |
445 | -1 if the process couldn't be started and typically 0 if the process | |
446 | terminated successfully. Also, while waiting for the process to | |
447 | terminate, wxExecute will call wxYield(). Because of this, by | |
448 | default this function disables all application windows to avoid unexpected | |
449 | reentrancies which could result from the users interaction with the program | |
450 | while the child process is running. If you are sure that it is safe to not | |
451 | disable the program windows, you may pass @c wxEXEC_NODISABLE flag to | |
452 | prevent this automatic disabling from happening. | |
453 | For asynchronous execution, however, the return value is the process id and | |
454 | zero value indicates that the command could not be executed. As an added | |
455 | complication, the return value of -1 in this case indicates that we didn't | |
456 | launch a new process, but connected to the running one (this can only happen in | |
457 | case of using DDE under Windows for command execution). In particular, in this, | |
458 | and only this, case the calling code will not get the notification about | |
459 | process termination. | |
460 | If callback isn't @NULL and if execution is asynchronous, | |
461 | wxProcess::OnTerminate will be called when | |
462 | the process finishes. Specifying this parameter also allows you to redirect the | |
463 | standard input and/or output of the process being launched by calling | |
464 | wxProcess::Redirect. If the child process IO is redirected, | |
465 | under Windows the process window is not shown by default (this avoids having to | |
466 | flush an unnecessary console for the processes which don't create any windows | |
467 | anyhow) but a @c wxEXEC_NOHIDE flag can be used to prevent this from | |
468 | happening, i.e. with this flag the child process window will be shown normally. | |
469 | Under Unix the flag @c wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER may be used to ensure | |
470 | that the new process is a group leader (this will create a new session if | |
471 | needed). Calling wxKill() passing wxKILL_CHILDREN will | |
472 | kill this process as well as all of its children (except those which have | |
473 | started their own session). | |
474 | The @c wxEXEC_NOEVENTS flag prevents processing of any events from taking | |
475 | place while the child process is running. It should be only used for very | |
476 | short-lived processes as otherwise the application windows risk becoming | |
477 | unresponsive from the users point of view. As this flag only makes sense with | |
478 | @c wxEXEC_SYNC, @c wxEXEC_BLOCK equal to the sum of both of these flags | |
479 | is provided as a convenience. | |
480 | Finally, you may use the third overloaded version of this function to execute | |
481 | a process (always synchronously, the contents of @a flags is or'd with | |
482 | @c wxEXEC_SYNC) and capture its output in the array @e output. The | |
483 | fourth version adds the possibility to additionally capture the messages from | |
484 | standard error output in the @a errors array. | |
485 | @b NB: Currently wxExecute() can only be used from the main thread, calling | |
486 | this function from another thread will result in an assert failure in debug | |
487 | build and won't work. | |
488 | ||
489 | @param command | |
490 | The command to execute and any parameters to pass to it as a | |
491 | single string. | |
492 | @param argv | |
493 | The command to execute should be the first element of this | |
494 | array, any additional ones are the command parameters and the array must be | |
495 | terminated with a @NULL pointer. | |
496 | @param flags | |
497 | Combination of bit masks wxEXEC_ASYNC, | |
498 | wxEXEC_SYNC and wxEXEC_NOHIDE | |
499 | @param callback | |
500 | An optional pointer to wxProcess | |
501 | ||
502 | @see wxShell(), wxProcess, @ref overview_sampleexec "Exec sample". | |
503 | */ | |
504 | long wxExecute(const wxString& command, int sync = wxEXEC_ASYNC, | |
505 | wxProcess* callback = NULL); | |
506 | wxPerl note: long wxExecute(char** argv, | |
507 | int flags = wxEXEC_ASYNC, | |
508 | wxProcess* callback = NULL); | |
509 | wxPerl note: long wxExecute(const wxString& command, | |
510 | wxArrayString& output, | |
511 | int flags = 0); | |
512 | wxPerl note: long wxExecute(const wxString& command, | |
513 | wxArrayString& output, | |
514 | wxArrayString& errors, | |
515 | int flags = 0); | |
23324ae1 FM |
516 | //@} |
517 | ||
39fb8056 FM |
518 | /** |
519 | Returns a string representing the current date and time. | |
520 | */ | |
521 | wxString wxNow(); | |
522 | ||
523 | /** | |
524 | Returns @true if the operating system the program is running under is 64 bit. | |
525 | The check is performed at run-time and may differ from the value available at | |
526 | compile-time (at compile-time you can just check if @c sizeof(void*)==8) | |
