move pages under 'mainpages' and also adopt new link anchor naming and use @itemdef...
[wxWidgets.git] / docs / doxygen / mainpages / utilities.h
1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: utilities.h
3 // Purpose: Utilities page of the Doxygen manual
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows license
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9 /*!
10
11 @page page_utils Utilities and samples supplied with wxWidgets
12
13 @li @ref page_utils_utils
14 @li @ref page_utils_samples
15
16
17 <hr>
18
19
20 @section page_utils_utils Utilities
21
22 In addition to the @ref libraries_page, some
23 additional utilities are supplied in the @c utils hierarchy.
24
25 For other user-contributed packages, please see the Contributions page
26 on the wxWidgets Web site http://www.wxwidgets.org.
27
28
29 @subsection page_utils_utils_helpview Helpview
30
31 Helpview is a program for displaying wxWidgets HTML
32 Help files. In many cases, you may wish to use the wxWidgets HTML
33 Help classes from within your application, but this provides a
34 handy stand-alone viewer. See @ref html_overview for more details.
35 You can find it in @c samples/html/helpview.
36
37 @subsection page_utils_utils_tex2rtf Tex2RTF
38
39 Supplied with wxWidgets is a utility called Tex2RTF for
40 converting @e LaTeX manuals HTML, MS HTML Help, wxHTML Help, RTF, and Windows
41 Help RTF formats. Tex2RTF was used for the wxWidgets manuals and can be used
42 independently by authors wishing to create on-line and printed manuals from the
43 same @e LaTeX source. Please see the separate documentation for Tex2RTF.
44 You can find it under @c utils/tex2rtf.
45
46 @subsection page_utils_utils_helpgen Helpgen
47
48 Helpgen takes C++ header files and generates a Tex2RTF-compatible
49 documentation file for each class it finds, using comments as appropriate.
50 This is a good way to start a reference for a set of classes.
51 Helpgen can be found in @c utils/HelpGen.
52
53 @subsection page_utils_utils_emulator Emulator
54
55 Xnest-based display emulator for X11-based PDA applications.
56 On some systems, the Xnest window does not synchronise with the
57 'skin' window. This program can be found in @c utils/emulator.
58
59
60
61
62 @section page_utils_samples Samples
63
64 Probably the best way to learn wxWidgets is by reading the source of some 50+
65 samples provided with it. Many aspects of wxWidgets programming can be learnt
66 from them, but sometimes it is not simple to just choose the right sample to
67 look at. This overview aims at describing what each sample does/demonstrates to
68 make it easier to find the relevant one if a simple grep through all sources
69 didn't help. They also provide some notes about using the samples and what
70 features of wxWidgets are they supposed to test.
71
72 There are currently more than 50 different samples as part of wxWidgets and
73 this list is not complete. You should start your tour of wxWidgets with the
74 minimal sample which is the wxWidgets version of
75 "Hello, world!". It shows the basic structure of wxWidgets program and is the
76 most commented sample of all - looking at its source code is recommended.
77
78 The next most useful samples are probably widgets
79 and controls which show many of wxWidgets native and
80 generic controls, such as buttons, listboxes, checkboxes, comboboxes etc.
81
82 Other, more complicated controls, have their own samples. In this category you
83 may find the following samples showing the corresponding controls:
84
85 @li wxCalendarCtrl: @ref page_utils_samples_calendar
86 @li wxListCtrl: @ref page_utils_samples_listctrl
87 @li wxTreeCtrl: @ref page_utils_samples_treectrl
88 @li wxGrid: @ref page_utils_samples_grid
89
90 Finally, it might be helpful to do a search in the entire sample directory if
91 you can't find the sample showing the control you are interested in by
92 name. Most classes contained in wxWidgets occur in at least one of the samples.
93
94
95 @subsection page_utils_samples_minimal Minimal sample
96
97 The minimal sample is what most people will know under the term Hello World,
98 i.e. a minimal program that doesn't demonstrate anything apart from what is
99 needed to write a program that will display a "hello" dialog. This is usually
100 a good starting point for learning how to use wxWidgets.
101
102
103 @subsection page_utils_samples_animate Animate sample
104
105 The @c animate sample shows how you can use wxAnimationCtrl
106 control and shows concept of a platform-dependent animation encapsulated
107 in wxAnimation.
