1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3 // Purpose: interface of various utility classes and functions
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
6 // Licence: wxWindows licence
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
10 @class wxWindowDisabler
12 This class disables all windows of the application (may be with the
13 exception of one of them) in its constructor and enables them back in its
16 This is useful when you want to indicate to the user that the application
17 is currently busy and cannot respond to user input.
24 class wxWindowDisabler
28 Disables all top level windows of the applications.
30 If @a disable is @c false nothing is done. This can be convenient if
31 the windows should be disabled depending on some condition.
35 wxWindowDisabler(bool disable
= true);
38 Disables all top level windows of the applications with the exception
39 of @a winToSkip if it is not @NULL.
41 Notice that under MSW if @a winToSkip appears in the taskbar, the user
42 will be able to close the entire application (even though its main
43 window is disabled) by right clicking on the taskbar icon and selecting
44 the appropriate "Close" command from the context menu. To prevent this
45 from happening you may want to use wxFRAME_TOOL_WINDOW, if applicable,
46 or wxFRAME_NO_TASKBAR style when creating the window that will remain
49 wxWindowDisabler(wxWindow
* winToSkip
);
52 Reenables the windows disabled by the constructor.
62 This class makes it easy to tell your user that the program is temporarily
63 busy. Just create a wxBusyCursor object on the stack, and within the
64 current scope, the hourglass will be shown.
71 for (int i = 0; i < 100000; i++)
75 It works by calling wxBeginBusyCursor() in the constructor, and
76 wxEndBusyCursor() in the destructor.
81 @see wxBeginBusyCursor(), wxEndBusyCursor(), wxWindowDisabler
87 Constructs a busy cursor object, calling wxBeginBusyCursor().
89 wxBusyCursor(const wxCursor
* cursor
= wxHOURGLASS_CURSOR
);
92 Destroys the busy cursor object, calling wxEndBusyCursor().
99 // ============================================================================
100 // Global functions/macros
101 // ============================================================================
104 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_dialog */
108 Changes the cursor to the given cursor for all windows in the application.
109 Use wxEndBusyCursor() to revert the cursor back to its previous state.
110 These two calls can be nested, and a counter ensures that only the outer
113 @see wxIsBusy(), wxBusyCursor
117 void wxBeginBusyCursor(const wxCursor
* cursor
= wxHOURGLASS_CURSOR
);
120 Changes the cursor back to the original cursor, for all windows in the
121 application. Use with wxBeginBusyCursor().
123 @see wxIsBusy(), wxBusyCursor
127 void wxEndBusyCursor();
130 Returns @true if between two wxBeginBusyCursor() and wxEndBusyCursor()
140 Ring the system bell.
142 @note This function is categorized as a GUI one and so is not thread-safe.
149 Shows a message box with the information about the wxWidgets build used,
150 including its version, most important build parameters and the version of
151 the underlying GUI toolkit. This is mainly used for diagnostic purposes
152 and can be invoked by Ctrl-Alt-middle clicking on any wxWindow which
153 doesn't otherwise handle this event.
156 @see wxGetLibraryVersionInfo()
159 void wxInfoMessageBox(wxWindow
* parent
);
163 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_version */
167 Get wxWidgets version information.
174 wxVersionInfo
wxGetLibraryVersionInfo();
180 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_env */
184 A map type containing environment variables names and values.
186 This type is used with wxGetEnvMap() function and wxExecuteEnv structure
187 optionally passed to wxExecute().
193 typedef wxStringToStringHashMap wxEnvVariableHashMap
;
196 This is a macro defined as @c getenv() or its wide char version in Unicode
199 Note that under Win32 it may not return correct value for the variables set
200 with wxSetEnv(), use wxGetEnv() function instead.
204 wxChar
* wxGetenv(const wxString
& var
);
207 Returns the current value of the environment variable @a var in @a value.
209 @a value may be @NULL if you just want to know if the variable exists and
210 are not interested in its value.
212 Returns @true if the variable exists, @false otherwise.
216 bool wxGetEnv(const wxString
& var
, wxString
* value
);
219 Sets the value of the environment variable @a var (adding it if necessary)
222 Notice that under Windows platforms the program may have two different
223 environment blocks: the first one is that of a Windows process and is
224 always present, but the CRT may maintain its own independent copy of the
225 environment. wxSetEnv() will always update the first copy, which means that
226 wxGetEnv(), which uses it directly, will always return the expected value
227 after this call. But wxSetEnv() only updates the second copy for some
228 compilers/CRT implementations (currently only MSVC and MinGW which uses the
229 same MSVC CRT) and so using wxGetenv() (notice the difference in case) may
230 not return the updated value.
