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1\chapter{Property sheet classes}\label{proplist}
2
3\section{Introduction}\label{proplistintro}
4
5The Property Sheet Classes help the programmer to specify complex dialogs and
6their relationship with their associated data. By specifying data as a
7wxPropertySheet containing wxProperty objects, the programmer can use
8a range of available or custom wxPropertyView classes to allow the user to
9edit this data. Classes derived from wxPropertyView act as mediators between the
10wxPropertySheet and the actual window (and associated panel items).
11
12For example, the wxPropertyListView is a kind of wxPropertyView which displays
13data in a Visual Basic-style property list (see \helpref{the next section}{proplistappearance} for
14screen shots). This is a listbox containing names and values, with
15an edit control and other optional controls via which the user edits the selected
16data item.
17
18wxPropertyFormView is another kind of wxPropertyView which mediates between
19the data and a panel or dialog box which has already been created. This makes it a contender for
20the replacement of wxForm, since programmer-controlled layout is going to be much more
21satisfactory. If automatic layout is desired, then wxPropertyListView could be used instead.
22
23The main intention of this class library was to provide property {\it list} behaviour, but
24it has been generalised as much as possible so that the concept of a property sheet and its viewers
25can reduce programming effort in a range of user interface tasks.
26
27For further details on the classes and how they are used, please see \helpref{Property classes overview}{proplistpropertyoverview}.
28
29\subsection{The appearance and behaviour of a property list view}\label{proplistappearance}
30
31The property list, as seen in an increasing number of development tools
32such as Visual Basic and Delphi, is a convenient and compact method for
33displaying and editing a number of items without the need for one
34control per item, and without the need for designing a special form. The
35controls are as follows:
36
37\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
38\item A listbox showing the properties and their current values, which has double-click
39properties dependent on the nature of the current property;
40\item a text editing area at the top of the display, allowing the user to edit
41the currently selected property if appropriate;
42\item `confirm' and `cancel' buttons to confirm or cancel an edit (for the property, not the
43whole sheet);
44\item an optional list that appears when the user can make a choice from several known possible values;
45\item a small Edit button to invoke `detailed editing' (perhaps showing or hiding the above value list, or
46maybe invoking a common dialog);
47\item optional OK/Close, Cancel and Help buttons for the whole dialog.
48\end{itemize}
49
50The concept of `detailed editing' versus quick editing gives the user a choice
51of editing mode, so novice and expert behaviour can be catered for, or the user can just
52use what he feels comfortable with.
53
54Behaviour alters depending on the kind of property being edited. For example, a boolean value has
55the following behaviour:
56
57\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
58\item Double-clicking on the item toggles between TRUE and FALSE.
59\item Showing the value list enables the user to select TRUE or FALSE.
60\item The user may be able to type in the word TRUE or FALSE, or the edit control
61may be read-only to disallow this since it is error-prone.
62\end{itemize}
63
64A list of strings may pop up a dialog for editing them, a simple string just allows text editing,
65double-clicking a colour property may show a colour selector, double-clicking on a filename property may
66show a file selector (in addition to being able to type in the name in the edit control), etc.
67
68Note that the `type' of property, such as string or integer, does not
69necessarily determine the behaviour of the property. The programmer has
70to be able to specify different behaviours for the same type, depending
71on the meaning of the property. For example, a colour and a filename may
72both be strings, but their editing behaviour should be different. This
73is why objects of type wxPropertyValidator need to be used, to define
74behaviour for a given class of properties or even specific property
75name. Objects of class wxPropertyView contain a list of property
76registries, which enable reuse of bunches of these validators in
77different circumstances. Or a wxProperty can be explicitly set to use a
78particular validator object.
79
80The following screen shot of the property classes test program shows the
81user editing a string, which is constrained to be one of three possible
82values.
83
84\helponly{\image{}{prop1.bmp}}
85
86The second picture shows the user having entered a integer that
87was outside the range specified to the validator. Note that in this picture,
88the value list is hidden because it is not used when editing an integer.
