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1\section{Printing overview}\label{printingoverview}
2
3Classes: \helpref{wxPrintout}{wxprintout},
4\helpref{wxPrinter}{wxprinter},
5\helpref{wxPrintPreview}{wxprintpreview},
6\helpref{wxPrinterDC}{wxprinterdc},
7\helpref{wxPostScriptDC}{wxpostscriptdc},
8\helpref{wxPrintDialog}{wxprintdialog},
9\helpref{wxPrintData}{wxprintdata},
10\helpref{wxPrintDialogData}{wxprintdialogdata},
11\helpref{wxPageSetupDialog}{wxpagesetupdialog},
12\helpref{wxPageSetupDialogData}{wxpagesetupdialogdata}
13
14The printing framework relies on the application to provide classes whose member
15functions can respond to particular requests, such as `print this page' or `does
16this page exist in the document?'. This method allows wxWidgets to take over the
17housekeeping duties of turning preview pages, calling the print dialog box,
18creating the printer device context, and so on: the application can concentrate
19on the rendering of the information onto a device context.
20
21In most cases, the only class you will need to derive from is
22\helpref{wxPrintout}{wxprintout}; all others will be used as-is.
23
24A brief description of each class's role and how they work together follows.
25
26For the special case of printing under Unix, where various different
27printing backends have to be offered, please have a look at the
28\helpref{Unix printing overview}{unixprinting}.
29
30\subsection{\helpref{wxPrintout}{wxprintout}}
31
32A document's printing ability is represented in an application by a derived
33wxPrintout class. This class prints a page on request, and can be passed to the
34Print function of a wxPrinter object to actually print the document, or can be
35passed to a wxPrintPreview object to initiate previewing. The following code
36(from the printing sample) shows how easy it is to initiate printing, previewing
37and the print setup dialog, once the wxPrintout functionality has been defined.
38Notice the use of MyPrintout for both printing and previewing. All the preview
39user interface functionality is taken care of by wxWidgets. For more details on how
40MyPrintout is defined, please look at the printout sample code.
41
42\begin{verbatim}
43 case WXPRINT_PRINT:
44 {
45 wxPrinter printer;
46 MyPrintout printout("My printout");
47 printer.Print(this, &printout, true);
48 break;
49 }
50 case WXPRINT_PREVIEW:
51 {
52 // Pass two printout objects: for preview, and possible printing.
53 wxPrintPreview *preview = new wxPrintPreview(new MyPrintout, new MyPrintout);
54 wxPreviewFrame *frame = new wxPreviewFrame(preview, this, "Demo Print Preview", wxPoint(100, 100), wxSize(600, 650));
55 frame->Centre(wxBOTH);
56 frame->Initialize();
57 frame->Show(true);
58 break;
59 }
60\end{verbatim}
61
62Class \helpref{wxPrintout}{wxprintout} assembles the printed page and (using
63your subclass's overrides) writes requested pages to a \helpref{wxDC}{wxdc} that
64is passed to it. This wxDC could be a \helpref{wxMemoryDC}{wxmemorydc} (for
65displaying the preview image on-screen), a \helpref{wxPrinterDC}{wxprinterdc}
66(for printing under MSW and Mac), or a \helpref{wxPostScriptDC}{wxpostscriptdc}
67(for printing under GTK or generating PostScript output).
68
69The \helpref{document/view framework}{docviewoverview} creates a default
70wxPrintout object for every view, calling wxView::OnDraw to achieve a
71prepackaged print/preview facility.
72
73If your window classes have a Draw(wxDC *dc) routine to do screen rendering,
74your wxPrintout subclass will typically call those routines to create portions
75of the image on your printout. Your wxPrintout subclass can also make its own
76calls to its wxDC to draw headers, footers, page numbers, etc.
77
78The scaling of the drawn image typically differs from the screen to the preview
79and printed images. This class provides a set of routines named
80FitThisSizeToXXX(), MapScreenSizeToXXX(), and GetLogicalXXXRect, which can be
81used to set the user scale and origin of the wxPrintout's DC so that your class
82can easily map your image to the printout withough getting into the details of
83screen and printer PPI and scaling. See the printing sample for examples of how
84these routines are used.
85
86\subsection{\helpref{wxPrinter}{wxprinter}}
87
88Class wxPrinter encapsulates the platform-dependent print function with a common
89interface. In most cases, you will not need to derive a class from wxPrinter;
90simply create a wxPrinter object in your Print function as in the example above.
91
92\subsection{\helpref{wxPrintPreview}{wxprintpreview}}
93
94Class wxPrintPreview manages the print preview process. Among other things, it
95constructs the wxDCs that get passed to your wxPrintout subclass for printing
96and manages the display of multiple pages, a zoomable preview image, and so
97forth. In most cases you will use this class as-is, but you can create your own
98subclass, for example, to change the layout or contents of the preview window.
99
100
101\subsection{\helpref{wxPrinterDC}{wxprinterdc}}
102
103Class wxPrinterDC is the wxDC that represents the actual printed page under MSW
104and Mac. During printing, an object of this class will be passed to your derived
105wxPrintout object to draw upon. The size of the wxPrinterDC will depend on the
106paper orientation and the resolution of the printer.
107
108There are two important rectangles in printing: the \em{page rectangle} defines
109the printable area seen by the application, and under MSW and Mac, it is the
110printable area specified by the printer. (For PostScript printing, the page
111rectangle is the entire page.) The inherited function
112\helpref{wxDC::GetSize}{wxdcgetsize} returns the page size in device pixels. The
113point (0,0) on the wxPrinterDC represents the top left corner of the page
114rectangle; that is, the page rect is given by wxRect(0, 0, w, h), where (w,h)
115are the values returned by GetSize.