233 The environment variable to be set, must not contain @c '=' character.
235 New value of the variable.
237 @true on success or @false if changing the value failed.
243 bool wxSetEnv(const wxString
& var
, const wxString
& value
);
246 Removes the variable @a var from the environment.
248 wxGetEnv() will return @NULL after the call to this function.
250 Returns @true on success.
254 bool wxUnsetEnv(const wxString
& var
);
257 Fill a map with the complete content of current environment.
259 The map will contain the environment variable names as keys and their
263 The environment map to fill, must be non-@NULL.
265 @true if environment was successfully retrieved or @false otherwise.
271 bool wxGetEnvMap(wxEnvVariableHashMap
*map
);
276 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_misc */
280 Returns battery state as one of @c wxBATTERY_NORMAL_STATE,
281 @c wxBATTERY_LOW_STATE, @c wxBATTERY_CRITICAL_STATE,
282 @c wxBATTERY_SHUTDOWN_STATE or @c wxBATTERY_UNKNOWN_STATE.
283 @c wxBATTERY_UNKNOWN_STATE is also the default on platforms where this
284 feature is not implemented (currently everywhere but MS Windows).
288 wxBatteryState
wxGetBatteryState();
291 Returns the type of power source as one of @c wxPOWER_SOCKET,
292 @c wxPOWER_BATTERY or @c wxPOWER_UNKNOWN. @c wxPOWER_UNKNOWN is also the
293 default on platforms where this feature is not implemented (currently
294 everywhere but MS Windows).
298 wxPowerType
wxGetPowerType();
301 Under X only, returns the current display name.
303 @see wxSetDisplayName()
307 wxString
wxGetDisplayName();
310 For normal keys, returns @true if the specified key is currently down.
312 For togglable keys (Caps Lock, Num Lock and Scroll Lock), returns @true if
313 the key is toggled such that its LED indicator is lit. There is currently
314 no way to test whether togglable keys are up or down.
316 Even though there are virtual key codes defined for mouse buttons, they
317 cannot be used with this function currently.
321 bool wxGetKeyState(wxKeyCode key
);
324 Returns the mouse position in screen coordinates.
328 wxPoint
wxGetMousePosition();
331 Returns the current state of the mouse. Returns a wxMouseState instance
332 that contains the current position of the mouse pointer in screen
333 coordinates, as well as boolean values indicating the up/down status of the
334 mouse buttons and the modifier keys.
338 wxMouseState
wxGetMouseState();
341 This function enables or disables all top level windows. It is used by
346 void wxEnableTopLevelWindows(bool enable
= true);
349 Find the deepest window at the given mouse position in screen coordinates,
350 returning the window if found, or @NULL if not.
354 wxWindow
* wxFindWindowAtPoint(const wxPoint
& pt
);
357 @deprecated Replaced by wxWindow::FindWindowByLabel().
359 Find a window by its label. Depending on the type of window, the label may
360 be a window title or panel item label. If @a parent is @NULL, the search
361 will start from all top-level frames and dialog boxes; if non-@NULL, the
362 search will be limited to the given window hierarchy. The search is
363 recursive in both cases.
367 wxWindow
* wxFindWindowByLabel(const wxString
& label
,
368 wxWindow
* parent
= NULL
);
371 @deprecated Replaced by wxWindow::FindWindowByName().
373 Find a window by its name (as given in a window constructor or @e Create
374 function call). If @a parent is @NULL, the search will start from all
375 top-level frames and dialog boxes; if non-@NULL, the search will be limited
376 to the given window hierarchy. The search is recursive in both cases.
378 If no such named window is found, wxFindWindowByLabel() is called.
382 wxWindow
* wxFindWindowByName(const wxString
& name
, wxWindow
* parent
= NULL
);
385 Find a menu item identifier associated with the given frame's menu bar.
389 int wxFindMenuItemId(wxFrame
* frame
, const wxString
& menuString
,
390 const wxString
& itemString
);
393 @deprecated Ids generated by it can conflict with the Ids defined by the
394 user code, use @c wxID_ANY to assign ids which are guaranteed
395 to not conflict with the user-defined ids for the controls and
396 menu items you create instead of using this function.