89
90\helponly{\image{}{prop2.bmp}}
91
92\section{Headers}\label{proplistfiles}
93
94The property class library comprises the following files:
95
96\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
97\item prop.h: base property class header
98\item proplist.h: wxPropertyListView and associated classes
99\item propform.h: wxPropertyListView and associated classes
100\end{itemize}
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110\section{Topic overviews}\label{proplistoverviews}
111
112This chapter contains a selection of topic overviews.
113
114\subsection{Property classes overview}\label{proplistpropertyoverview}
115
116The property classes help a programmer to express relationships between
117data and physical windows, in particular:
118
119\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
120\item the transfer of data to and from the physical controls;
121\item the behaviour of various controls and custom windows for particular
122types of data;
123\item the validation of data, notifying the user when incorrect data is entered,
124or even better, constraining the input so only valid data can be entered.
125\end{itemize}
126
127With a consistent framework, the programmer should be able to use existing
128components and design new ones in a principled manner, to solve many data entry
129requirements.
130
131Each datum is represented in a \helpref{wxProperty}{wxproperty}, which has a name and a value.
132Various C++ types are permitted in the value of a property, and the property can store a pointer
133to the data instead of a copy of the data. A \helpref{wxPropertySheet}{wxpropertysheet} represents a number of these properties.
134
135These two classes are independent from the way in which the data is visually manipulated. To
136mediate between property sheets and windows, the abstract class \helpref{wxPropertyView}{wxpropertyview} is
137available for programmers to derive new kinds of view. One kind of view that is available is the \helpref{wxPropertyListView}{wxpropertylistview},
138which displays the data in a Visual Basic-style list, with a small number of controls for editing
139the currently selected property. Another is \helpref{wxPropertyFormView}{wxpropertyformview} which
140mediates between an existing dialog or panel and the property sheet.
141
142The hard work of mediation is actually performed by validators, which are instances of classes
143derived from \helpref{wxPropertyValidator}{wxpropertyvalidator}. A validator is associated with
144a particular property and is responsible for
145responding to user interface events, and displaying, updating and checking the property value.
146Because a validator's behaviour depends largely on the kind of view being used, there has to be
147a separate hierarchy of validators for each class of view. So for wxPropertyListView, there is
148an abstract class \helpref{wxPropertyListValidator}{wxpropertylistvalidator} from which concrete
149classes are derived, such as \helpref{wxRealListValidator}{wxreallistvalidator} and
150\rtfsp\helpref{wxStringListValidator}{wxstringlistvalidator}.
151
152A validator can be explicitly set for a property, so there is no doubt which validator
153should be used to edit that property. However, it is also possible to define a registry
154of validators, and have the validator chosen on the basis of the {\it role} of the property.
155So a property with a ``filename" role would match the ``filename" validator, which pops
156up a file selector when the user double clicks on the property.
157
158You don't have to define your own frame or window classes: there are some predefined
159that will work with the property list view. See \helpref{Window classes}{proplistwindowclasses} for
160further details.
161
162\subsubsection{Example 1: Property list view}
163
164The following code fragment shows the essentials of creating a registry of
165standard validators, a property sheet containing some properties, and
166a property list view and dialog or frame. RegisterValidators will be
167called on program start, and PropertySheetTest is called in response to a
168menu command.
169
170Note how some properties are created with an explicit reference to
171a validator, and others are provided with a ``role'' which can be matched
172against a validator in the registry.
173
174The interface generated by this test program is shown in the section \helpref{Appearance and
175behaviour of a property list view}{proplistappearance}.
