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1 \section{\class{wxScopedArray}}\label{wxscopedarray}
2
3 This is a simple scoped smart pointer array implementation that is similar to
4 the \urlref{Boost}{http://www.boost.org} smart pointers but rewritten to
5 use macros instead.
6
7 \wxheading{Example}
8
9 Below is an example of using a wxWidgets scoped smart pointer and
10 pointer array.
11
12 \begin{verbatim}
13 class MyClass { /* ... */ };
14
15 // declare a smart pointer to a MyClass called wxMyClassPtr
16 wxDECLARE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr)
17 // declare a smart pointer to an array of chars
18 wxDECLARE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray)
19
20 ...
21
22 // define the first pointer class, must be complete
23 wxDEFINE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr)
24 // define the second pointer class
25 wxDEFINE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray)
26
27 // create an object with a new pointer to MyClass
28 wxMyClassPtr theObj(new MyClass());
29 // reset the pointer (deletes the previous one)
30 theObj.reset(new MyClass());
31
32 // access the pointer
33 theObj->MyFunc();
34
35 // create an object with a new array of chars
36 wxCharArray theCharObj(new char[100]);
37
38 // access the array
39 theCharObj[0] = "!";
40 \end{verbatim}
41
42 \wxheading{Declaring new smart pointer types}
43
44 \begin{verbatim}
45 wxDECLAR_SCOPED_ARRAY( TYPE, // type of the values
46 CLASSNAME ); // name of the class
47 \end{verbatim}
48
49 A smart pointer holds a pointer to an object (which must be complete
50 when wxDEFINE\_SCOPED\_ARRAY() is called). The memory used by the object is
51 deleted when the smart pointer goes out of scope. The first argument
52 of the macro is the pointer type, the second is the name of the new
53 smart pointer class being created. Below we will use wxScopedArray to
54 represent the scoped pointer array class, but the user may create the class
55 with any legal name.
56
57 \wxheading{Include files}
58
59 <wx/ptr\_scpd.h>
60
61 \wxheading{See also}
62
63 \helpref{wxScopedPtr}{wxscopedptr}\rtfsp
64
65 \latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}}
66
67 \membersection{wxScopedArray::wxScopedArray}\label{wxscopedarrayctor}
68
69 \func{}{wxScopedArray}{\param{type}{ * T = NULL}}
70
71 Creates the smart pointer with the given pointer or none if NULL. On
72 compilers that support it, this uses the explicit keyword.
73
74 \membersection{wxScopedArray::reset}\label{wxscopedarrayreset}
75
76 \func{\void}{reset}{\param{T}{ p * = NULL}}
77
78 Deletes the currently held pointer and sets it to 'p' or to NULL if no
79 arguments are specified. This function does check to make sure that the
80 pointer you are assigning is not the same pointer that is already stored.
81
82 \membersection{wxScopedArray::operator []}\label{wxscopedarraybracket}
83
84 \func{const T \&}{operator []}{\param{long int}{i}}
85
86 This operator acts like the standard [] indexing operator for C++ arrays. The
87 function does not do bounds checking.
88
89 \membersection{wxScopedArray::get}\label{wxscopedarrayget}
90
91 \func{const T*}{get}{\void}
92
93 This operator gets the pointer stored in the smart pointer or returns NULL if
94 there is none.
95
96 \membersection{wxScopedArray::swap}\label{wxscopedarrayswap}
97
98 \func{\void}{swap}{\param{wxScopedPtr}{ \& ot}}
99
100 Swap the pointer inside the smart pointer with 'ot'. The pointer being swapped
101 must be of the same type (hence the same class name).
102