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1\section{\class{wxApp}}\label{wxapp}
2
3The {\bf wxApp} class represents the application itself. It is used
4to:
5
6\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
7\item set and get application-wide properties;
8\item implement the windowing system message or event loop;
9\item initiate application processing via \helpref{wxApp::OnInit}{wxapponinit};
10\item allow default processing of events not handled by other
11objects in the application.
12\end{itemize}
13
14You should use the macro IMPLEMENT\_APP(appClass) in your application implementation
15file to tell wxWidgets how to create an instance of your application class.
16
17Use DECLARE\_APP(appClass) in a header file if you want the wxGetApp function (which returns
18a reference to your application object) to be visible to other files.
19
20\wxheading{Derived from}
21
22\helpref{wxEvtHandler}{wxevthandler}\\
23\helpref{wxObject}{wxobject}
24
25\wxheading{Include files}
26
27<wx/app.h>
28
29\wxheading{Library}
30
31\helpref{wxBase}{librarieslist}
32
33\wxheading{See also}
34
35\helpref{wxApp overview}{wxappoverview}
36
37\latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}}
38
39
40\membersection{wxApp::wxApp}\label{wxappctor}
41
42\func{}{wxApp}{\void}
43
44Constructor. Called implicitly with a definition of a wxApp object.
45
46
47\membersection{wxApp::\destruct{wxApp}}\label{wxappdtor}
48
49\func{virtual}{\destruct{wxApp}}{\void}
50
51Destructor. Will be called implicitly on program exit if the wxApp
52object is created on the stack.
53
54
55\membersection{wxApp::argc}\label{wxappargc}
56
57\member{int}{argc}
58
59Number of command line arguments (after environment-specific processing).
60
61
62\membersection{wxApp::argv}\label{wxappargv}
63
64\member{wxChar **}{argv}
65
66Command line arguments (after environment-specific processing).
67
68
69\membersection{wxApp::CreateLogTarget}\label{wxappcreatelogtarget}
70
71\func{virtual wxLog*}{CreateLogTarget}{\void}
72
73Creates a wxLog class for the application to use for logging errors. The default
74implementation returns a new wxLogGui class.
75
76\wxheading{See also}
77
78\helpref{wxLog}{wxlog}
79
80
81\membersection{wxApp::CreateTraits}\label{wxappcreatetraits}
82
83\func{virtual wxAppTraits *}{CreateTraits}{\void}
84
85Creates the \helpref{wxAppTraits}{wxapptraits} object when \helpref{GetTraits}{wxappgettraits}
86needs it for the first time.
87
88\wxheading{See also}
89
90\helpref{wxAppTraits}{wxapptraits}
91
92
93\membersection{wxApp::Dispatch}\label{wxappdispatch}
94
95\func{virtual void}{Dispatch}{\void}
96
97Dispatches the next event in the windowing system event queue.
98
99This can be used for programming event loops, e.g.
100
101\begin{verbatim}
102 while (app.Pending())
103 Dispatch();
104\end{verbatim}
105
106\wxheading{See also}
107
108\helpref{wxApp::Pending}{wxapppending}
109
110
111\membersection{wxApp::ExitMainLoop}\label{wxappexitmainloop}
112
113\func{virtual void}{ExitMainLoop}{\void}
114
115Call this to explicitly exit the main message (event) loop.
116You should normally exit the main loop (and the application) by deleting
117the top window.
118
119
120\membersection{wxApp::FilterEvent}\label{wxappfilterevent}
121
122\func{int}{FilterEvent}{\param{wxEvent\& }{event}}
123
124This function is called before processing any event and allows the application
125to preempt the processing of some events. If this method returns $-1$ the event
126is processed normally, otherwise either {\tt true} or {\tt false} should be
127returned and the event processing stops immediately considering that the event
128had been already processed (for the former return value) or that it is not
129going to be processed at all (for the latter one).
130
131
132\membersection{wxApp::GetAppDisplayName}\label{wxappgetappdisplayname}
133
134\constfunc{wxString}{GetAppDisplayName}{\void}
135
136Returns the user-readable application name. The difference between this string
137and the one returned by \helpref{GetAppName}{wxappgetappname} is that this one
138is meant to be shown to the user and so should be used for the window titles,
139page headers and so on while the other one should be only used internally, e.g.
