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1\section{\class{wxArray}}\label{wxarray}
2
3This section describes the so called {\it dynamic arrays}. This is a C
4array-like data structure i.e. the member access time is constant (and not
5linear according to the number of container elements as for linked lists). However, these
6arrays are dynamic in the sense that they will automatically allocate more
7memory if there is not enough of it for adding a new element. They also perform
8range checking on the index values but in debug mode only, so please be sure to
9compile your application in debug mode to use it (see \helpref{debugging overview}{debuggingoverview} for
10details). So, unlike the arrays in some other
11languages, attempt to access an element beyond the arrays bound doesn't
12automatically expand the array but provokes an assertion failure instead in
13debug build and does nothing (except possibly crashing your program) in the
14release build.
15
16The array classes were designed to be reasonably efficient, both in terms of
17run-time speed and memory consumption and the executable size. The speed of
18array item access is, of course, constant (independent of the number of elements)
19making them much more efficient than linked lists (\helpref{wxList}{wxlist}).
20Adding items to the arrays is also implemented in more or less constant time -
21but the price is preallocating the memory in advance. In the \helpref{memory management}{wxarraymemorymanagement} section
22you may find some useful hints about optimizing wxArray memory usage. As for executable size, all
23wxArray functions are inline, so they do not take {\it any space at all}.
24
25wxWindows has three different kinds of array. All of them derive from
26wxBaseArray class which works with untyped data and can not be used directly.
27The standard macros WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY(), WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY() and
28WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY() are used to define a new class deriving from it. The
29classes declared will be called in this documentation wxArray, wxSortedArray and
30wxObjArray but you should keep in mind that no classes with such names actually
31exist, each time you use one of WX\_DEFINE\_XXXARRAY macro you define a class
32with a new name. In fact, these names are "template" names and each usage of one
33of the macros mentioned above creates a template specialization for the given
34element type.
35
36wxArray is suitable for storing integer types and pointers which it does not
37treat as objects in any way, i.e. the element pointed to by the pointer is not
38deleted when the element is removed from the array. It should be noted that
39all of wxArray's functions are inline, so it costs strictly nothing to define as
40many array types as you want (either in terms of the executable size or the
41speed) as long as at least one of them is defined and this is always the case
42because wxArrays are used by wxWindows internally. This class has one serious
43limitation: it can only be used for storing integral types (bool, char, short,
44int, long and their unsigned variants) or pointers (of any kind). An attempt
45to use with objects of sizeof() greater than sizeof(long) will provoke a
46runtime assertion failure, however declaring a wxArray of floats will not (on
47the machines where sizeof(float) <= sizeof(long)), yet it will {\bf not} work,
48please use wxObjArray for storing floats and doubles (NB: a more efficient
49wxArrayDouble class is scheduled for the next release of wxWindows).
50
51wxSortedArray is a wxArray variant which should be used when searching in the
52array is a frequently used operation. It requires you to define an additional
53function for comparing two elements of the array element type and always stores
54its items in the sorted order (according to this function). Thus, it's
55 \helpref{Index()}{wxarrayindex} function execution time is $O(log(N))$ instead of
56$O(N)$ for the usual arrays but the \helpref{Add()}{wxarrayadd} method is
57slower: it is $O(log(N))$ instead of constant time (neglecting time spent in
58memory allocation routine). However, in a usual situation elements are added to
59an array much less often than searched inside it, so wxSortedArray may lead to
60huge performance improvements compared to wxArray. Finally, it should be
61noticed that, as wxArray, wxSortedArray can be only used for storing integral
62types or pointers.
63
64wxObjArray class treats its elements like "objects". It may delete them when
65they are removed from the array (invoking the correct destructor) and copies
66them using the objects copy constructor. In order to implement this behaviour
67the definition of the wxObjArray arrays is split in two parts: first, you should
68declare the new wxObjArray class using WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY() macro and then
69you must include the file defining the implementation of template type:
70<wx/arrimpl.cpp> and define the array class with WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY() macro
71from a point where the full (as opposed to `forward') declaration of the array
72elements class is in scope. As it probably sounds very complicated here is an
73example:
74
75\begin{verbatim}
76#include <wx/dynarray.h>
77
78// we must forward declare the array because it's used inside the class
79// declaration
80class MyDirectory;
81class MyFile;
82
83// this defines two new types: ArrayOfDirectories and ArrayOfFiles which can be
84// now used as shown below
85WX_DECLARE_OBJARRAY(MyDirectory, ArrayOfDirectories);
86WX_DECLARE_OBJARRAY(MyFile, ArrayOfFiles);
87
88class MyDirectory
89{
90...