176
177\begin{verbatim}
178void RegisterValidators(void)
179{
180 myListValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"real", new wxRealListValidator);
181 myListValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"string", new wxStringListValidator);
182 myListValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"integer", new wxIntegerListValidator);
183 myListValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"bool", new wxBoolListValidator);
184}
185
186void PropertyListTest(Bool useDialog)
187{
188 wxPropertySheet *sheet = new wxPropertySheet;
189
190 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("fred", 1.0, "real"));
191 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("tough choice", (Bool)TRUE, "bool"));
192 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("ian", (long)45, "integer", new wxIntegerListValidator(-50, 50)));
193 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("bill", 25.0, "real", new wxRealListValidator(0.0, 100.0)));
194 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("julian", "one", "string"));
195 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("bitmap", "none", "string", new wxFilenameListValidator("Select a bitmap file", "*.bmp")));
196 wxStringList *strings = new wxStringList("one", "two", "three", NULL);
197 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("constrained", "one", "string", new wxStringListValidator(strings)));
198
199 wxPropertyListView *view =
200 new wxPropertyListView(NULL,
201 wxPROP_BUTTON_CHECK_CROSS|wxPROP_DYNAMIC_VALUE_FIELD|wxPROP_PULLDOWN);
202
203 wxDialogBox *propDialog = NULL;
204 wxPropertyListFrame *propFrame = NULL;
205 if (useDialog)
206 {
207 propDialog = new wxPropertyListDialog(view, NULL, "Property Sheet Test", TRUE, -1, -1, 400, 500);
208 }
209 else
210 {
211 propFrame = new wxPropertyListFrame(view, NULL, "Property Sheet Test", -1, -1, 400, 500);
212 }
213
214 view->AddRegistry(&myListValidatorRegistry);
215
216 if (useDialog)
217 {
218 view->ShowView(sheet, propDialog);
219 propDialog->Centre(wxBOTH);
220 propDialog->Show(TRUE);
221 }
222 else
223 {
224 propFrame->Initialize();
225 view->ShowView(sheet, propFrame->GetPropertyPanel());
226 propFrame->Centre(wxBOTH);
227 propFrame->Show(TRUE);
228 }
229}
230\end{verbatim}
231
232\subsubsection{Example 2: Property form view}
233
234This example is similar to Example 1, but uses a property form view to
235edit a property sheet using a predefined dialog box.
236
237\begin{verbatim}
238void RegisterValidators(void)
239{
240 myFormValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"real", new wxRealFormValidator);
241 myFormValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"string", new wxStringFormValidator);
242 myFormValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"integer", new wxIntegerFormValidator);
243 myFormValidatorRegistry.RegisterValidator((wxString)"bool", new wxBoolFormValidator);
244}
245
246void PropertyFormTest(Bool useDialog)
247{
248 wxPropertySheet *sheet = new wxPropertySheet;
249
250 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("fred", 25.0, "real", new wxRealFormValidator(0.0, 100.0)));
251 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("tough choice", (Bool)TRUE, "bool"));
252 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("ian", (long)45, "integer", new wxIntegerFormValidator(-50, 50)));
253 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("julian", "one", "string"));
254 wxStringList *strings = new wxStringList("one", "two", "three", NULL);
255 sheet->AddProperty(new wxProperty("constrained", "one", "string", new wxStringFormValidator(strings)));
256
257 wxPropertyFormView *view = new wxPropertyFormView(NULL);
258
259 wxDialogBox *propDialog = NULL;
260 wxPropertyFormFrame *propFrame = NULL;
261 if (useDialog)
262 {
263 propDialog = new wxPropertyFormDialog(view, NULL, "Property Form Test", TRUE, -1, -1, 400, 300);
264 }
265 else
266 {
267 propFrame = new wxPropertyFormFrame(view, NULL, "Property Form Test", -1, -1, 400, 300);
268 propFrame->Initialize();
269 }
270
271 wxPanel *panel = propDialog ? propDialog : propFrame->GetPropertyPanel();
272 panel->SetLabelPosition(wxVERTICAL);
273
274 // Add items to the panel
275
276 (void) new wxButton(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "OK", -1, -1, -1, -1, 0, "ok");
277 (void) new wxButton(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Cancel", -1, -1, 80, -1, 0, "cancel");
278 (void) new wxButton(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Update", -1, -1, 80, -1, 0, "update");
279 (void) new wxButton(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Revert", -1, -1, -1, -1, 0, "revert");
280 panel->NewLine();
281
282 // The name of this text item matches the "fred" property
283 (void) new wxText(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Fred", "", -1, -1, 90, -1, 0, "fred");
284 (void) new wxCheckBox(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Yes or no", -1, -1, -1, -1, 0, "tough choice");
285 (void) new wxSlider(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Sliding scale", 0, -50, 50, 100, -1, -1, wxHORIZONTAL, "ian");
286 panel->NewLine();
287 (void) new wxListBox(panel, (wxFunction)NULL, "Constrained", wxSINGLE, -1, -1, 100, 90, 0, NULL, 0, "constrained");
288
289 view->AddRegistry(&myFormValidatorRegistry);
290
291 if (useDialog)
292 {
293 view->ShowView(sheet, propDialog);
294 view->AssociateNames();
295 view->TransferToDialog();
296 propDialog->Centre(wxBOTH);
297 propDialog->Show(TRUE);
298 }
299 else
300 {
301 view->ShowView(sheet, propFrame->GetPropertyPanel());
302 view->AssociateNames();
303 view->TransferToDialog();
304 propFrame->Centre(wxBOTH);
305 propFrame->Show(TRUE);
306 }
307}
308\end{verbatim}
309
310\subsection{Validator classes overview}\label{proplistvalidatoroverview}
311
312Classes: \helpref{Validator classes}{proplistvalidatorclasses}
313
314The validator classes provide functionality for mediating between a wxProperty and
315the actual display. There is a separate family of validator classes for each
316class of view, since the differences in user interface for these views implies
317that little common functionality can be shared amongst validators.