398 Generates an integer identifier unique to this run of the program.
405 Ensures that Ids subsequently generated by wxNewId() do not clash with the
410 void wxRegisterId(long id
);
413 Opens the @a document in the application associated with the files of this
416 The @a flags parameter is currently not used
418 Returns @true if the application was successfully launched.
420 @see wxLaunchDefaultBrowser(), wxExecute()
424 bool wxLaunchDefaultApplication(const wxString
& document
, int flags
= 0);
427 Opens the @a url in user's default browser.
429 If the @a flags parameter contains @c wxBROWSER_NEW_WINDOW flag, a new
430 window is opened for the URL (currently this is only supported under
433 And unless the @a flags parameter contains @c wxBROWSER_NOBUSYCURSOR flag,
434 a busy cursor is shown while the browser is being launched (using
437 The parameter @a url is interpreted as follows:
438 - if it has a valid scheme (e.g. @c "file:", @c "http:" or @c "mailto:")
439 it is passed to the appropriate browser configured in the user system.
440 - if it has no valid scheme (e.g. it's a local file path without the @c "file:"
441 prefix), then ::wxFileExists and ::wxDirExists are used to test if it's a
442 local file/directory; if it is, then the browser is called with the
443 @a url parameter eventually prefixed by @c "file:".
444 - if it has no valid scheme and it's not a local file/directory, then @c "http:"
445 is prepended and the browser is called.
447 Returns @true if the application was successfully launched.
449 @note For some configurations of the running user, the application which is
450 launched to open the given URL may be URL-dependent (e.g. a browser
451 may be used for local URLs while another one may be used for remote
454 @see wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxExecute()
458 bool wxLaunchDefaultBrowser(const wxString
& url
, int flags
= 0);
461 Loads a user-defined Windows resource as a string. If the resource is
462 found, the function creates a new character array and copies the data into
463 it. A pointer to this data is returned. If unsuccessful, @NULL is returned.
465 The resource must be defined in the @c .rc file using the following syntax:
468 myResource TEXT file.ext
471 Where @c file.ext is a file that the resource compiler can find.
473 This function is available under Windows only.
477 wxString
wxLoadUserResource(const wxString
& resourceName
,
478 const wxString
& resourceType
= "TEXT");
481 @deprecated Replaced by wxWindow::Close(). See the
482 @ref overview_windowdeletion "window deletion overview".
484 Tells the system to delete the specified object when all other events have
485 been processed. In some environments, it is necessary to use this instead
486 of deleting a frame directly with the delete operator, because some GUIs
487 will still send events to a deleted window.
491 void wxPostDelete(wxObject
* object
);
495 Compare function type for use with wxQsort()
501 typedef int (wxCMPFUNC_CONV
*CMPFUNCDATA
)(const void* pItem1
, const void* pItem2
, const void* user_data
);
505 Function for performing a qsort operation including a user data
510 void wxQsort(void *const pbase
, size_t total_elems
,
511 size_t size
, CMPFUNCDATA cmp
, const void* user_data
);
515 Under X only, sets the current display name. This is the X host and display
516 name such as "colonsay:0.0", and the function indicates which display
517 should be used for creating windows from this point on. Setting the display
518 within an application allows multiple displays to be used.
520 @see wxGetDisplayName()
524 void wxSetDisplayName(const wxString
& displayName
);
527 Strips any menu codes from @a str and returns the result.
529 By default, the functions strips both the mnemonics character (@c '&')
530 which is used to indicate a keyboard shortkey, and the accelerators, which
531 are used only in the menu items and are separated from the main text by the
532 @c \\t (TAB) character. By using @a flags of @c wxStrip_Mnemonics or
533 @c wxStrip_Accel to strip only the former or the latter part, respectively.
535 Notice that in most cases wxMenuItem::GetLabelFromText() or
536 wxControl::GetLabelText() can be used instead.
540 wxString
wxStripMenuCodes(const wxString
& str
, int flags
= wxStrip_All
);
546 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_networkuseros */
550 Copies the user's email address into the supplied buffer, by concatenating
551 the values returned by wxGetFullHostName() and wxGetUserId().
553 @return @true if successful, @false otherwise.
557 wxString
wxGetEmailAddress();
560 @deprecated Use wxGetEmailAddress() instead.
562 @param buf Buffer to store the email address in.
563 @param sz Size of the buffer.