140for the file names or configuration file keys.
141
142By default, returns the same string as \helpref{GetAppName}{wxappgetappname}.
143
144\newsince{3.0}
145
146
147\membersection{wxApp::GetAppName}\label{wxappgetappname}
148
149\constfunc{wxString}{GetAppName}{\void}
150
151Returns the application name.
152
153\wxheading{Remarks}
154
155wxWidgets sets this to a reasonable default before
156calling \helpref{wxApp::OnInit}{wxapponinit}, but the application can reset it at will.
157
158\wxheading{See also}
159
160\helpref{GetAppDisplayName}{wxappgetappdisplayname}
161
162
163\membersection{wxApp::GetClassName}\label{wxappgetclassname}
164
165\constfunc{wxString}{GetClassName}{\void}
166
167Gets the class name of the application. The class name may be used in a platform specific
168manner to refer to the application.
169
170\wxheading{See also}
171
172\helpref{wxApp::SetClassName}{wxappsetclassname}
173
174
175\membersection{wxApp::GetExitOnFrameDelete}\label{wxappgetexitonframedelete}
176
177\constfunc{bool}{GetExitOnFrameDelete}{\void}
178
179Returns true if the application will exit when the top-level window is deleted, false
180otherwise.
181
182\wxheading{See also}
183
184\helpref{wxApp::SetExitOnFrameDelete}{wxappsetexitonframedelete},\\
185\helpref{wxApp shutdown overview}{wxappshutdownoverview}
186
187
188\membersection{wxApp::GetInstance}\label{wxappgetinstance}
189
190\func{static wxAppConsole *}{GetInstance}{\void}
191
192Returns the one and only global application object.
193Usually \texttt{wxTheApp} is usead instead.
194
195\wxheading{See also}
196
197\helpref{wxApp::SetInstance}{wxappsetinstance}
198
199
200\membersection{wxApp::GetTopWindow}\label{wxappgettopwindow}
201
202\constfunc{virtual wxWindow *}{GetTopWindow}{\void}
203
204Returns a pointer to the top window.
205
206\wxheading{Remarks}
207
208If the top window hasn't been set using \helpref{wxApp::SetTopWindow}{wxappsettopwindow}, this
209function will find the first top-level window (frame or dialog) and return that.
210
211\wxheading{See also}
212
213\helpref{SetTopWindow}{wxappsettopwindow}
214
215
216
217\membersection{wxApp::GetTraits}\label{wxappgettraits}
218
219\func{wxAppTraits *}{GetTraits}{\void}
220
221Returns a pointer to the \helpref{wxAppTraits}{wxapptraits} object for the application.
222If you want to customize the \helpref{wxAppTraits}{wxapptraits} object, you must override the
223\helpref{CreateTraits}{wxappcreatetraits} function.
224
225
226
227\membersection{wxApp::GetUseBestVisual}\label{wxappgetusebestvisual}
228
229\constfunc{bool}{GetUseBestVisual}{\void}
230
231Returns true if the application will use the best visual on systems that support
232different visuals, false otherwise.
233
234\wxheading{See also}
235
236\helpref{SetUseBestVisual}{wxappsetusebestvisual}
237
238
239\membersection{wxApp::GetVendorDisplayName}\label{wxappgetvendordisplayname}
240
241\constfunc{wxString}{GetVendorDisplayName}{\void}
242
243Returns the user-readable vendor name. The difference between this string
244and the one returned by \helpref{GetVendorName}{wxappgetvendorname} is that this one
245is meant to be shown to the user and so should be used for the window titles,
246page headers and so on while the other one should be only used internally, e.g.
247for the file names or configuration file keys.
248
249By default, returns the same string as \helpref{GetVendorName}{wxappgetvendorname}.
250
251\newsince{2.9.0}
252
253
254\membersection{wxApp::GetVendorName}\label{wxappgetvendorname}
255
256\constfunc{wxString}{GetVendorName}{\void}
257
258Returns the application's vendor name.
259
260
261\membersection{wxApp::IsActive}\label{wxappisactive}
262
263\constfunc{bool}{IsActive}{\void}
264
265Returns \true if the application is active, i.e. if one of its windows is
266currently in the foreground. If this function returns \false and you need to
267attract users attention to the application, you may use
268\helpref{wxTopLevelWindow::RequestUserAttention}{wxtoplevelwindowrequestuserattention}
269to do it.