318
319
320
321\subsubsection{wxPropertyValidator overview}\label{wxpropertyvalidatoroverview}
322
323Class: \helpref{wxPropertyValidator}{wxpropertyvalidator}
324
325This class is the root of all property validator classes. It contains a small
326amount of common functionality, including functions to convert between
327strings and C++ values.
328
329A validator is notionally an object which sits between a property and its displayed
330value, and checks that the value the user enters is correct, giving an error message
331if the validation fails. In fact, the validator does more than that, and is akin to
332a view class but at a finer level of detail. It is also responsible for
333loading the dialog box control with the value from the property, putting it back
334into the property, preparing special controls for editing the value, and
335may even invoke special dialogs for editing the value in a convenient way.
336
337In a property list dialog, there is quite a lot of scope for supplying custom dialogs,
338such as file or colour selectors. For a form dialog, there is less scope because
339there is no concept of `detailed editing' of a value: one control is associated with
340one property, and there is no provision for invoking further dialogs. The reader
341may like to work out how the form view could be extended to provide some of the
342functionality of the property list!
343
344Validator objects may be associated explictly with a wxProperty, or they may be
345indirectly associated by virtue of a property `kind' that matches validators having
346that kind. In the latter case, such validators are stored in a validator registry
347which is passed to the view before the dialog is shown. If the validator takes
348arguments, such as minimum and maximum values in the case of a wxIntegerListValidator,
349then the validator must be associated explicitly with the property. The validator
350will be deleted when the property is deleted.
351
352\subsubsection{wxPropertyListValidator overview}\label{wxpropertylistvalidatoroverview}
353
354Class: \helpref{wxPropertyListValidator}{wxpropertylistvalidator}
355
356This class is the abstract base class for property list view validators.
357The list view acts upon a user interface containing a list of properties,
358a text item for direct property value editing, confirm/cancel buttons for the value,
359a pulldown list for making a choice between values, and OK/Cancel/Help buttons
360for the dialog (see \helpref{property list appearance}{proplistappearance}).
361
362By overriding virtual functions, the programmer can create custom
363behaviour for different kinds of property. Custom behaviour can use just the
364available controls on the property list dialog, or the validator can
365invoke custom editors with quite different controls, which pop up in
366`detailed editing' mode.
367
368See the detailed class documentation for the members you should override
369to give your validator appropriate behaviour.
370
371\subsubsection{wxPropertyFormValidator overview}\label{wxpropertyformvalidatoroverview}
372
373This class is the abstract base class for property form view validators.
374The form view acts upon an existing dialog box or panel, where either the
375panel item names correspond to property names, or the programmer has explicitly
376associated the panel item with the property.
377
378By overriding virtual functions, the programmer determines how
379values are displayed or retrieved, and the checking that the validator does.
380
381See the detailed class documentation for the members you should override
382to give your validator appropriate behaviour.
383
384\subsection{View classes overview}\label{proplistviewoverview}
385
386Classes: \helpref{View classes}{proplistviewclasses}
387
388An instance of a view class relates a property sheet with an actual window.