565 @return @true if successful, @false otherwise.
569 bool wxGetEmailAddress(char* buf
, int sz
);
572 Returns the amount of free memory in bytes under environments which support
573 it, and -1 if not supported or failed to perform measurement.
577 wxMemorySize
wxGetFreeMemory();
580 Return the (current) user's home directory.
582 @see wxGetUserHome(), wxStandardPaths
586 wxString
wxGetHomeDir();
589 Copies the current host machine's name into the supplied buffer. Please
590 note that the returned name is @e not fully qualified, i.e. it does not
591 include the domain name.
593 Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the environment variable
594 SYSTEM_NAME; if this is not found, the entry @b HostName in the wxWidgets
595 section of the WIN.INI file is tried.
597 @return The hostname if successful or an empty string otherwise.
599 @see wxGetFullHostName()
603 wxString
wxGetHostName();
606 @deprecated Use wxGetHostName() instead.
608 @param buf Buffer to store the host name in.
609 @param sz Size of the buffer.
611 @return @true if successful, @false otherwise.
615 bool wxGetHostName(char* buf
, int sz
);
618 Returns the FQDN (fully qualified domain host name) or an empty string on
625 wxString
wxGetFullHostName();
628 Returns the home directory for the given user. If the @a user is empty
629 (default value), this function behaves like wxGetHomeDir() (i.e. returns
630 the current user home directory).
632 If the home directory couldn't be determined, an empty string is returned.
636 wxString
wxGetUserHome(const wxString
& user
= wxEmptyString
);
639 This function returns the "user id" also known as "login name" under Unix
640 (i.e. something like "jsmith"). It uniquely identifies the current user (on
641 this system). Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the
642 environment variables USER and LOGNAME; if neither of these is found, the
643 entry @b UserId in the @b wxWidgets section of the WIN.INI file is tried.
645 @return The login name if successful or an empty string otherwise.
651 wxString
wxGetUserId();
654 @deprecated Use wxGetUserId() instead.
656 @param buf Buffer to store the login name in.
657 @param sz Size of the buffer.
659 @return @true if successful, @false otherwise.
663 bool wxGetUserId(char* buf
, int sz
);
666 This function returns the full user name (something like "Mr. John Smith").
668 Under Windows or NT, this function looks for the entry UserName in the
669 wxWidgets section of the WIN.INI file. If PenWindows is running, the entry
670 Current in the section User of the PENWIN.INI file is used.
672 @return The full user name if successful or an empty string otherwise.
678 wxString
wxGetUserName();
681 @deprecated Use wxGetUserName() instead.
683 @param buf Buffer to store the full user name in.
684 @param sz Size of the buffer.
686 @return @true if successful, @false otherwise.
690 bool wxGetUserName(char* buf
, int sz
);
693 Returns the string containing the description of the current platform in a
694 user-readable form. For example, this function may return strings like
695 "Windows NT Version 4.0" or "Linux 2.2.2 i386".
697 @see wxGetOsVersion()
701 wxString
wxGetOsDescription();
704 Gets the version and the operating system ID for currently running OS.
705 The returned wxOperatingSystemId value can be used for a basic categorization
706 of the OS family; the major and minor version numbers allows to detect a specific
709 For Unix-like systems (@c wxOS_UNIX) the major and minor version integers will
710 contain the kernel major and minor version numbers (as returned by the
711 'uname -r' command); e.g. "2" and "6" if the machine is using kernel 2.6.19.
713 For Mac OS X systems (@c wxOS_MAC) the major and minor version integers are the
714 natural version numbers associated with the OS; e.g. "10" and "6" if the machine
715 is using Mac OS X Snow Leopard.
717 For Windows-like systems (@c wxOS_WINDOWS) the major and minor version integers will
718 contain the following values:
720 @row3col{<b>Windows OS name</b>, <b>Major version</b>, <b>Minor version</b>}
721 @row3col{Windows 7, 6, 1}
722 @row3col{Windows Server 2008 R2, 6, 1}
723 @row3col{Windows Server 2008, 6, 0}
724 @row3col{Windows Vista, 6, 0}
725 @row3col{Windows Server 2003 R2, 5, 2}
726 @row3col{Windows Server 2003, 5, 2}
727 @row3col{Windows XP, 5, 1}
728 @row3col{Windows 2000, 5, 0}
730 See the <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms724832(VS.85).aspx">MSDN</a>
731 for more info about the values above.