91 ArrayOfDirectories m_subdirectories; // all subdirectories
92 ArrayOfFiles m_files; // all files in this directory
93};
94
95...
96
97// now that we have MyDirectory declaration in scope we may finish the
98// definition of ArrayOfDirectories -- note that this expands into some C++
99// code and so should only be compiled once (i.e., don't put this in the
100// header, but into a source file or you will get linkin errors)
101#include <wx/arrimpl.cpp> // this is a magic incantation which must be done!
102WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY(ArrayOfDirectories);
103
104// that's all!
105\end{verbatim}
106
107It is not as elegant as writing
108
109\begin{verbatim}
110typedef std::vector<MyDirectory> ArrayOfDirectories;
111\end{verbatim}
112
113but is not that complicated and allows the code to be compiled with any, however
114dumb, C++ compiler in the world.
115
116Things are much simpler for wxArray and wxSortedArray however: it is enough
117just to write
118
119\begin{verbatim}
120WX_DEFINE_ARRAY(MyDirectory *, ArrayOfDirectories);
121WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(MyFile *, ArrayOfFiles);
122\end{verbatim}
123
124\wxheading{See also:}
125
126\helpref{Container classes overview}{wxcontaineroverview}, \helpref{wxList}{wxlist}
127
128\wxheading{Required headers:}
129
130<wx/dynarray.h> for wxArray and wxSortedArray and additionally <wx/arrimpl.cpp>
131for wxObjArray.
132
133\latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Function groups}}}
134
135\membersection{Macros for template array definition}
136
137To use an array you must first define the array class. This is done with the
138help of the macros in this section. The class of array elements must be (at
139least) forward declared for WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY, WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY and
140WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY macros and must be fully declared before you use
141WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY macro.
142
143\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY}{wxdefinearray}\\
144\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinearray}\\
145\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinesortedarray}\\
146\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinesortedarray}\\
147\helpref{WX\_DECLARE\_EXPORTED\_OBJARRAY}{wxdeclareobjarray}\\
148\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY}{wxdefineobjarray}
149
150\membersection{Constructors and destructors}
151
152Array classes are 100\% C++ objects and as such they have the appropriate copy
153constructors and assignment operators. Copying wxArray just copies the elements
154but copying wxObjArray copies the arrays items. However, for memory-efficiency
155sake, neither of these classes has virtual destructor. It is not very important
156for wxArray which has trivial destructor anyhow, but it does mean that you
157should avoid deleting wxObjArray through a wxBaseArray pointer (as you would
158never use wxBaseArray anyhow it shouldn't be a problem) and that you should not
159derive your own classes from the array classes.
160
161\helpref{wxArray default constructor}{wxarrayctordef}\\
162\helpref{wxArray copy constructors and assignment operators}{wxarrayctorcopy}\\
163\helpref{\destruct{wxArray}}{wxarraydtor}
164
165\membersection{Memory management}\label{wxarraymemorymanagement}
166
167Automatic array memory management is quite trivial: the array starts by
168preallocating some minimal amount of memory (defined by
169WX\_ARRAY\_DEFAULT\_INITIAL\_SIZE) and when further new items exhaust already
170allocated memory it reallocates it adding 50\% of the currently allocated
171amount, but no more than some maximal number which is defined by
172ARRAY\_MAXSIZE\_INCREMENT constant. Of course, this may lead to some memory
173being wasted (ARRAY\_MAXSIZE\_INCREMENT in the worst case, i.e. 4Kb in the
174current implementation), so the \helpref{Shrink()}{wxarrayshrink} function is
175provided to unallocate the extra memory. The \helpref{Alloc()}{wxarrayalloc}
176function can also be quite useful if you know in advance how many items you are
177going to put in the array and will prevent the array code from reallocating the
178memory more times than needed.
179
180\helpref{Alloc}{wxarrayalloc}\\
181\helpref{Shrink}{wxarrayshrink}
182
183\membersection{Number of elements and simple item access}
184
185Functions in this section return the total number of array elements and allow to
186retrieve them - possibly using just the C array indexing $[]$ operator which
187does exactly the same as \helpref{Item()}{wxarrayitem} method.