389Currently, there are two classes of view: wxPropertyListView and wxPropertyFormView.
390
391\subsubsection{wxPropertyView overview}\label{wxpropertyviewoverview}
392
393Class: \helpref{wxPropertyView}{wxpropertyview}
394
395This is the abstract base class for property views.
396
397\subsubsection{wxPropertyListView overview}\label{wxpropertylistviewoverview}
398
399Class: \helpref{wxPropertyListView}{wxpropertylistview}
400
401The property list view defines the relationship between a property sheet and
402a property list dialog or panel. It manages user interface events such as
403clicking on a property, pressing return in the text edit field, and clicking
404on Confirm or Cancel. These events cause member functions of the
405class to be called, and these in turn may call member functions of
406the appropriate validator to be called, to prepare controls, check the property value,
407invoke detailed editing, etc.
408
409\subsubsection{wxPropertyFormView overview}\label{wxpropertyformviewoverview}
410
411Class: \helpref{wxPropertyFormView}{wxpropertyformview}
412
413The property form view manages the relationship between a property sheet
414and an existing dialog or panel.
415
416You must first create a panel or dialog box for the view to work on.
417The panel should contain panel items with names that correspond to
418properties in your property sheet; or you can explicitly set the
419panel item for each property.
420
421Apart from any custom panel items that you wish to control independently
422of the property-editing items, wxPropertyFormView takes over the
423processing of item events. It can also control normal dialog behaviour such
424as OK, Cancel, so you should also create some standard buttons that the property view
425can recognise. Just create the buttons with standard names and the view
426will do the rest. The following button names are recognised:
427
428\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
429\item {\bf ok}: indicates the OK button. Calls wxPropertyFormView::OnOk. By default,
430checks and updates the form values, closes and deletes the frame or dialog, then deletes the view.
431\item {\bf cancel}: indicates the Cancel button. Calls wxPropertyFormView::OnCancel. By default,
432closes and deletes the frame or dialog, then deletes the view.
433\item {\bf help}: indicates the Help button. Calls wxPropertyFormView::OnHelp. This needs
434to be overridden by the application for anything interesting to happen.
435\item {\bf revert}: indicates the Revert button. Calls wxPropertyFormView::OnRevert,
436which by default transfers the wxProperty values to the panel items (in effect
437undoing any unsaved changes in the items).
438\item {\bf update}: indicates the Revert button. Calls wxPropertyFormView::OnUpdate, which
439by defaults transfers the displayed values to the wxProperty objects.
440\end{itemize}
441
442\subsection{wxPropertySheet overview}\label{wxpropertysheetoverview}
443
444Classes: \helpref{wxPropertySheet}{wxpropertysheet}, \helpref{wxProperty}{wxproperty}, \helpref{wxPropertyValue}{wxpropertyvalue}
445
446A property sheet defines zero or more properties. This is a bit like an explicit representation of
447a C++ object. wxProperty objects can have values which are pointers to C++ values, or they
448can allocate their own storage for values.
449
450Because the property sheet representation is explicit and can be manipulated by
451a program, it is a convenient form to be used for a variety of
452editing purposes. wxPropertyListView and wxPropertyFormView are two classes that
453specify the relationship between a property sheet and a user interface. You could imagine
454other uses for wxPropertySheet, for example to generate a form-like user interface without
455the need for GUI programming. Or for storing the names and values of command-line switches, with the
456option to subsequently edit these values using a wxPropertyListView.
457
458A typical use for a property sheet is to represent values of an object
459which are only implicit in the current representation of it. For
460example, in Visual Basic and similar programming environments, you can
461`edit a button', or rather, edit the button's properties. One of the
462properties you can edit is {\it width} - but there is no explicit
463representation of width in a wxWindows button; instead, you call SetSize
464and GetSize members. To translate this into a consisent,
465property-oriented scheme, we could derive a new class
466wxButtonWithProperties, which has two new functions: SetProperty and
467GetProperty. SetProperty accepts a property name and a value, and calls
468an appropriate function for the property that is being passed.