733 @see wxGetOsDescription(), wxPlatformInfo
737 wxOperatingSystemId
wxGetOsVersion(int* major
= NULL
, int* minor
= NULL
);
740 Returns @true if the operating system the program is running under is 64
741 bit. The check is performed at run-time and may differ from the value
742 available at compile-time (at compile-time you can just check if
743 <tt>sizeof(void*) == 8</tt>) since the program could be running in
744 emulation mode or in a mixed 32/64 bit system (bi-architecture operating
747 @note This function is not 100% reliable on some systems given the fact
748 that there isn't always a standard way to do a reliable check on the
753 bool wxIsPlatform64Bit();
756 Returns @true if the current platform is little endian (instead of big
757 endian). The check is performed at run-time.
759 @see @ref group_funcmacro_byteorder "Byte Order Functions and Macros"
763 bool wxIsPlatformLittleEndian();
766 Returns a structure containing informations about the currently running
769 This function uses the @c lsb_release utility which is part of the
770 <tt>Linux Standard Base Core</tt> specification
771 (see http://refspecs.linux-foundation.org/lsb.shtml) since the very first LSB
772 release 1.0 (released in 2001).
773 The @c lsb_release utility is very common on modern Linux distributions but in
774 case it's not available, then this function will return a ::wxLinuxDistributionInfo
775 structure containing empty strings.
777 This function is Linux-specific and is only available when the @c __LINUX__
780 wxLinuxDistributionInfo
wxGetLinuxDistributionInfo();
786 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_procctrl */
792 This structure can optionally be passed to wxExecute() to specify
793 additional options to use for the child process.
802 The initial working directory for the new process.
804 If this field is empty, the current working directory of this process
810 The environment variable map.
812 If the map is empty, the environment variables of the current process
813 are also used for the child one, otherwise only the variables defined
814 in this map are used.
816 wxEnvVariableHashMap env
;
820 Executes another program in Unix or Windows.
822 In the overloaded versions of this function, if @a flags parameter contains
823 @c wxEXEC_ASYNC flag (the default), flow of control immediately returns. If
824 it contains @c wxEXEC_SYNC, the current application waits until the other
825 program has terminated.
827 In the case of synchronous execution, the return value is the exit code of
828 the process (which terminates by the moment the function returns) and will
829 be -1 if the process couldn't be started and typically 0 if the process
830 terminated successfully. Also, while waiting for the process to terminate,
831 wxExecute() will call wxYield(). Because of this, by default this function
832 disables all application windows to avoid unexpected reentrancies which
833 could result from the users interaction with the program while the child
834 process is running. If you are sure that it is safe to not disable the
835 program windows, you may pass @c wxEXEC_NODISABLE flag to prevent this
836 automatic disabling from happening.
838 For asynchronous execution, however, the return value is the process id and
839 zero value indicates that the command could not be executed. As an added
840 complication, the return value of -1 in this case indicates that we didn't
841 launch a new process, but connected to the running one (this can only
842 happen when using DDE under Windows for command execution). In particular,
843 in this case only, the calling code will not get the notification about
846 If @a callback isn't @NULL and if execution is asynchronous,
847 wxProcess::OnTerminate() will be called when the process finishes.
848 Specifying this parameter also allows you to redirect the standard input
849 and/or output of the process being launched by calling
850 wxProcess::Redirect(). If the child process IO is redirected, under Windows
851 the process window is not shown by default (this avoids having to flush an
852 unnecessary console for the processes which don't create any windows
853 anyhow) but a @c wxEXEC_NOHIDE flag can be used to prevent this from
854 happening, i.e. with this flag the child process window will be shown
857 Under Unix the flag @c wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER may be used to ensure that
858 the new process is a group leader (this will create a new session if
859 needed). Calling wxKill() passing wxKILL_CHILDREN will kill this process as
860 well as all of its children (except those which have started their own
863 The @c wxEXEC_NOEVENTS flag prevents processing of any events from taking
864 place while the child process is running. It should be only used for very
865 short-lived processes as otherwise the application windows risk becoming
866 unresponsive from the users point of view. As this flag only makes sense
867 with @c wxEXEC_SYNC, @c wxEXEC_BLOCK equal to the sum of both of these
868 flags is provided as a convenience.
870 @note Currently wxExecute() can only be used from the main thread, calling
871 this function from another thread will result in an assert failure in
872 debug build and won't work.