108
109
110 @subsection page_utils_samples_artprovider Art provider sample
111
112 The @c artprov sample shows how you can customize the look of standard
113 wxWidgets dialogs by replacing default bitmaps/icons with your own versions.
114 It also shows how you can use wxArtProvider to
115 get stock bitmaps for use in your application.
116
117
118 @subsection page_utils_samples_calendar Calendar sample
119
120 This font shows the calendar control in action. It
121 shows how to configure the control (see the different options in the calendar
122 menu) and also how to process the notifications from it.
123
124
125 @subsection page_utils_samples_config Config sample
126
127 This sample demonstrates the wxConfig classes in a platform
128 independent way, i.e. it uses text based files to store a given configuration under
129 Unix and uses the Registry under Windows.
130
131 See wxConfig overview for the descriptions of all
132 features of this class.
133
134
135 @subsection page_utils_samples_controls Controls sample
136
137 The controls sample is the main test program for most simple controls used in
138 wxWidgets. The sample tests their basic functionality, events, placement,
139 modification in terms of colour and font as well as the possibility to change
140 the controls programmatically, such as adding an item to a list box etc. Apart
141 from that, the sample uses a wxNotebook and tests most
142 features of this special control (using bitmap in the tabs, using
143 wxSizer instances and wxLayoutConstraints within notebook pages, advancing pages
144 programmatically and vetoing a page change by intercepting the wxNotebookEvent.
145
146 The various controls tested are listed here:
147
148 @li wxButton
149 @li wxBitmapButton
150 @li wxCheckBox
151 @li wxChoice
152 @li wxComboBox
153 @li wxGauge
154 @li wxStaticBox
155 @li wxListBox
156 @li wxSpinCtrl
157 @li wxSpinButton
158 @li wxStaticText
159 @li wxStaticBitmap
160 @li wxRadioBox
161 @li wxRadioButton
162 @li wxSlider
163
164
165 @subsection page_utils_samples_debugrpt DebugRpt sample
166
167 This sample shows how to use wxDebugReport class to
168 generate a debug report in case of a program crash or otherwise. On start up,
169 it proposes to either crash itself (by dereferencing a NULL pointer) or
170 generate debug report without doing it. Next it initializes the debug report
171 with standard information adding a custom file to it (just a timestamp) and
172 allows to view the information gathered using
173 wxDebugReportPreview.
174
175 For the report processing part of the sample to work you should make available
176 a Web server accepting form uploads, otherwise
177 wxDebugReportUpload will report an error.
178
179
180 @subsection page_utils_samples_dialogs Dialogs sample
181
182 This sample shows how to use the common dialogs available from wxWidgets. These
183 dialogs are described in detail in the Common dialogs overview.
184
185
186 @subsection page_utils_samples_dialup Dialup sample
187
188 This sample shows the wxDialUpManager
189 class. In the status bar, it displays the information gathered through its
190 interface: in particular, the current connection status (online or offline) and
191 whether the connection is permanent (in which case a string `LAN' appears in
192 the third status bar field - but note that you may be on a LAN not
193 connected to the Internet, in which case you will not see this) or not.
194
195 Using the menu entries, you may also dial or hang up the line if you have a
196 modem attached and (this only makes sense for Windows) list the available
197 connections.
198
199
200 @subsection page_utils_samples_dnd DnD sample
201
202 This sample shows both clipboard and drag and drop in action. It is quite non
203 trivial and may be safely used as a basis for implementing the clipboard and
204 drag and drop operations in a real-life program.
205
206 When you run the sample, its screen is split in several parts. On the top,
207 there are two listboxes which show the standard derivations of
208 wxDropTarget:
209 wxTextDropTarget and
210 wxFileDropTarget.
211
212 The middle of the sample window is taken by the log window which shows what is
213 going on (of course, this only works in debug builds) and may be helpful to see
214 the sequence of steps of data transfer.
215
216 Finally, the last part is used for dragging text from it to either one of the
217 listboxes (only one will accept it) or another application. The last
218 functionality available from the main frame is to paste a bitmap from the
219 clipboard (or, in the case of the Windows version, also a metafile) - it will be
220 shown in a new frame.