188
189\helpref{Count}{wxarraycount}\\
190\helpref{GetCount}{wxarraygetcount}\\
191\helpref{IsEmpty}{wxarrayisempty}\\
192\helpref{Item}{wxarrayitem}\\
193\helpref{Last}{wxarraylast}
194
195\membersection{Adding items}
196
197\helpref{Add}{wxarrayadd}\\
198\helpref{Insert}{wxarrayinsert}\\
199\helpref{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{wxappendarray}
200
201\membersection{Removing items}
202
203\helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray}\\
204\helpref{Empty}{wxarrayempty}\\
205\helpref{Clear}{wxarrayclear}\\
206\helpref{RemoveAt}{wxarrayremoveat}\\
207\helpref{Remove}{wxarrayremove}
208
209\membersection{Searching and sorting}
210
211\helpref{Index}{wxarrayindex}\\
212\helpref{Sort}{wxarraysort}
213
214%%%%% MEMBERS HERE %%%%%
215\helponly{\insertatlevel{2}{
216
217\wxheading{Members}
218
219}}
220
221\membersection{WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY}\label{wxdefinearray}
222
223\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
224
225\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
226
227This macro defines a new array class named {\it name} and containing the
228elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL
229under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL.
230Example:
231
232\begin{verbatim}
233WX_DEFINE_ARRAY(int, wxArrayInt);
234
235class MyClass;
236WX_DEFINE_ARRAY(MyClass *, wxArrayOfMyClass);
237\end{verbatim}
238
239Note that wxWindows predefines the following standard array classes: wxArrayInt,
240wxArrayLong and wxArrayPtrVoid.
241
242\membersection{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY}\label{wxdefinesortedarray}
243
244\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
245
246\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
247
248This macro defines a new sorted array class named {\it name} and containing
249the elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL
250under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL.
251
252
253Example:
254
255\begin{verbatim}
256WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(int, wxSortedArrayInt);
257
258class MyClass;
259WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(MyClass *, wxArrayOfMyClass);
260\end{verbatim}
261
262You will have to initialize the objects of this class by passing a comparaison
263function to the array object constructor like this:
264\begin{verbatim}
265int CompareInts(int n1, int n2)
266{
267 return n1 - n2;
268}
269
270wxSortedArrayInt sorted(CompareInts);
271
272int CompareMyClassObjects(MyClass *item1, MyClass *item2)
273{
274 // sort the items by their address...
275 return Stricmp(item1->GetAddress(), item2->GetAddress());
276}
277
278wxArrayOfMyClass another(CompareMyClassObjects);
279\end{verbatim}
280
281\membersection{WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY}\label{wxdeclareobjarray}
282
283\func{}{WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
284
285\func{}{WX\_DECLARE\_EXPORTED\_OBJARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}}
286
287This macro declares a new object array class named {\it name} and containing
288the elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL
289under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL.
290
291Example:
292
293\begin{verbatim}
294class MyClass;
295WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY(MyClass, wxArrayOfMyClass); // note: not "MyClass *"!
296\end{verbatim}
297
298You must use \helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY()}{wxdefineobjarray} macro to define
299the array class - otherwise you would get link errors.
300
301\membersection{WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY}\label{wxdefineobjarray}
302
303\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY}{\param{}{name}}
304
305This macro defines the methods of the array class {\it name} not defined by the
306\helpref{WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY()}{wxdeclareobjarray} macro. You must include the
307file <wx/arrimpl.cpp> before using this macro and you must have the full
308declaration of the class of array elements in scope! If you forget to do the
309first, the error will be caught by the compiler, but, unfortunately, many
310compilers will not give any warnings if you forget to do the second - but the
311objects of the class will not be copied correctly and their real destructor will
312not be called.
313
314Example of usage:
315
316\begin{verbatim}
317// first declare the class!
318class MyClass
319{
320public:
321 MyClass(const MyClass&);
322
323 ...
324
325 virtual ~MyClass();
326};
327
328#include <wx/arrimpl.cpp>
329WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY(wxArrayOfMyClass);
330\end{verbatim}
331
332\membersection{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}\label{wxappendarray}
333
334\func{void}{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{\param{wxArray\& }{array}, \param{wxArray\& }{other}}
335
336This macro may be used to append all elements of the {\it other} array to the
337{\it array}. The two arrays must be of the same type.
338
339\membersection{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}\label{wxcleararray}
340
341\func{void}{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{\param{wxArray\& }{array}}
342
343This macro may be used to delete all elements of the array before emptying it.
344It can not be used with wxObjArrays - but they will delete their elements anyhow
345when you call Empty().
346
347\membersection{Default constructors}\label{wxarrayctordef}
348
349\func{}{wxArray}{\void}
350
351\func{}{wxObjArray}{\void}
352
353Default constructor initializes an empty array object.