875 The command to execute and any parameters to pass to it as a single
876 string, i.e. "emacs file.txt".
878 Must include either wxEXEC_ASYNC or wxEXEC_SYNC and can also include
879 wxEXEC_NOHIDE, wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER (in either case) or
880 wxEXEC_NODISABLE and wxEXEC_NOEVENTS or wxEXEC_BLOCK, which is equal to
881 their combination, in wxEXEC_SYNC case.
883 An optional pointer to wxProcess.
885 An optional pointer to additional parameters for the child process,
886 such as its initial working directory and environment variables. This
887 parameter is available in wxWidgets 2.9.2 and later only.
889 @see wxShell(), wxProcess, @ref page_samples_exec,
890 wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
895 In wxPerl this function is called @c Wx::ExecuteCommand.
898 long wxExecute(const wxString
& command
, int flags
= wxEXEC_ASYNC
,
899 wxProcess
* callback
= NULL
,
900 const wxExecuteEnv
* env
= NULL
);
903 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_procctrl */
906 This is an overloaded version of wxExecute(const wxString&,int,wxProcess*),
907 please see its documentation for general information.
909 This version takes an array of values: a command, any number of arguments,
913 The command to execute should be the first element of this array, any
914 additional ones are the command parameters and the array must be
915 terminated with a @NULL pointer.
917 Must include either wxEXEC_ASYNC or wxEXEC_SYNC and can also include
918 wxEXEC_NOHIDE, wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER (in either case) or
919 wxEXEC_NODISABLE and wxEXEC_NOEVENTS or wxEXEC_BLOCK, which is equal to
920 their combination, in wxEXEC_SYNC case.
922 An optional pointer to wxProcess.
924 An optional pointer to additional parameters for the child process,
925 such as its initial working directory and environment variables. This
926 parameter is available in wxWidgets 2.9.2 and later only.
928 @see wxShell(), wxProcess, @ref page_samples_exec,
929 wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
934 In wxPerl this function is called @c Wx::ExecuteArgs.
937 long wxExecute(char** argv
, int flags
= wxEXEC_ASYNC
,
938 wxProcess
* callback
= NULL
,
939 const wxExecuteEnv
*env
= NULL
);
940 long wxExecute(wchar_t** argv
, int flags
= wxEXEC_ASYNC
,
941 wxProcess
* callback
= NULL
,
942 const wxExecuteEnv
*env
= NULL
);
945 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_procctrl */
949 This is an overloaded version of wxExecute(const wxString&,int,wxProcess*),
950 please see its documentation for general information.
952 This version can be used to execute a process (always synchronously, the
953 contents of @a flags is or'd with @c wxEXEC_SYNC) and capture its output in
957 The command to execute and any parameters to pass to it as a single
960 The string array where the stdout of the executed process is saved.
962 May include wxEXEC_NOHIDE, wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER (in either case) or
963 wxEXEC_NODISABLE and wxEXEC_NOEVENTS or wxEXEC_BLOCK, which is equal to
964 their combination. wxEXEC_SYNC is always implicitly added to the flags.
966 An optional pointer to additional parameters for the child process,
967 such as its initial working directory and environment variables. This
968 parameter is available in wxWidgets 2.9.2 and later only.
970 @see wxShell(), wxProcess, @ref page_samples_exec,
971 wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
976 This function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdout: it only takes the
977 @a command argument, and returns a 2-element list (@c status, @c output),
978 where @c output in an array reference.
981 long wxExecute(const wxString
& command
, wxArrayString
& output
, int flags
= 0,
982 const wxExecuteEnv
*env
= NULL
);
985 This is an overloaded version of wxExecute(const wxString&,int,wxProcess*),
986 please see its documentation for general information.
988 This version adds the possibility to additionally capture the messages from
989 standard error output in the @a errors array. As with the above overload
990 capturing standard output only, execution is always synchronous.
993 The command to execute and any parameters to pass to it as a single
996 The string array where the stdout of the executed process is saved.
998 The string array where the stderr of the executed process is saved.
1000 May include wxEXEC_NOHIDE, wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER (in either case) or
1001 wxEXEC_NODISABLE and wxEXEC_NOEVENTS or wxEXEC_BLOCK, which is equal to
1002 their combination. wxEXEC_SYNC is always implicitly added to the flags.