270
271
272\membersection{wxApp::IsMainLoopRunning}\label{wxappismainlooprunning}
273
274\func{static bool}{IsMainLoopRunning}{\void}
275
276Returns \true if the main event loop is currently running, i.e. if the
277application is inside \helpref{OnRun}{wxapponrun}.
278
279This can be useful to test whether events can be dispatched. For example,
280if this function returns \false, non-blocking sockets cannot be used because
281the events from them would never be processed.
282
283
284\membersection{wxApp::MainLoop}\label{wxappmainloop}
285
286\func{virtual int}{MainLoop}{\void}
287
288Called by wxWidgets on creation of the application. Override this if you wish
289to provide your own (environment-dependent) main loop.
290
291\wxheading{Return value}
292
293Returns 0 under X, and the wParam of the WM\_QUIT message under Windows.
294
295%% VZ: OnXXX() functions should *not* be documented
296%%
297%%\membersection{wxApp::OnActivate}\label{wxapponactivate}
298%%
299%%\func{void}{OnActivate}{\param{wxActivateEvent\& }{event}}
300%%
301%%Provide this member function to know whether the application is being
302%%activated or deactivated (Windows only).
303%%
304%%\wxheading{See also}
305%%
306%%\helpref{wxWindow::OnActivate}{wxwindowonactivate}, \helpref{wxActivateEvent}{wxactivateevent}
307%%
308%%\membersection{wxApp::OnCharHook}\label{wxapponcharhook}
309%%
310%%\func{void}{OnCharHook}{\param{wxKeyEvent\&}{ event}}
311%%
312%%This event handler function is called (under Windows only) to allow the window to intercept keyboard events
313%%before they are processed by child windows.
314%%
315%%\wxheading{Parameters}
316%%
317%%\docparam{event}{The keypress event.}
318%%
319%%\wxheading{Remarks}
320%%
321%%Use the wxEVT\_CHAR\_HOOK macro in your event table.
322%%
323%%If you use this member, you can selectively consume keypress events by calling\rtfsp
324%%\helpref{wxEvent::Skip}{wxeventskip} for characters the application is not interested in.
325%%
326%%\wxheading{See also}
327%%
328%%\helpref{wxKeyEvent}{wxkeyevent}, \helpref{wxWindow::OnChar}{wxwindowonchar},\rtfsp
329%%\helpref{wxWindow::OnCharHook}{wxwindowoncharhook}, \helpref{wxDialog::OnCharHook}{wxdialogoncharhook}
330
331
332\membersection{wxApp::OnAssertFailure}\label{wxapponassertfailure}
333
334\func{void}{OnAssertFailure}{\param{const wxChar }{*file}, \param{int }{line}, \param{const wxChar }{*func}, \param{const wxChar }{*cond}, \param{const wxChar }{*msg}}
335
336This function is called when an assert failure occurs, i.e. the condition
337specified in \helpref{wxASSERT}{wxassert} macro evaluated to {\tt false}.
338It is only called in debug mode (when {\tt \_\_WXDEBUG\_\_} is defined) as
339asserts are not left in the release code at all.
340
341The base class version shows the default assert failure dialog box proposing to
342the user to stop the program, continue or ignore all subsequent asserts.
343
344\wxheading{Parameters}
345
346\docparam{file}{the name of the source file where the assert occurred}
347
348\docparam{line}{the line number in this file where the assert occurred}
349
350\docparam{func}{the name of the function where the assert occurred, may be
351empty if the compiler doesn't support C99 \texttt{\_\_FUNCTION\_\_}}
352
353\docparam{cond}{the condition of the failed assert in text form}
354
355\docparam{msg}{the message specified as argument to
356\helpref{wxASSERT\_MSG}{wxassertmsg} or \helpref{wxFAIL\_MSG}{wxfailmsg}, will
357be {\tt NULL} if just \helpref{wxASSERT}{wxassert} or \helpref{wxFAIL}{wxfail}
358was used}
359
360
361\membersection{wxApp::OnCmdLineError}\label{wxapponcmdlineerror}
362
363\func{bool}{OnCmdLineError}{\param{wxCmdLineParser\& }{parser}}
364
365Called when command line parsing fails (i.e. an incorrect command line option
366was specified by the user). The default behaviour is to show the program usage
367text and abort the program.