116
117The \em{paper rectangle}, on the other hand, represents the entire paper area
118including the non-printable border. Thus, the coordinates of the top left corner
119of the paper rectangle will have small negative values, while the width and
120height will be somewhat larger than that of the page rectangle. The
121wxPrinterDC-specific function
122\helpref{wxPrinterDC::GetPaperRect}{wxprinterdcgetpaperrect} returns the paper
123rectangle of the given wxPrinterDC.
124
125\subsection{\helpref{wxPostScriptDC}{wxpostscriptdc}}
126
127Class wxPostScriptDC is the wxDC that represents the actual printed page under
128GTK and other PostScript printing. During printing, an object of this class will
129be passed to your derived wxPrintout object to draw upon. The size of the
130wxPostScriptDC will depend upon the \helpref{wxPrintData}{wxprintdata} used to
131construct it.
132
133Unlike a wxPrinterDC, there is no distinction between the page rectangle and the
134paper rectangle in a wxPostScriptDC; both rectangles are taken to represent the
135entire sheet of paper.
136
137\subsection{\helpref{wxPrintDialog}{wxprintdialog}}
138
139Class wxPrintDialog puts up the standard print dialog, which allows you to
140select the page range for printing (as well as many other print settings, which
141may vary from platform to platform). You provide an object of type
142\helpref{wxPrintDialogData}{wxprintdialogdata} to the wxPrintDialog at
143construction, which is used to populate the dialog.
144
145\subsection{\helpref{wxPrintData}{wxprintdata}}
146
147Class wxPrintData is a subset of wxPrintDialogData that is used (internally) to
148initialize a wxPrinterDC or wxPostScriptDC. (In fact, a wxPrintData is a data
149member of a wxPrintDialogData and a wxPageSetupDialogData). Essentially,
150wxPrintData contains those bits of information from the two dialogs necessary to
151configure the wxPrinterDC or wxPostScriptDC (e.g., size, orientation, etc.). You
152might wish to create a global instance of this object to provide call-to-call
153persistence to your application's print settings.
154
155\subsection{\helpref{wxPrintDialogData}{wxprintdialogdata}}
156
157Class wxPrintDialogData contains the settings entered by the user in the print
158dialog. It contains such things as page range, number of copies, and so forth.
159In most cases, you won't need to access this information; the framework takes
160care of asking your wxPrintout derived object for the pages requested by the
161user.
162
163\subsection{\helpref{wxPageSetupDialog}{wxpagesetupdialog}}
164
165Class wxPageSetupDialog puts up the standard page setup dialog, which allows you
166to specify the orientation, paper size, and related settings. You provide it
167with a wxPageSetupDialogData object at intialization, which is used to populate
168the dialog; when the dialog is dismissed, this object contains the settings
169chosen by the user, including orientation and/or page margins.
170
171Note that on Macintosh, the native page setup dialog does not contain entries
172that allow you to change the page margins. You can use the Mac-specific class
173wxMacPageMarginsDialog (which, like wxPageSetupDialog, takes a
174wxPageSetupDialogData object in its constructor) to provide this capability; see
175the printing sample for an example.
176
177\subsection{\helpref{wxPageSetupDialogData}{wxpagesetupdialogdata}}
178
179Class wxPageSetupDialogData contains settings affecting the page size (paper
180size), orientation, margins, and so forth. Note that not all platforms populate
181all fields; for example, the MSW page setup dialog lets you set the page margins
182while the Mac setup dialog does not.
183
184You will typically create a global instance of each of a wxPrintData and
185wxPageSetupDialogData at program initiation, which will contain the default
186settings provided by the system. Each time the user calls up either the
187wxPrintDialog or the wxPageSetupDialog, you pass these data structures to
188initialize the dialog values and to be updated by the dialog. The framework then
189queries these data structures to get information like the printed page range
190(from the wxPrintDialogData) or the paper size and/or page orientation (from the
191wxPageSetupDialogData).
192
193
194\section{Printing under Unix (GTK+)}\label{unixprinting}
195
196Printing under Unix has always been a cause of problems as Unix
197does not provide a standard way to display text and graphics
198on screen and print it to a printer using the same application
199programming interface - instead, displaying on screen is done
200via the X11 library while printing has to be done with using
201PostScript commands. This was particularly difficult to handle
202for the case of fonts with the result that only a selected
203number of application could offer WYSIWYG under Unix. Equally,
204wxWidgets offered its own printing implementation using PostScript
205which never really matched the screen display.
206
207Starting with version 2.8.X, the GNOME project provides printing
208support through the libgnomeprint and libgnomeprintui libraries
209by which especially the font problem is mostly solved. Beginning
210with version 2.5.4, the GTK+ port of wxWidgets can make use of
211these libraries if wxWidgets is configured accordingly and if the
212libraries are present. You need to configure wxWidgets with the
213{\it configure --with-gnomeprint} switch and your application will
214then search for the GNOME print libraries at runtime. If they
215are found, printing will be done through these, otherwise the
216application will fall back to the old PostScript printing code.
217Note that the application will not require the GNOME print libraries
218to be installed in order to run (there will be no dependency on
219these libraries).
220
221In version GTK+ 2.10, support for printing has finally been
222added to GTK+ itself. Support for this has yet to be written
223for wxGTK (which requires drawing through Cairo).
224