354
355\func{}{wxSortedArray}{\param{int (*)(T first, T second)}{compareFunction}}
356
357There is no default constructor for wxSortedArray classes - you must initialize it
358with a function to use for item comparaison. It is a function which is passed
359two arguments of type {\it T} where {\it T} is the array element type and which
360should return a negative, zero or positive value according to whether the first
361element passed to it is less than, equal to or greater than the second one.
362
363\membersection{wxArray copy constructor and assignment operator}\label{wxarrayctorcopy}
364
365\func{}{wxArray}{\param{const wxArray\& }{array}}
366
367\func{}{wxSortedArray}{\param{const wxSortedArray\& }{array}}
368
369\func{}{wxObjArray}{\param{const wxObjArray\& }{array}}
370
371\func{wxArray\&}{operator$=$}{\param{const wxArray\& }{array}}
372
373\func{wxSortedArray\&}{operator$=$}{\param{const wxSortedArray\& }{array}}
374
375\func{wxObjArray\&}{operator$=$}{\param{const wxObjArray\& }{array}}
376
377The copy constructors and assignment operators perform a shallow array copy
378(i.e. they don't copy the objects pointed to even if the source array contains
379the items of pointer type) for wxArray and wxSortedArray and a deep copy (i.e.
380the array element are copied too) for wxObjArray.
381
382\membersection{wxArray::\destruct{wxArray}}\label{wxarraydtor}
383
384\func{}{\destruct{wxArray}}{\void}
385
386\func{}{\destruct{wxSortedArray}}{\void}
387
388\func{}{\destruct{wxObjArray}}{\void}
389
390The wxObjArray destructor deletes all the items owned by the array. This is not
391done by wxArray and wxSortedArray versions - you may use
392\helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray} macro for this.
393
394\membersection{wxArray::Add}\label{wxarrayadd}
395
396\func{void}{Add}{\param{T }{item}}
397
398\func{void}{Add}{\param{T *}{item}}
399
400\func{void}{Add}{\param{T \&}{item}}
401
402Appends a new element to the array (where {\it T} is the type of the array
403elements.)
404
405The first version is used with wxArray and wxSortedArray. The second and the
406third are used with wxObjArray. There is an important difference between
407them: if you give a pointer to the array, it will take ownership of it, i.e.
408will delete it when the item is deleted from the array. If you give a reference
409to the array, however, the array will make a copy of the item and will not take
410ownership of the original item. Once again, it only makes sense for wxObjArrays
411because the other array types never take ownership of their elements.
412
413You may also use \helpref{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{wxappendarray} macro to append all
414elements of one array to another one.
415
416\membersection{wxArray::Alloc}\label{wxarrayalloc}
417
418\func{void}{Alloc}{\param{size\_t }{count}}
419
420Preallocates memory for a given number of array elements. It is worth calling
421when the number of items which are going to be added to the array is known in
422advance because it will save unneeded memory reallocation. If the array already
423has enough memory for the given number of items, nothing happens.
424
425\membersection{wxArray::Clear}\label{wxarrayclear}
426
427\func{void}{Clear}{\void}
428
429This function does the same as \helpref{Empty()}{wxarrayempty} and additionally
430frees the memory allocated to the array.
431
432\membersection{wxArray::Count}\label{wxarraycount}
433
434\constfunc{size\_t}{Count}{\void}
435
436Same as \helpref{GetCount()}{wxarraygetcount}. This function is deprecated -
437it exists only for compatibility.
438
439\membersection{wxObjArray::Detach}\label{wxobjarraydetach}
440
441\func{T *}{Detach}{\param{size\_t }{index}}
442
443Removes the element from the array, but, unlike,
444\helpref{Remove()}{wxarrayremove} doesn't delete it. The function returns the
445pointer to the removed element.
446
447\membersection{wxArray::Empty}\label{wxarrayempty}
448
449\func{void}{Empty}{\void}
450
451Empties the array. For wxObjArray classes, this destroys all of the array
452elements. For wxArray and wxSortedArray this does nothing except marking the
453array of being empty - this function does not free the allocated memory, use
454\helpref{Clear()}{wxarrayclear} for this.
455
456\membersection{wxArray::GetCount}\label{wxarraygetcount}
457
458\constfunc{size\_t}{GetCount}{\void}
459
460Return the number of items in the array.
461
462\membersection{wxArray::Index}\label{wxarrayindex}
463
464\func{int}{Index}{\param{T\& }{item}, \param{bool }{searchFromEnd = FALSE}}
465
466\func{int}{Index}{\param{T\& }{item}}
467
468The first version of the function is for wxArray and wxObjArray, the second is
469for wxSortedArray only.