368
369Return {\tt true} to continue normal execution or {\tt false} to return
370{\tt false} from \helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} thus terminating the program.
371
372\wxheading{See also}
373
374\helpref{OnInitCmdLine}{wxapponinitcmdline}
375
376
377\membersection{wxApp::OnCmdLineHelp}\label{wxapponcmdlinehelp}
378
379\func{bool}{OnCmdLineHelp}{\param{wxCmdLineParser\& }{parser}}
380
381Called when the help option ({\tt --help}) was specified on the command line.
382The default behaviour is to show the program usage text and abort the program.
383
384Return {\tt true} to continue normal execution or {\tt false} to return
385{\tt false} from \helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} thus terminating the program.
386
387\wxheading{See also}
388
389\helpref{OnInitCmdLine}{wxapponinitcmdline}
390
391
392\membersection{wxApp::OnCmdLineParsed}\label{wxapponcmdlineparsed}
393
394\func{bool}{OnCmdLineParsed}{\param{wxCmdLineParser\& }{parser}}
395
396Called after the command line had been successfully parsed. You may override
397this method to test for the values of the various parameters which could be
398set from the command line.
399
400Don't forget to call the base class version unless you want to suppress
401processing of the standard command line options.
402
403Return {\tt true} to continue normal execution or {\tt false} to return
404{\tt false} from \helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} thus terminating the program.
405
406\wxheading{See also}
407
408\helpref{OnInitCmdLine}{wxapponinitcmdline}
409
410
411\membersection{wxApp::OnExceptionInMainLoop}\label{wxapponexceptioninmainloop}
412
413\func{virtual bool}{OnExceptionInMainLoop}{\void}
414
415This function is called if an unhandled exception occurs inside the main
416application event loop. It can return \true to ignore the exception and to
417continue running the loop or \false to exit the loop and terminate the
418program. In the latter case it can also use C++ \texttt{throw} keyword to
419rethrow the current exception.
420
421The default behaviour of this function is the latter in all ports except under
422Windows where a dialog is shown to the user which allows him to choose between
423the different options. You may override this function in your class to do
424something more appropriate.
425
426Finally note that if the exception is rethrown from here, it can be caught in
427\helpref{OnUnhandledException}{wxapponunhandledexception}.
428
429
430\membersection{wxApp::OnExit}\label{wxapponexit}
431
432\func{virtual int}{OnExit}{\void}
433
434Override this member function for any processing which needs to be
435done as the application is about to exit. OnExit is called after
436destroying all application windows and controls, but before
437wxWidgets cleanup. Note that it is not called at all if
438\helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} failed.
439
440The return value of this function is currently ignored, return the same value
441as returned by the base class method if you override it.
442
443
444\membersection{wxApp::OnFatalException}\label{wxapponfatalexception}
445
446\func{void}{OnFatalException}{\void}
447
448This function may be called if something fatal happens: an unhandled
449exception under Win32 or a a fatal signal under Unix, for example. However,
450this will not happen by default: you have to explicitly call
451\helpref{wxHandleFatalExceptions}{wxhandlefatalexceptions} to enable this.
452
453Generally speaking, this function should only show a message to the user and
454return. You may attempt to save unsaved data but this is not guaranteed to
455work and, in fact, probably won't.
456
457\wxheading{See also}
458
459\helpref{wxHandleFatalExceptions}{wxhandlefatalexceptions}
460
461%% VZ: the wxApp event handler are private and should not be documented here!
462%%
463%%\membersection{wxApp::OnIdle}\label{wxapponidle}
464%%
465%%\func{void}{OnIdle}{\param{wxIdleEvent\& }{event}}
466%%
467%%Override this member function for any processing which needs to be done
468%%when the application is idle. You should call wxApp::OnIdle from your own function,
469%%since this forwards OnIdle events to windows and also performs garbage collection for
470%%windows whose destruction has been delayed.