469GetProperty accepts a property name, returning a property value. So
470instead of having to use the usual arbitrary set of C++ member functions
471to set or access attributes of a window, programmer deals merely with
472SetValue/GetValue, and property names and values.
473We now have a single point at which we can modify or query an object by specifying
474names and values at run-time. (The implementation of SetProperty and GetProperty
475is probably quite messy and involves a large if-then-else statement to
476test the property name and act accordingly.)
477
478When the user invokes the property editor for a wxButtonWithProperties, the system
479creates a wxPropertySheet with `imaginary' properties such as width, height, font size
480and so on. For each property, wxButtonWithProperties::GetProperty is called, and the result is
481passed to the corresponding wxProperty. The wxPropertySheet is passed to a wxPropertyListView
482as described elsewhere, and the user edits away. When the user has finished editing, the system calls
483wxButtonWithProperties::SetProperty to transfer the wxProperty value back into the button
484by way of an appropriate call, wxWindow::SetSize in the case of width and height properties.
485
486
487
488\section{Classes by category}\label{proplistclassesbycat}
489
490A classification of property sheet classes by category.
491
492\subsection{Data classes}
493
494\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
495\item \helpref{wxProperty}{wxproperty}
496\item \helpref{wxPropertyValue}{wxpropertyvalue}
497\item \helpref{wxPropertySheet}{wxpropertysheet}
498\end{itemize}
499
500
501\subsection{Validator classes}\label{proplistvalidatorclasses}
502
503Validators check that the values the user has entered for a property are
504valid. They can also define specific ways of entering data, such as a
505file selector for a filename, and they are responsible for transferring
506values between the wxProperty and the physical display.
507
508Base classes:
509
510\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
511\item \helpref{wxPropertyValidator}{wxproperty}
512\item \helpref{wxPropertyListValidator}{wxpropertylistvalidator}
513\item \helpref{wxPropertyFormValidator}{wxpropertyformvalidator}
514\end{itemize}
515
516List view validators:
517
518\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
519\item \helpref{wxBoolListValidator}{wxboollistvalidator}
520\item \helpref{wxFilenameListValidator}{wxfilenamelistvalidator}
521\item \helpref{wxIntegerListValidator}{wxintegerlistvalidator}
522\item \helpref{wxListOfStringsListValidator}{wxlistofstringslistvalidator}
523\item \helpref{wxRealListValidator}{wxreallistvalidator}
524\item \helpref{wxStringListValidator}{wxstringlistvalidator}
525\end{itemize}
526
527Form view validators:
528
529\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
530\item \helpref{wxBoolFormValidator}{wxboolformvalidator}
531\item \helpref{wxIntegerFormValidator}{wxintegerformvalidator}
532\item \helpref{wxRealFormValidator}{wxrealformvalidator}
533\item \helpref{wxStringFormValidator}{wxstringformvalidator}
534\end{itemize}
535
536\subsection{View classes}\label{proplistviewclasses}
537
538View classes mediate between a property sheet and a physical window.
539
540\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
541\item \helpref{wxPropertyView}{wxpropertyview}
542\item \helpref{wxPropertyListView}{wxpropertylistview}
543\item \helpref{wxPropertyFormView}{wxpropertyformview}
544\end{itemize}
545
546\subsection{Window classes}\label{proplistwindowclasses}
547
548The class library defines some window classes that can be used as-is with a suitable
549view class and property sheet.
550
551\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
552\item \helpref{wxPropertyFormFrame}{wxpropertyformframe}
553\item \helpref{wxPropertyFormDialog}{wxpropertyformdialog}
554\item \helpref{wxPropertyFormPanel}{wxpropertyformpanel}
555\item \helpref{wxPropertyListFrame}{wxpropertylistframe}
556\item \helpref{wxPropertyListDialog}{wxpropertylistdialog}
557\item \helpref{wxPropertyListPanel}{wxpropertylistpanel}
558\end{itemize}
559
560\subsection{Registry classes}
561
562A validator registry is a list of validators that can be applied to properties in a property sheet.
563There may be one or more registries per property view.
564
565\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
566\item \helpref{wxPropertyValidatorRegistry}{wxpropertyvalidatorregistry}
567\end{itemize}