470
471Searches the element in the array, starting from either beginning or the end
472depending on the value of {\it searchFromEnd} parameter. wxNOT\_FOUND is
473returned if the element is not found, otherwise the index of the element is
474returned.
475
476Linear search is used for the wxArray and wxObjArray classes but binary search
477in the sorted array is used for wxSortedArray (this is why searchFromEnd
478parameter doesn't make sense for it).
479
480\membersection{wxArray::Insert}\label{wxarrayinsert}
481
482\func{void}{Insert}{\param{T }{item}, \param{size\_t }{n}}
483
484\func{void}{Insert}{\param{T *}{item}, \param{size\_t }{n}}
485
486\func{void}{Insert}{\param{T \&}{item}, \param{size\_t }{n}}
487
488Insert a new item into the array before the item {\it n} - thus, {\it Insert(something, 0u)} will
489insert an item in such way that it will become the
490first array element.
491
492Please see \helpref{Add()}{wxarrayadd} for explanation of the differences
493between the overloaded versions of this function.
494
495\membersection{wxArray::IsEmpty}\label{wxarrayisempty}
496
497\constfunc{bool}{IsEmpty}{\void}
498
499Returns TRUE if the array is empty, FALSE otherwise.
500
501\membersection{wxArray::Item}\label{wxarrayitem}
502
503\constfunc{T\&}{Item}{\param{size\_t }{index}}
504
505Returns the item at the given position in the array. If {\it index} is out of
506bounds, an assert failure is raised in the debug builds but nothing special is
507done in the release build.
508
509The returned value is of type "reference to the array element type" for all of
510the array classes.
511
512\membersection{wxArray::Last}\label{wxarraylast}
513
514\constfunc{T\&}{Last}{\void}
515
516Returns the last element in the array, i.e. is the same as Item(GetCount() - 1).
517An assert failure is raised in the debug mode if the array is empty.
518
519The returned value is of type "reference to the array element type" for all of
520the array classes.
521
522\membersection{wxArray::Remove}\label{wxarrayremove}
523
524\func{\void}{Remove}{\param{T }{item}}
525
526Removes the element from the array either by value: the first item of the
527array equal to {\it item} is removed, an assert failure will result from an
528attempt to remove an item which doesn't exist in the array.
529
530When an element is removed from wxObjArray it is deleted by the array - use
531\helpref{Detach()}{wxobjarraydetach} if you don't want this to happen. On the
532other hand, when an object is removed from a wxArray nothing happens - you
533should delete the it manually if required:
534
535\begin{verbatim}
536T *item = array[n];
537delete item;
538array.Remove(n)
539\end{verbatim}
540
541See also \helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray} macro which deletes all
542elements of a wxArray (supposed to contain pointers).
543
544\membersection{wxArray::RemoveAt}\label{wxarrayremoveat}
545
546\func{\void}{RemoveAt}{\param{size\_t }{index}}
547
548Removes the element from the array either by index. When an element
549is removed from wxObjArray it is deleted by the array - use
550\helpref{Detach()}{wxobjarraydetach} if you don't want this to happen. On the
551other hand, when an object is removed from a wxArray nothing happens - you
552should delete the it manually if required:
553
554\begin{verbatim}
555T *item = array[n];
556delete item;
557array.RemoveAt(n)
558\end{verbatim}
559
560See also \helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray} macro which deletes all
561elements of a wxArray (supposed to contain pointers).
562
563\membersection{wxArray::Shrink}\label{wxarrayshrink}
564
565\func{void}{Shrink}{\void}
566
567Frees all memory unused by the array. If the program knows that no new items
568will be added to the array it may call Shrink() to reduce its memory usage.
569However, if a new item is added to the array, some extra memory will be
570allocated again.
571
572\membersection{wxArray::Sort}\label{wxarraysort}
573
574\func{void}{Sort}{\param{CMPFUNC<T> }{compareFunction}}
575
576The notation CMPFUNC<T> should be read as if we had the following declaration:
577
578\begin{verbatim}
579template int CMPFUNC(T *first, T *second);
580\end{verbatim}
581
582where {\it T} is the type of the array elements. I.e. it is a function returning
583{\it int} which is passed two arguments of type {\it T *}.
584
585Sorts the array using the specified compare function: this function should
586return a negative, zero or positive value according to whether the first element
587passed to it is less than, equal to or greater than the second one.
588
589wxSortedArray doesn't have this function because it is always sorted.
590