471%%
472%%wxWidgets' strategy for OnIdle processing is as follows. After pending user interface events for an
473%%application have all been processed, wxWidgets sends an OnIdle event to the application object. wxApp::OnIdle itself
474%%sends an OnIdle event to each application window, allowing windows to do idle processing such as updating
475%%their appearance. If either wxApp::OnIdle or a window OnIdle function requested more time, by
476%%calling \helpref{wxIdleEvent::RequestMore}{wxidleeventrequestmore}, wxWidgets will send another OnIdle
477%%event to the application object. This will occur in a loop until either a user event is found to be
478%%pending, or OnIdle requests no more time. Then all pending user events are processed until the system
479%%goes idle again, when OnIdle is called, and so on.
480%%
481%%\wxheading{See also}
482%%
483%%\helpref{wxWindow::OnIdle}{wxwindowonidle}, \helpref{wxIdleEvent}{wxidleevent},\rtfsp
484%%\helpref{wxWindow::SendIdleEvents}{wxappsendidleevents}
485%%
486%%\membersection{wxApp::OnEndSession}\label{wxapponendsession}
487%%
488%%\func{void}{OnEndSession}{\param{wxCloseEvent\& }{event}}
489%%
490%%This is an event handler function called when the operating system or GUI session is
491%%about to close down. The application has a chance to silently save information,
492%%and can optionally close itself.
493%%
494%%Use the EVT\_END\_SESSION event table macro to handle query end session events.
495%%
496%%The default handler calls \helpref{wxWindow::Close}{wxwindowclose} with a true argument
497%%(forcing the application to close itself silently).
498%%
499%%\wxheading{Remarks}
500%%
501%%Under X, OnEndSession is called in response to the `die' event.
502%%
503%%Under Windows, OnEndSession is called in response to the WM\_ENDSESSION message.
504%%
505%%\wxheading{See also}
506%%
507%%\helpref{wxWindow::Close}{wxwindowclose},\rtfsp
508%%\helpref{wxWindow::OnCloseWindow}{wxwindowonclosewindow},\rtfsp
509%%\helpref{wxCloseEvent}{wxcloseevent},\rtfsp
510
511
512\membersection{wxApp::OnInit}\label{wxapponinit}
513
514\func{bool}{OnInit}{\void}
515
516This must be provided by the application, and will usually create the
517application's main window, optionally calling
518\helpref{wxApp::SetTopWindow}{wxappsettopwindow}. You may use
519\helpref{OnExit}{wxapponexit} to clean up anything initialized here, provided
520that the function returns \true.
521
522Notice that if you want to to use the command line processing provided by
523wxWidgets you have to call the base class version in the derived class
524OnInit().
525
526Return \true to continue processing, \false to exit the application
527immediately.
528
529
530\membersection{wxApp::OnInitCmdLine}\label{wxapponinitcmdline}
531
532\func{void}{OnInitCmdLine}{\param{wxCmdLineParser\& }{parser}}
533
534Called from \helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} and may be used to initialize the
535parser with the command line options for this application. The base class
536versions adds support for a few standard options only.
537
538\membersection{wxApp::OnRun}\label{wxapponrun}
539
540\func{virtual int}{OnRun}{\void}
541
542This virtual function is where the execution of a program written in wxWidgets
543starts. The default implementation just enters the main loop and starts
544handling the events until it terminates, either because
545\helpref{ExitMainLoop}{wxappexitmainloop} has been explicitly called or because
546the last frame has been deleted and
547\helpref{GetExitOnFrameDelete}{wxappgetexitonframedelete} flag is \true (this
548is the default).
549
550The return value of this function becomes the exit code of the program, so it
551should return $0$ in case of successful termination.
552
553
554\membersection{wxApp::OnUnhandledException}\label{wxapponunhandledexception}
555
556\func{virtual void}{OnUnhandledException}{\void}
557
558This function is called when an unhandled C++ exception occurs inside
559\helpref{OnRun()}{wxapponrun} (the exceptions which occur during the program
560startup and shutdown might not be caught at all). Notice that by now the main
561event loop has been terminated and the program will exit, if you want to
562prevent this from happening (i.e. continue running after catching an exception)
563you need to override \helpref{OnExceptionInMainLoop}{wxapponexceptioninmainloop}.
564
565The default implementation shows information about the exception in debug build
566but does nothing in the release build.