527 | since the program could be running in emulation mode or in a mixed 32/64 bit | |
528 | system | |
529 | (bi-architecture operating system). | |
530 | Very important: this function is not 100% reliable on some systems given the | |
531 | fact | |
532 | that there isn't always a standard way to do a reliable check on the OS | |
533 | architecture. | |
534 | */ | |
535 | bool wxIsPlatform64Bit(); | |
536 | ||
537 | /** | |
538 | Returns the number uniquely identifying the current process in the system. | |
539 | If an error occurs, 0 is returned. | |
540 | */ | |
541 | unsigned long wxGetProcessId(); | |
542 | ||
543 | /** | |
544 | Equivalent to the Unix kill function: send the given signal @a sig to the | |
545 | process with PID @e pid. The valid signal values are | |
546 | ||
547 | @code | |
548 | enum wxSignal | |
549 | { | |
550 | wxSIGNONE = 0, // verify if the process exists under Unix | |
551 | wxSIGHUP, | |
552 | wxSIGINT, | |
553 | wxSIGQUIT, | |
554 | wxSIGILL, | |
555 | wxSIGTRAP, | |
556 | wxSIGABRT, | |
557 | wxSIGEMT, | |
558 | wxSIGFPE, | |
559 | wxSIGKILL, // forcefully kill, dangerous! | |
560 | wxSIGBUS, | |
561 | wxSIGSEGV, | |
562 | wxSIGSYS, | |
563 | wxSIGPIPE, | |
564 | wxSIGALRM, | |
565 | wxSIGTERM // terminate the process gently | |
566 | }; | |
567 | @endcode | |
568 | ||
569 | @c wxSIGNONE, @c wxSIGKILL and @c wxSIGTERM have the same meaning | |
570 | under both Unix and Windows but all the other signals are equivalent to | |
571 | @c wxSIGTERM under Windows. | |
572 | Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure. If @a rc parameter is not @NULL, it will | |
573 | be filled with an element of @c wxKillError enum: | |
574 | ||
575 | @code | |
576 | enum wxKillError | |
577 | { | |
578 | wxKILL_OK, // no error | |
579 | wxKILL_BAD_SIGNAL, // no such signal | |
580 | wxKILL_ACCESS_DENIED, // permission denied | |
581 | wxKILL_NO_PROCESS, // no such process | |
582 | wxKILL_ERROR // another, unspecified error | |
583 | }; | |
584 | @endcode | |
585 | ||
586 | The @a flags parameter can be wxKILL_NOCHILDREN (the default), | |
587 | or wxKILL_CHILDREN, in which case the child processes of this | |
588 | process will be killed too. Note that under Unix, for wxKILL_CHILDREN | |
589 | to work you should have created the process by passing wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER | |
590 | to wxExecute. | |
591 | ||
592 | @see wxProcess::Kill, wxProcess::Exists, @ref overview_sampleexec "Exec sample" | |
593 | */ | |
594 | int wxKill(long pid, int sig = wxSIGTERM, wxKillError rc = NULL, | |
595 | int flags = 0); | |
596 | ||
597 | /** | |
598 | Returns the current state of the mouse. Returns a wxMouseState | |
599 | instance that contains the current position of the mouse pointer in | |
600 | screen coordinates, as well as boolean values indicating the up/down | |
601 | status of the mouse buttons and the modifier keys. | |
602 | */ | |
603 | wxMouseState wxGetMouseState(); | |
604 | ||
605 | /** | |
606 | Returns @true if between two wxBeginBusyCursor() and | |
607 | wxEndBusyCursor() calls. | |
608 | See also wxBusyCursor. | |
609 | */ | |
610 | bool wxIsBusy(); | |
23324ae1 | 611 | |
7c913512 | 612 | //@{ |
39fb8056 FM |
613 | /** |
614 | Copies the user's email address into the supplied buffer, by | |
615 | concatenating the values returned by wxGetFullHostName() | |
616 | and wxGetUserId(). | |
617 | Returns @true if successful, @false otherwise. | |
618 | */ | |
619 | wxString wxGetEmailAddress(); | |
620 | bool wxGetEmailAddress(char* buf, int sz); | |
7c913512 | 621 | //@} |
23324ae1 | 622 | |
39fb8056 FM |
623 | /** |
624 | Sleeps for the specified number of seconds. | |
625 | */ | |
626 | void wxSleep(int secs); | |
627 | ||
628 | /** | |
629 | Sets the value of the environment variable @a var (adding it if necessary) | |
630 | to @e value. | |
631 | Returns @true on success. | |
632 | ||
633 | @see wxUnsetEnv() | |
634 | */ | |
635 | bool wxSetEnv(const wxString& var, const wxString& value); | |
636 | ||
637 | /** | |
638 | Returns @true if the current platform is little endian (instead of big | |
639 | endian). | |
640 | The check is performed at run-time. | |
641 | ||
642 | @see @ref overview_byteordermacros "Byte order macros" | |
643 | */ | |
644 | bool wxIsPlatformLittleEndian(); | |
645 | ||
646 | /** | |
647 | Under X only, sets the current display name. This is the X host and display | |
648 | name such | |
649 | as "colonsay:0.0", and the function indicates which display should be used for | |
650 | creating | |
651 | windows from this point on. Setting the display within an application allows | |
652 | multiple | |
653 | displays to be used. | |
654 | See also wxGetDisplayName(). | |
655 | */ | |
656 | void wxSetDisplayName(const wxString& displayName); | |
23324ae1 | 657 |