1004 An optional pointer to additional parameters for the child process,
1005 such as its initial working directory and environment variables. This
1006 parameter is available in wxWidgets 2.9.2 and later only.
1008 @see wxShell(), wxProcess, @ref page_samples_exec,
1009 wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
1014 This function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdoutStderr: it only takes the
1015 @a command argument, and returns a 3-element list (@c status, @c output,
1016 @c errors), where @c output and @c errors are array references.
1019 long wxExecute(const wxString
& command
, wxArrayString
& output
,
1020 wxArrayString
& errors
, int flags
= 0,
1021 const wxExecuteEnv
*env
= NULL
);
1024 Returns the number uniquely identifying the current process in the system.
1025 If an error occurs, 0 is returned.
1029 unsigned long wxGetProcessId();
1032 Equivalent to the Unix kill function: send the given signal @a sig to the
1033 process with PID @a pid.
1035 The valid signal values are:
1040 wxSIGNONE = 0, // verify if the process exists under Unix
1049 wxSIGKILL, // forcefully kill, dangerous!
1055 wxSIGTERM // terminate the process gently
1059 @c wxSIGNONE, @c wxSIGKILL and @c wxSIGTERM have the same meaning under
1060 both Unix and Windows but all the other signals are equivalent to
1061 @c wxSIGTERM under Windows.
1063 Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure. If the @a rc parameter is not @NULL,
1064 it will be filled with a value from the @c wxKillError enum:
1069 wxKILL_OK, // no error
1070 wxKILL_BAD_SIGNAL, // no such signal
1071 wxKILL_ACCESS_DENIED, // permission denied
1072 wxKILL_NO_PROCESS, // no such process
1073 wxKILL_ERROR // another, unspecified error
1077 The @a flags parameter can be wxKILL_NOCHILDREN (the default), or
1078 wxKILL_CHILDREN, in which case the child processes of this process will be
1079 killed too. Note that under Unix, for wxKILL_CHILDREN to work you should
1080 have created the process by passing wxEXEC_MAKE_GROUP_LEADER to
1083 @see wxProcess::Kill(), wxProcess::Exists(), @ref page_samples_exec
1087 int wxKill(long pid
, wxSignal sig
= wxSIGTERM
,
1088 wxKillError
* rc
= NULL
, int flags
= wxKILL_NOCHILDREN
);
1091 Executes a command in an interactive shell window. If no command is
1092 specified, then just the shell is spawned.
1094 @see wxExecute(), @ref page_samples_exec
1098 bool wxShell(const wxString
& command
= wxEmptyString
);
1101 This function shuts down or reboots the computer depending on the value of
1104 @note Note that performing the shutdown requires the corresponding access
1105 rights (superuser under Unix, SE_SHUTDOWN privilege under Windows NT)
1106 and that this function is only implemented under Unix and MSW.
1109 One of @c wxSHUTDOWN_POWEROFF, @c wxSHUTDOWN_REBOOT or
1110 @c wxSHUTDOWN_LOGOFF (currently implemented only for MSW) possibly
1111 combined with @c wxSHUTDOWN_FORCE which forces shutdown under MSW by
1112 forcefully terminating all the applications. As doing this can result
1113 in a data loss, this flag shouldn't be used unless really necessary.
1115 @return @true on success, @false if an error occurred.
1119 bool wxShutdown(int flags
= wxSHUTDOWN_POWEROFF
);
1125 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_time */
1129 Sleeps for the specified number of microseconds. The microsecond resolution
1130 may not, in fact, be available on all platforms (currently only Unix
1131 platforms with nanosleep(2) may provide it) in which case this is the same
1132 as calling wxMilliSleep() with the argument of @e microseconds/1000.
1136 void wxMicroSleep(unsigned long microseconds
);
1139 Sleeps for the specified number of milliseconds. Notice that usage of this
1140 function is encouraged instead of calling usleep(3) directly because the
1141 standard @e usleep() function is not MT safe.
1145 void wxMilliSleep(unsigned long milliseconds
);
1148 Returns a string representing the current date and time.
1155 Sleeps for the specified number of seconds.
1159 void wxSleep(int secs
);
1162 @deprecated This function is deprecated because its name is misleading:
1163 notice that the argument is in milliseconds, not microseconds.
1164 Please use either wxMilliSleep() or wxMicroSleep() depending on
1165 the resolution you need.
1167 Sleeps for the specified number of milliseconds.
1171 void wxUsleep(unsigned long milliseconds
);