567
568
569\membersection{wxApp::ProcessMessage}\label{wxappprocessmessage}
570
571\func{bool}{ProcessMessage}{\param{WXMSG *}{msg}}
572
573Windows-only function for processing a message. This function
574is called from the main message loop, checking for windows that
575may wish to process it. The function returns true if the message
576was processed, false otherwise. If you use wxWidgets with another class
577library with its own message loop, you should make sure that this
578function is called to allow wxWidgets to receive messages. For example,
579to allow co-existence with the Microsoft Foundation Classes, override
580the PreTranslateMessage function:
581
582\begin{verbatim}
583// Provide wxWidgets message loop compatibility
584BOOL CTheApp::PreTranslateMessage(MSG *msg)
585{
586 if (wxTheApp && wxTheApp->ProcessMessage((WXMSW *)msg))
587 return true;
588 else
589 return CWinApp::PreTranslateMessage(msg);
590}
591\end{verbatim}
592
593
594\membersection{wxApp::Pending}\label{wxapppending}
595
596\func{virtual bool}{Pending}{\void}
597
598Returns true if unprocessed events are in the window system event queue.
599
600\wxheading{See also}
601
602\helpref{wxApp::Dispatch}{wxappdispatch}
603
604
605\membersection{wxApp::SendIdleEvents}\label{wxappsendidleevents}
606
607\func{bool}{SendIdleEvents}{\param{wxWindow*}{ win}, \param{wxIdleEvent\& }{event}}
608
609Sends idle events to a window and its children.
610
611Please note that this function is internal to wxWidgets and shouldn't be used
612by user code.
613
614\wxheading{Remarks}
615
616These functions poll the top-level windows, and their children, for idle event processing.
617If true is returned, more OnIdle processing is requested by one or more window.
618
619\wxheading{See also}
620
621\helpref{wxIdleEvent}{wxidleevent}
622
623
624\membersection{wxApp::SetAppDisplayName}\label{wxappsetappdisplayname}
625
626\func{void}{SetAppDisplayName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}}
627
628Set the application name to be used in the user-visible places such as window
629titles. See \helpref{GetAppDisplayName}{wxappgetappdisplayname} for more about
630the differences between the display name and name.
631
632
633\membersection{wxApp::SetAppName}\label{wxappsetappname}
634
635\func{void}{SetAppName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}}
636
637Sets the name of the application. This name should be used for file names,
638configuration file entries and other internal strings. For the user-visible
639strings, such as the window titles, the application display name set by
640\helpref{SetAppDisplayName}{wxappsetappdisplayname} is used instead.
641
642By default the application name is set to the name of its executable file.
643
644\wxheading{See also}
645
646\helpref{wxApp::GetAppName}{wxappgetappname}
647
648
649\membersection{wxApp::SetClassName}\label{wxappsetclassname}
650
651\func{void}{SetClassName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}}
652
653Sets the class name of the application. This may be used in a platform specific
654manner to refer to the application.
655
656\wxheading{See also}
657
658\helpref{wxApp::GetClassName}{wxappgetclassname}
659
660
661\membersection{wxApp::SetExitOnFrameDelete}\label{wxappsetexitonframedelete}
662
663\func{void}{SetExitOnFrameDelete}{\param{bool}{ flag}}
664
665Allows the programmer to specify whether the application will exit when the
666top-level frame is deleted.
667
668\wxheading{Parameters}
669
670\docparam{flag}{If true (the default), the application will exit when the top-level frame is
671deleted. If false, the application will continue to run.}
672
673\wxheading{See also}
674
675\helpref{wxApp::GetExitOnFrameDelete}{wxappgetexitonframedelete},\\
676\helpref{wxApp shutdown overview}{wxappshutdownoverview}
677
678
679\membersection{wxApp::SetInstance}\label{wxappsetinstance}
680
681\func{static void}{SetInstance}{\param{wxAppConsole* }{app}}
682
683Allows external code to modify global \texttt{wxTheApp}, but you should really
684know what you're doing if you call it.