221
222 So far, everything we mentioned was implemented with minimal amount of code
223 using standard wxWidgets classes. The more advanced features are demonstrated
224 if you create a shape frame from the main frame menu. A shape is a geometric
225 object which has a position, size and color. It models some
226 application-specific data in this sample. A shape object supports its own
227 private wxDataFormat which means that you may cut and
228 paste it or drag and drop (between one and the same or different shapes) from
229 one sample instance to another (or the same). However, chances are that no
230 other program supports this format and so shapes can also be rendered as
231 bitmaps which allows them to be pasted/dropped in many other applications
232 (and, under Windows, also as metafiles which are supported by most of Windows
233 programs as well - try Write/Wordpad, for example).
234
235 Take a look at DnDShapeDataObject class to see how you may use
236 wxDataObject to achieve this.
237
238
239 @subsection page_utils_samples_event Event sample
240
241 The event sample demonstrates various features of the wxWidgets events. It
242 shows using dynamic events and connecting/disconnecting the event handlers
243 during run time and also using
244 PushEventHandler() and
245 PopEventHandler().
246
247
248 @subsection page_utils_samples_except Except(ions) sample
249
250 This very simple sample shows how to use C++ exceptions in wxWidgets programs,
251 i.e. where to catch the exception which may be thrown by the program code. It
252 doesn't do anything very exciting by itself, you need to study its code to
253 understand what goes on.
254
255 You need to build the library with @c wxUSE_EXCEPTIONS being set to @c 1
256 and compile your code with C++ exceptions support to be able to build this
257 sample.
258
259
260 @subsection page_utils_samples_exec Exec sample
261
262 The exec sample demonstrates the wxExecute and
263 wxShell functions. Both of them are used to execute the
264 external programs and the sample shows how to do this synchronously (waiting
265 until the program terminates) or asynchronously (notification will come later).
266
267 It also shows how to capture the output of the child process in both
268 synchronous and asynchronous cases and how to kill the processes with
269 wxProcess::Kill and test for their existence with
270 wxProcess::Exists.
271
272
273 @subsection page_utils_samples_font Font sample
274
275 The font sample demonstrates wxFont,
276 wxFontEnumerator and
277 wxFontMapper classes. It allows you to see the fonts
278 available (to wxWidgets) on the computer and shows all characters of the
279 chosen font as well.
280
281
282 @subsection page_utils_samples_grid Grid sample
283
284 TODO.
285
286
287 @subsection page_utils_samples_html HTML samples
288
289 Eight HTML samples (you can find them in directory @c samples/html)
290 cover all features of the HTML sub-library.
291
292 @li @b Test demonstrates how to create wxHtmlWindow
293 and also shows most supported HTML tags.
294
295 @li @b Widget shows how you can embed ordinary controls or windows within an
296 HTML page. It also nicely explains how to write new tag handlers and extend
297 the library to work with unsupported tags.
298
299 @li @b About may give you an idea how to write good-looking About boxes.
300
301 @li @b Zip demonstrates use of virtual file systems in wxHTML. The zip archives
302 handler (ships with wxWidgets) allows you to access HTML pages stored
303 in a compressed archive as if they were ordinary files.
304
305 @li @b Virtual is yet another virtual file systems demo. This one generates pages at run-time.
306 You may find it useful if you need to display some reports in your application.
307
308 @li @b Printing explains use of wxHtmlEasyPrinting
309 class which serves as as-simple-as-possible interface for printing HTML
310 documents without much work. In fact, only few function calls are sufficient.
311
312 @li @b Help and @b Helpview are variations on displaying HTML help
313 (compatible with MS HTML Help Workshop). @e Help shows how to embed
314 wxHtmlHelpController in your application
315 while @e Helpview is a simple tool that only pops up the help window and
316 displays help books given at command line.
317
318
319 @subsection page_utils_samples_image Image sample
320
321 The image sample demonstrates use of the wxImage class
322 and shows how to download images in a variety of formats, currently PNG, GIF,
323 TIFF, JPEG, BMP, PNM and PCX. The top of the sample shows two rectangles, one
324 of which is drawn directly in the window, the other one is drawn into a
325 wxBitmap, converted to a wxImage, saved as a PNG image
326 and then reloaded from the PNG file again so that conversions between wxImage
327 and wxBitmap as well as loading and saving PNG files are tested.
