]> git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blame_incremental - docs/latex/wx/tapp.tex
Always draw the selection of selected items, not just when they have
[wxWidgets.git] / docs / latex / wx / tapp.tex
... / ...
CommitLineData
1\section{wxApp overview}\label{wxappoverview}
2
3Classes: \helpref{wxApp}{wxapp}
4
5A wxWidgets application does not have a {\it main} procedure; the equivalent is the
6\rtfsp\helpref{OnInit}{wxapponinit} member defined for a class derived from wxApp.\rtfsp
7\rtfsp{\it OnInit} will usually create a top window as a bare minimum.
8
9Unlike in earlier versions of wxWidgets, OnInit does not return a frame. Instead it
10returns a boolean value which indicates whether processing should continue (true) or not (false).
11You call \helpref{wxApp::SetTopWindow}{wxappsettopwindow} to let wxWidgets know
12about the top window.
13
14Note that the program's command line arguments, represented by {\it argc}
15and {\it argv}, are available from within wxApp member functions.
16
17An application closes by destroying all windows. Because all frames must
18be destroyed for the application to exit, it is advisable to use parent
19frames wherever possible when creating new frames, so that deleting the
20top level frame will automatically delete child frames. The alternative
21is to explicitly delete child frames in the top-level frame's \helpref{wxCloseEvent}{wxcloseevent}\rtfsp
22handler.
23
24In emergencies the \helpref{wxExit}{wxexit} function can be called to kill the
25application however normally the application shuts down automatically,
26\helpref{see below}{wxappshutdownoverview}.
27
28An example of defining an application follows:
29
30\begin{verbatim}
31class DerivedApp : public wxApp
32{
33public:
34 virtual bool OnInit();
35};
36
37IMPLEMENT_APP(DerivedApp)
38
39bool DerivedApp::OnInit()
40{
41 wxFrame *the_frame = new wxFrame(NULL, ID_MYFRAME, argv[0]);
42 ...
43 the_frame->Show(true);
44 SetTopWindow(the_frame);
45
46 return true;
47}
48\end{verbatim}
49
50Note the use of IMPLEMENT\_APP(appClass), which allows wxWidgets to dynamically create an instance of the application object
51at the appropriate point in wxWidgets initialization. Previous versions of wxWidgets used
52to rely on the creation of a global application object, but this is no longer recommended,
53because required global initialization may not have been performed at application object
54construction time.
55
56You can also use DECLARE\_APP(appClass) in a header file to declare the wxGetApp function which returns
57a reference to the application object. Otherwise you can only use the global
58\texttt{wxTheApp} pointer which is of type \texttt{wxApp *}.
59
60
61\subsection{Application shutdown}\label{wxappshutdownoverview}
62
63The application normally shuts down when the last of its top level windows is
64closed. This is normally the expected behaviour and means that it is enough to
65call \helpref{Close()}{wxwindowclose} in response to the {\tt "Exit"} menu
66command if your program has a single top level window. If this behaviour is not
67desirable \helpref{wxApp::SetExitOnFrameDelete}{wxappsetexitonframedelete} can
68be called to change it. Note that starting from wxWidgets 2.3.3 such logic
69doesn't apply for the windows shown before the program enters the main loop: in
70other words, you can safely show a dialog from
71\helpref{wxApp::OnInit}{wxapponinit} and not be afraid that your application
72terminates when this dialog -- which is the last top level window for the
73moment -- is closed.
74
75
76Another aspect of the application shutdown is \helpref{OnExit}{wxapponexit}
77which is called when the application exits but {\it before} wxWidgets cleans up
78its internal structures. You should delete all wxWidgets object that you
79created by the time OnExit finishes. In particular, do {\bf not} destroy them
80from application class' destructor!
81
82For example, this code may crash:
83
84\begin{verbatim}
85class MyApp : public wxApp
86{
87 public:
88 wxCHMHelpController m_helpCtrl;
89 ...
90};
91\end{verbatim}
92
93The reason for that is that {\tt m\_helpCtrl} is a member object and is
94thus destroyed from MyApp destructor. But MyApp object is deleted after
95wxWidgets structures that wxCHMHelpController depends on were
96uninitialized! The solution is to destroy HelpCtrl in {\it OnExit}:
97
98\begin{verbatim}
99class MyApp : public wxApp
100{
101 public:
102 wxCHMHelpController *m_helpCtrl;
103 ...
104};
105
106bool MyApp::OnInit()
107{
108 ...
109 m_helpCtrl = new wxCHMHelpController;
110 ...
111}
112
113int MyApp::OnExit()
114{
115 delete m_helpCtrl;
116 return 0;
117}
118\end{verbatim}
119