685
686\wxheading{Parameters}
687
688\docparam{app}{Replacement for the global application object.}
689
690\wxheading{See also}
691
692\helpref{wxApp::GetInstance}{wxappgetinstance}
693
694
695\membersection{wxApp::SetTopWindow}\label{wxappsettopwindow}
696
697\func{void}{SetTopWindow}{\param{wxWindow* }{window}}
698
699Sets the `top' window. You can call this from within \helpref{wxApp::OnInit}{wxapponinit} to
700let wxWidgets know which is the main window. You don't have to set the top window;
701it is only a convenience so that (for example) certain dialogs without parents can use a
702specific window as the top window. If no top window is specified by the application,
703wxWidgets just uses the first frame or dialog in its top-level window list, when it
704needs to use the top window.
705
706\wxheading{Parameters}
707
708\docparam{window}{The new top window.}
709
710\wxheading{See also}
711
712\helpref{wxApp::GetTopWindow}{wxappgettopwindow}, \helpref{wxApp::OnInit}{wxapponinit}
713
714
715\membersection{wxApp::SetVendorDisplayName}\label{wxappsetvendordisplayname}
716
717\func{void}{SetVendorDisplayName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}}
718
719Set the vendor name to be used in the user-visible places. See
720\helpref{GetVendorDisplayName}{wxappgetvendordisplayname} for more about
721the differences between the display name and name.
722
723
724\membersection{wxApp::SetVendorName}\label{wxappsetvendorname}
725
726\func{void}{SetVendorName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}}
727
728Sets the name of application's vendor. The name will be used
729in registry access. A default name is set by
730wxWidgets.
731
732\wxheading{See also}
733
734\helpref{wxApp::GetVendorName}{wxappgetvendorname}
735
736
737\membersection{wxApp::SetUseBestVisual}\label{wxappsetusebestvisual}
738
739\func{void}{SetUseBestVisual}{\param{bool}{ flag}, \param{bool}{ forceTrueColour = false}}
740
741Allows the programmer to specify whether the application will use the best visual
742on systems that support several visual on the same display. This is typically the
743case under Solaris and IRIX, where the default visual is only 8-bit whereas certain
744applications are supposed to run in TrueColour mode.
745
746If \arg{forceTrueColour} is true then the application will try to force
747using a TrueColour visual and abort the app if none is found.
748
749Note that this function has to be called in the constructor of the {\tt wxApp}
750instance and won't have any effect when called later on.
751
752This function currently only has effect under GTK.
753
754\wxheading{Parameters}
755
756\docparam{flag}{If true, the app will use the best visual.}
757
758
759\membersection{wxApp::HandleEvent}\label{wxapphandleevent}
760
761\constfunc{virtual void}{HandleEvent}{\param{wxEvtHandler}{ *handler}, \param{wxEventFunction}{ func}, \param{wxEvent\& }{event}}
762
763This function simply invokes the given method \arg{func} of the specified
764event handler \arg{handler} with the \arg{event} as parameter. It exists solely
765to allow to catch the C++ exceptions which could be thrown by all event
766handlers in the application in one place: if you want to do this, override this
767function in your wxApp-derived class and add try/catch clause(s) to it.
768
769
770\membersection{wxApp::Yield}\label{wxappyield}
771
772\func{bool}{Yield}{\param{bool}{ onlyIfNeeded = false}}
773
774Yields control to pending messages in the windowing system. This can be useful, for example, when a
775time-consuming process writes to a text window. Without an occasional
776yield, the text window will not be updated properly, and on systems with
777cooperative multitasking, such as Windows 3.1 other processes will not respond.
778
779Caution should be exercised, however, since yielding may allow the
780user to perform actions which are not compatible with the current task.
781Disabling menu items or whole menus during processing can avoid unwanted
782reentrance of code: see \helpref{::wxSafeYield}{wxsafeyield} for a better
783function.
784
785Note that Yield() will not flush the message logs. This is intentional as
786calling Yield() is usually done to quickly update the screen and popping up a
787message box dialog may be undesirable. If you do wish to flush the log
788messages immediately (otherwise it will be done during the next idle loop
789iteration), call \helpref{wxLog::FlushActive}{wxlogflushactive}.
790
791Calling Yield() recursively is normally an error and an assert failure is
792raised in debug build if such situation is detected. However if the
793{\it onlyIfNeeded} parameter is {\tt true}, the method will just silently
794return {\tt false} instead.
795