328
329 At the bottom of the main frame there is a test for using a monochrome bitmap by
330 drawing into a wxMemoryDC. The bitmap is then drawn
331 specifying the foreground and background colours with
332 wxDC::SetTextForeground and
333 wxDC::SetTextBackground (on the left). The
334 bitmap is then converted to a wxImage and the foreground colour (black) is
335 replaced with red using wxImage::Replace.
336
337 This sample also contains the code for testing the image rotation and resizing
338 and using raw bitmap access, see the corresponding menu commands.
339
340
341 @subsection page_utils_samples_internat Internat(ionalization) sample
342
343 The not very clearly named internat sample demonstrates the wxWidgets
344 internationalization (i18n for short from now on) features. To be more
345 precise, it only shows localization support, i.e. support for translating the
346 program messages into another language while true i18n would also involve
347 changing the other aspects of the programs behaviour.
348
349 More information about this sample can be found in the @c readme.txt file in
350 its directory. Please see also i18n overview.
351
352
353 @subsection page_utils_samples_layout Layout sample
354
355 The layout sample demonstrates the two different layout systems offered
356 by wxWidgets. When starting the program, you will see a frame with some
357 controls and some graphics. The controls will change their size whenever
358 you resize the entire frame and the exact behaviour of the size changes
359 is determined using the wxLayoutConstraints
360 class. See also the overview and the
361 wxIndividualLayoutConstraint
362 class for further information.
363
364 The menu in this sample offers two more tests, one showing how to use
365 a wxBoxSizer in a simple dialog and the other one
366 showing how to use sizers in connection with a wxNotebook
367 class. See also wxSizer.
368
369
370 @subsection page_utils_samples_listctrl Listctrl sample
371
372 This sample shows the wxListCtrl control. Different modes
373 supported by the control (list, icons, small icons, report) may be chosen from
374 the menu.
375
376 The sample also provides some timings for adding/deleting/sorting a lot of
377 (several thousands) items into the control.
378
379
380 @subsection page_utils_samples_mediaplayer Mediaplayer sample
381
382 This sample demonstrates how to use all the features of
383 wxMediaCtrl and play various types of sound, video,
384 and other files.
385
386 It replaces the old dynamic sample.
387
388
389 @subsection page_utils_samples_notebook Notebook sample
390
391 This samples shows wxBookCtrl family of controls.
392 Although initially it was written to demonstrate wxNotebook
393 only, it can now be also used to see wxListbook,
394 wxChoicebook and wxTreebook in action.
395 Test each of the controls, their orientation, images and pages using
396 commands through menu.
397
398
399 @subsection page_utils_samples_render Render sample
400
401 This sample shows how to replace the default wxWidgets
402 renderer and also how to write a shared library
403 (DLL) implementing a renderer and load and unload it during the run-time.
404
405
406 @subsection page_utils_samples_scrollsub Scroll subwindow sample
407
408 This sample demonstrates use of the wxScrolledWindow
409 class including placing subwindows into it and drawing simple graphics. It uses the
410 SetTargetWindow method and thus the effect
411 of scrolling does not show in the scrolled window itself, but in one of its subwindows.
412
413 Additionally, this samples demonstrates how to optimize drawing operations in wxWidgets,
414 in particular using the wxWindow::IsExposed method with
415 the aim to prevent unnecessary drawing in the window and thus reducing or removing
416 flicker on screen.
417
418
419 @subsection page_utils_samples_sockets Sockets sample
420
421 The sockets sample demonstrates how to use the communication facilities
422 provided by wxSocket. There are two different
423 applications in this sample: a server, which is implemented using a
424 wxSocketServer object, and a client, which
425 is implemented as a wxSocketClient.
426
427 The server binds to the local address, using TCP port number 3000,
428 sets up an event handler to be notified of incoming connection requests
429 (@b wxSOCKET_CONNECTION events), and sits there, waiting for clients
430 (@e listening, in socket parlance). For each accepted connection,
431 a new wxSocketBase object is created. These
432 socket objects are independent from the server that created them, so
433 they set up their own event handler, and then request to be notified
434 of @b wxSOCKET_INPUT (incoming data) or @b wxSOCKET_LOST
435 (connection closed at the remote end) events. In the sample, the event
436 handler is the same for all connections; to find out which socket the
437 event is addressed to, the GetSocket function
438 is used.
439
440 Although it might take some time to get used to the event-oriented
441 system upon which wxSocket is built, the benefits are many. See, for
442 example, that the server application, while being single-threaded
443 (and of course without using fork() or ugly select() loops) can handle
444 an arbitrary number of connections.
