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1\section{Document/view overview}\label{docviewoverview}
2
3Classes: \helpref{wxDocument}{wxdocument}, \helpref{wxView}{wxview}, \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate},\rtfsp
4\helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager}, \helpref{wxDocParentFrame}{wxdocparentframe}, \helpref{wxDocChildFrame}{wxdocchildframe},
5\rtfsp\helpref{wxDocMDIParentFrame}{wxdocmdiparentframe}, \helpref{wxDocMDIChildFrame}{wxdocmdichildframe},
6\rtfsp\helpref{wxCommand}{wxcommand}, \helpref{wxCommandProcessor}{wxcommandprocessor}
7
8The document/view framework is found in most application frameworks, because it
9can dramatically simplify the code required to build many kinds of application.
10
11The idea is that you can model your application primarily in terms of {\it documents} to store data
12and provide interface-independent operations upon it, and {\it views} to visualise and manipulate
13the data. Documents know how to do input and output given stream objects, and views are responsible
14for taking input from physical windows and performing the manipulation on the document data.
15If a document's data changes, all views should be updated to reflect the change.
16
17The framework can provide many user-interface elements based on this model. Once you have defined
18your own classes and the relationships between them, the framework takes care
19of popping up file selectors, opening and closing files, asking the user to save
20modifications, routing menu commands to appropriate (possibly default) code, even
21some default print/preview functionality and support for command undo/redo.
22The framework is highly modular, allowing overriding and replacement of functionality
23and objects to achieve more than the default behaviour.
24
25These are the overall steps involved in creating an application based on the document/view framework:
26
27\begin{enumerate}\itemsep=0pt
28\item Define your own document and view classes, overriding a minimal set of
29member functions e.g. for input/output, drawing and initialization.
30\item Define any subwindows
31(such as a scrolled window) that are needed for the view(s). You may need to route some events
32to views or documents, for example OnPaint needs to be routed to wxView::OnDraw.
33\item Decide what style of interface you will use: Microsoft's MDI (multiple
34document child frames surrounded by an overall frame), SDI (a separate, unconstrained frame
35for each document), or single-window (one document open at a time, as in Windows Write).
36\item Use the appropriate wxDocParentFrame and wxDocChildFrame classes. Construct an instance
37of wxDocParentFrame in your wxApp::OnInit, and a wxDocChildFrame (if not single-window) when
38you initialize a view. Create menus using standard menu ids (such as wxID\_OPEN, wxID\_PRINT).
39\item Construct a single wxDocManager instance at the beginning of your wxApp::OnInit, and then
40as many wxDocTemplate instances as necessary to define relationships between documents and
41views. For a simple application, there will be just one wxDocTemplate.
42\end{enumerate}
43
44If you wish to implement Undo/Redo, you need to derive your own class(es) from wxCommand
45and use wxCommandProcessor::Submit instead of directly executing code. The framework will
46take care of calling Undo and Do functions as appropriate, so long as the wxID\_UNDO and
47wxID\_REDO menu items are defined in the view menu.
48
49Here are a few examples of the tailoring you can do to go beyond the default framework
50behaviour:
51
52\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
53\item Override wxDocument::OnCreateCommandProcessor to define a different Do/Undo strategy,
54or a command history editor.
55\item Override wxView::OnCreatePrintout to create an instance of a derived \helpref{wxPrintout}{wxprintout}\rtfsp
56class, to provide multi-page document facilities.
57\item Override wxDocManager::SelectDocumentPath to provide a different file selector.
58\item Limit the maximum number of open documents and the maximum number of undo commands.
59\end{itemize}
60
61Note that to activate framework functionality, you need to use some or all of
62the wxWidgets \helpref{predefined command identifiers}{predefinedids} in your menus.
63
64\perlnote{The document/view framework is available in wxPerl. To use it,
65you will need the following statements in your application code:\par
66{\small
67\begin{verbatim}
68use Wx::DocView;
69use Wx ':docview'; # import constants (optional)
70\end{verbatim}
71}}
72
73\subsection{wxDocument overview}\label{wxdocumentoverview}
74
75\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
76
77Class: \helpref{wxDocument}{wxdocument}
78
79The wxDocument class can be used to model an application's file-based
80data. It is part of the document/view framework supported by wxWidgets,
81and cooperates with the \helpref{wxView}{wxview}, \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate}\rtfsp
82and \helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager} classes.
83
84Using this framework can save a lot of routine user-interface programming,
85since a range of menu commands -- such as open, save, save as -- are supported automatically.
86The programmer just needs to define a minimal set of classes and member functions
87for the framework to call when necessary. Data, and the means to view and edit
88the data, are explicitly separated out in this model, and the concept of multiple {\it views} onto
89the same data is supported.
