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1/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2// Name: container.h
3// Purpose: topic overview
4// Author: wxWidgets team
5// RCS-ID: $Id$
6// Licence: wxWindows licence
7/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9/**
10
11@page overview_container Container Classes
12
13Classes: wxList<T>, wxArray<T>, wxVector<T>, wxStack<T>, wxHashMap, wxHashSet
14
15@section overview_container_intro Overview
16
17For historical reasons, wxWidgets uses custom container classes internally.
18This was unfortunately unavoidable during a long time when the standard library
19wasn't widely available and can't be easily changed even now that it is for
20compatibility reasons. If you are building your own version of the library and
21don't care about compatibility nor slight (less than 5%) size penalty imposed
22by the use of STL classes, you may choose to use the "STL" build of wxWidgets
23in which these custom classes are replaced with their standard counterparts and
24only read the section @ref overview_container_std explaining how to do it.
25
26Otherwise you will need to know about the custom wxWidgets container classes
27such as wxList<T> and wxArray<T> if only to use wxWidgets functions that work
28with them, e.g. wxWindow::GetChildren(), and you should find the information
29about using these classes below useful.
30
31Notice that we recommend that you use standard classes directly in your own
32code instead of the container classes provided by wxWidgets in any case as the
33standard classes are easier to use and may also be safer because of extra
34run-time checks they may perform as well as more efficient.
35
36Finally notice that recent versions of wxWidgets also provide standard-like
37classes such as wxVector<T>, wxStack<T> or wxDList which can be used exactly
38like the std::vector<T>, std::stack<T> and std::list<T*>, respectively, and
39actually are just typedefs for the corresponding types if wxWidgets is compiled
40in STL mode. These classes could be useful if you wish to avoid the use of the
41standard library in your code for some reason.
42
43To summarize, you should use the standard container classes such as
44std::vector<T> and std::list<T> if possible and wxVector<T> or wxDList<T> if
45it isn't and only use legacy wxWidgets containers such as wxArray<T> and
46wxList<T> when you must, i.e. when you use a wxWidgets function taking or
47returning a container of such type.
48
49
50@section overview_container_legacy Legacy Classes
51
52The list classes in wxWidgets are doubly-linked lists which may either own the
53objects they contain (meaning that the list deletes the object when it is
54removed from the list or the list itself is destroyed) or just store the
55pointers depending on whether or not you called wxList<T>::DeleteContents()
56method.
57
58Dynamic arrays resemble C arrays but with two important differences: they
59provide run-time range checking in debug builds and they automatically expand
60the allocated memory when there is no more space for new items. They come in
61two sorts: the "plain" arrays which store either built-in types such as "char",
62"int" or "bool" or the pointers to arbitrary objects, or "object arrays" which
63own the object pointers to which they store.
64
65For the same portability reasons, the container classes implementation in
66wxWidgets don't use templates, but are rather based on C preprocessor i.e. are
67implemented using the macros: WX_DECLARE_LIST() and WX_DEFINE_LIST() for the
68linked lists and WX_DECLARE_ARRAY(), WX_DECLARE_OBJARRAY() and
69WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY() for the dynamic arrays.
70
71The "DECLARE" macro declares a new container class containing the elements of
72given type and is needed for all three types of container classes: lists,
73arrays and objarrays. The "DEFINE" classes must be inserted in your program in
74a place where the @e full declaration of container element class is in scope
75(i.e. not just forward declaration), otherwise destructors of the container
76elements will not be called!
77
78As array classes never delete the items they contain anyhow, there is no
79WX_DEFINE_ARRAY() macro for them.
80
81Examples of usage of these macros may be found in wxList<T> and wxArray<T>
82documentation.
83
84Finally, wxWidgets predefines several commonly used container classes. wxList
85is defined for compatibility with previous versions as a list containing
86wxObjects and wxStringList as a list of C-style strings (char *), both of these
87classes are deprecated and should not be used in new programs. The following
88array classes are defined: wxArrayInt, wxArrayLong, wxArrayPtrVoid and
89wxArrayString. The first three store elements of corresponding types, but
90wxArrayString is somewhat special: it is an optimized version of wxArray which
91uses its knowledge about wxString reference counting schema.
92
93
94@section overview_container_std STL Build
95
96To build wxWidgets with the standard containers you need to set
97wxUSE_STD_CONTAINERS option to 1 in @c wx/msw/setup.h for wxMSW builds or
98specify @c --enable-std_containers option to configure (which is also
99implicitly enabled by @c --enable-stl option) in Unix builds.
100
101The standard container build is mostly, but not quite, compatible with the
102default one. Here are the most important differences:
103 - wxList::compatibility_iterator must be used instead of wxList::Node* when
104 iterating over the list contents. The compatibility_iterator class has the
105 same semantics as a Node pointer but it is an object and not a pointer, so
106 you need to write
107 @code
108 for ( wxWindowList::compatibility_iterator it = list.GetFirst();
109 it;
110 it = it->GetNext() )
111 ...
112 @endcode
113 instead of the old
114 @code
115 for ( wxWindowList::Node *n = list.GetFirst(); n; n = n->GetNext() )
116 ...
117 @endcode
118 - wxSortedArrayString and wxArrayString are separate classes now and the
119 former doesn't derive from the latter. If you need to convert a sorted array
120 to a normal one, you must copy all the elements. Alternatively, you may
121 avoid the use of wxSortedArrayString by using a normal array and calling its
122 Sort() method when needed.
123 - WX_DEFINE_ARRAY_INT(bool) cannot be used because of the differences in
124 std::vector<bool> specialization compared with the generic std::vector<>
125 class. Please either use std::vector<bool> directly or use an integer array
126 instead.
127
128
129*/
130