90
91Note that the document/view model will suit many but not all styles of application.
92For example, it would be overkill for a simple file conversion utility, where there
93may be no call for {\it views} on {\it documents} or the ability to open, edit and save
94files. But probably the majority of applications are document-based.
95
96See the example application in {\tt samples/docview}.
97
98To use the abstract wxDocument class, you need to derive a new class and override
99at least the member functions SaveObject and LoadObject. SaveObject and
100LoadObject will be called by the framework when the document needs to be saved
101or loaded.
102
103Use the macros DECLARE\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS and IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS in order
104to allow the framework to create document objects on demand. When you create
105a \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate} object on application initialization, you
106should pass CLASSINFO(YourDocumentClass) to the wxDocTemplate constructor
107so that it knows how to create an instance of this class.
108
109If you do not wish to use the wxWidgets method of creating document
110objects dynamically, you must override wxDocTemplate::CreateDocument
111to return an instance of the appropriate class.
112
113\subsection{wxView overview}\label{wxviewoverview}
114
115\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
116
117Class: \helpref{wxView}{wxview}
118
119The wxView class can be used to model the viewing and editing component of
120an application's file-based data. It is part of the document/view framework supported by wxWidgets,
121and cooperates with the \helpref{wxDocument}{wxdocument}, \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate}
122and \helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager} classes.
123
124See the example application in {\tt samples/docview}.
125
126To use the abstract wxView class, you need to derive a new class and override
127at least the member functions OnCreate, OnDraw, OnUpdate and OnClose. You will probably
128want to override OnMenuCommand to respond to menu commands from the frame containing the
129view.
130
131Use the macros DECLARE\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS and IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS in order
132to allow the framework to create view objects on demand. When you create
133a \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate} object on application initialization, you
134should pass CLASSINFO(YourViewClass) to the wxDocTemplate constructor
135so that it knows how to create an instance of this class.
136
137If you do not wish to use the wxWidgets method of creating view
138objects dynamically, you must override wxDocTemplate::CreateView
139to return an instance of the appropriate class.
140
141\subsection{wxDocTemplate overview}\label{wxdoctemplateoverview}
142
143\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
144
145Class: \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate}
146
147The wxDocTemplate class is used to model the relationship between a
148document class and a view class. The application creates a document
149template object for each document/view pair. The list of document
150templates managed by the wxDocManager instance is used to create
151documents and views. Each document template knows what file filters
152and default extension are appropriate for a document/view combination,
153and how to create a document or view.
154
155For example, you might write a small doodling application that can load
156and save lists of line segments. If you had two views of the data -- graphical,
157and a list of the segments -- then you would create one document class DoodleDocument,
158and two view classes (DoodleGraphicView and DoodleListView). You would also
159need two document templates, one for the graphical view and another for the
160list view. You would pass the same document class and default file extension to both
161document templates, but each would be passed a different view class. When
162the user clicks on the Open menu item, the file selector is displayed
163with a list of possible file filters -- one for each wxDocTemplate. Selecting
164the filter selects the wxDocTemplate, and when
165a file is selected, that template will be used for creating a document
166and view.
167
168For the case where an application has one document type and one view type,
169a single document template is constructed, and dialogs will be appropriately
170simplified.
171
172wxDocTemplate is part of the document/view framework supported by wxWidgets,
173and cooperates with the \helpref{wxView}{wxview}, \helpref{wxDocument}{wxdocument}
174and \helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager} classes.
175
176See the example application in {\tt samples/docview}.
177
178To use the wxDocTemplate class, you do not need to derive a new class.
179Just pass relevant information to the constructor including CLASSINFO(YourDocumentClass) and
180CLASSINFO(YourViewClass) to allow dynamic instance creation.
181If you do not wish to use the wxWidgets method of creating document
182objects dynamically, you must override wxDocTemplate::CreateDocument
183and wxDocTemplate::CreateView to return instances of the appropriate class.
184
185{\it NOTE}: the document template has nothing to do with the C++ template construct.
186
187\subsection{wxDocManager overview}\label{wxdocmanageroverview}
188
189\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
190
191Class: \helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager}
192
193The wxDocManager class is part of the document/view framework supported by wxWidgets,
194and cooperates with the \helpref{wxView}{wxview}, \helpref{wxDocument}{wxdocument}\rtfsp
195and \helpref{wxDocTemplate}{wxdoctemplate} classes.
196
197A wxDocManager instance coordinates documents, views and document templates. It keeps a list of document
198and template instances, and much functionality is routed through this object, such
199as providing selection and file dialogs. The application can use this class `as is' or
200derive a class and override some members to extend or change the functionality.
201Create an instance of this class near the beginning of your application initialization,
202before any documents, views or templates are manipulated.
203
204There may be multiple wxDocManager instances in an application.
205
206See the example application in {\tt samples/docview}.
207
208\subsection{wxCommand overview}\label{wxcommandoverview}
209
210\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
211
212Classes: \helpref{wxCommand}{wxcommand}, \helpref{wxCommandProcessor}{wxcommandprocessor}
213
214wxCommand is a base class for modelling an application command,
215which is an action usually performed by selecting a menu item, pressing
216a toolbar button or any other means provided by the application to
217change the data or view.
218
219Instead of the application functionality being scattered around
220switch statements and functions in a way that may be hard to
221read and maintain, the functionality for a command is explicitly represented
222as an object which can be manipulated by a framework or application.
223When a user interface event occurs, the application {\it submits} a command
224to a \helpref{wxCommandProcessor}{wxcommandprocessoroverview} object to execute and
225store.
226
227The wxWidgets document/view framework handles Undo and Redo by use of
228wxCommand and wxCommandProcessor objects. You might find further uses
229for wxCommand, such as implementing a macro facility that stores, loads
230and replays commands.
231
232An application can derive a new class for every command, or, more likely, use
233one class parameterized with an integer or string command identifier.
234
235\subsection{wxCommandProcessor overview}\label{wxcommandprocessoroverview}
236
237\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
238
239Classes: \helpref{wxCommandProcessor}{wxcommandprocessor}, \helpref{wxCommand}{wxcommand}
240
241wxCommandProcessor is a class that maintains a history of wxCommand
242instances, with undo/redo functionality built-in. Derive a new class from this
243if you want different behaviour.
244
245\subsection{wxFileHistory overview}\label{wxfilehistoryoverview}
246
247\overview{Document/view framework overview}{docviewoverview}
248
249Classes: \helpref{wxFileHistory}{wxfilehistory}, \helpref{wxDocManager}{wxdocmanager}
250
251wxFileHistory encapsulates functionality to record the last few files visited, and
252to allow the user to quickly load these files using the list appended to the File menu.
253
254Although wxFileHistory is used by wxDocManager, it can be used independently. You may wish
255to derive from it to allow different behaviour, such as popping up a scrolling
256list of files.
257
258By calling \helpref{wxFileHistory::UseMenu()}{wxfilehistoryusemenu} you can
259associate a file menu with the file history. The menu will then be used for
260appending filenames that are added to the history. Please notice that currently
261if the history already contained filenames when UseMenu() is called (e.g. when
262initializing a second MDI child frame), the menu is not automatically
263initialized with the existing filenames in the history and so you need to call
264\helpref{AddFilesToMenu()}{wxfilehistoryaddfilestomenu} after UseMenu()
265explicitly in order to initialize the menu with the existing list of MRU files.
266(otherwise an assertion failure is raised in debug builds).
267The filenames are appended using menu identifiers in the range
268\texttt{wxID\_FILE1} to \texttt{wxID\_FILE9}.
269
270In order to respond to a file load command from one of these identifiers,
271you need to handle them using an event handler, for example:
272
273{\small
274\begin{verbatim}
275BEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(wxDocParentFrame, wxFrame)
276 EVT_MENU(wxID_EXIT, wxDocParentFrame::OnExit)
277 EVT_MENU_RANGE(wxID_FILE1, wxID_FILE9, wxDocParentFrame::OnMRUFile)
278END_EVENT_TABLE()
279
280void wxDocParentFrame::OnExit(wxCommandEvent& WXUNUSED(event))
281{
282 Close();
283}
284
285void wxDocParentFrame::OnMRUFile(wxCommandEvent& event)
286{
287 wxString f(m_docManager->GetHistoryFile(event.GetId() - wxID_FILE1));
288 if (f != "")
289 (void)m_docManager->CreateDocument(f, wxDOC_SILENT);
290}
291\end{verbatim}
292}
293
294\subsection{wxWidgets predefined command identifiers}\label{predefinedids}
295
296To allow communication between the application's menus and the
297document/view framework, several command identifiers are predefined for you
298to use in menus. The framework recognizes them and processes them if you
299forward commands from wxFrame::OnMenuCommand (or perhaps from toolbars and
300other user interface constructs).
301
302\begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
303\item wxID\_OPEN (5000)
304\item wxID\_CLOSE (5001)
305\item wxID\_NEW (5002)
306\item wxID\_SAVE (5003)
307\item wxID\_SAVEAS (5004)
308\item wxID\_REVERT (5005)
309\item wxID\_EXIT (5006)
310\item wxID\_UNDO (5007)
311\item wxID\_REDO (5008)
312\item wxID\_HELP (5009)
313\item wxID\_PRINT (5010)
314\item wxID\_PRINT\_SETUP (5011)
315\item wxID\_PREVIEW (5012)
316\end{itemize}
317
318