445
446 The client starts up unconnected, so you can use the Connect... option
447 to specify the address of the server you are going to connect to (the
448 TCP port number is hard-coded as 3000). Once connected, a number of
449 tests are possible. Currently, three tests are implemented. They show
450 how to use the basic IO calls in wxSocketBase,
451 such as wxSocketBase::Read, wxSocketBase::Write,
452 wxSocketBase::ReadMsg and wxSocketBase::WriteMsg,
453 and how to set up the correct IO flags depending on what you are going to
454 do. See the comments in the code for more information. Note that because
455 both clients and connection objects in the server set up an event handler
456 to catch @b wxSOCKET_LOST events, each one is immediately notified
457 if the other end closes the connection.
458
459 There is also a URL test which shows how to use
460 the wxURL class to fetch data from a given URL.
461
462 The sockets sample is work in progress. Some things to do:
463
464 @li More tests for basic socket functionality.
465 @li More tests for protocol classes (wxProtocol and its descendants).
466 @li Tests for the recently added (and still in alpha stage) datagram sockets.
467 @li New samples which actually do something useful (suggestions accepted).
468
469
470 @subsection page_utils_samples_sound Sound sample
471
472 The @c sound sample shows how to use wxSound for simple
473 audio output (e.g. notifications).
474
475
476 @subsection page_utils_samples_statbar Statbar sample
477
478 This sample shows how to create and use wxStatusBar. Although most of the
479 samples have a statusbar, they usually only create a default one and only
480 do it once.
481
482 Here you can see how to recreate the statusbar (with possibly different number
483 of fields) and how to use it to show icons/bitmaps and/or put arbitrary
484 controls into it.
485
486
487 @subsection page_utils_samples_taborder Tab order sample
488
489 This sample allows to test keyboard navigation (mostly done using the
490 @c TAB key, hence the sample name) between different controls.
491 It shows the use of wxWindow::MoveBeforeInTabOrder() and
492 MoveAfterInTabOrder() methods to change
493 the default order of the windows in the navigation chain and of
494 wxWindow::Navigate() for moving focus along this
495 chain.
496
497
498 @subsection page_utils_samples_text Text sample
499
500 This sample demonstrates four features: firstly the use and many variants of
501 the wxTextCtrl class (single line, multi line, read only,
502 password, ignoring TAB, ignoring ENTER).
503
504 Secondly it shows how to intercept a wxKeyEvent in both
505 the raw form using the @c EVT_KEY_UP and @c EVT_KEY_DOWN macros and the
506 higher level from using the @c EVT_CHAR macro. All characters will be logged
507 in a log window at the bottom of the main window. By pressing some of the function
508 keys, you can test some actions in the text ctrl as well as get statistics on the
509 text ctrls, which is useful for testing if these statistics actually are correct.
510
511 Thirdly, on platforms which support it, the sample will offer to copy text to the
512 wxClipboard and to paste text from it. The GTK version will
513 use the so called PRIMARY SELECTION, which is the pseudo clipboard under X and
514 best known from pasting text to the XTerm program.
515
516 Last not least: some of the text controls have tooltips and the sample also shows
517 how tooltips can be centrally disabled and their latency controlled.
518
519
520 @subsection page_utils_samples_thread Thread sample
521
522 This sample demonstrates use of threads in connection with GUI programs.
523 There are two fundamentally different ways to use threads in GUI programs and
524 either way has to take care of the fact that the GUI library itself usually
525 is not multi-threading safe, i.e. that it might crash if two threads try to
526 access the GUI class simultaneously. One way to prevent that is have a normal
527 GUI program in the main thread and some worker threads which work in the
528 background. In order to make communication between the main thread and the
529 worker threads possible, wxWidgets offers the wxPostEvent
530 function and this sample makes use of this function.
531
532 The other way to use a so called Mutex (such as those offered in the wxMutex
533 class) that prevent threads from accessing the GUI classes as long as any other
534 thread accesses them. For this, wxWidgets has the wxMutexGuiEnter
535 and wxMutexGuiLeave functions, both of which are
536 used and tested in the sample as well.
537
538 See also @ref thread_overview and wxThread.
539
540
541 @subsection page_utils_samples_toolbar Toolbar sample
542
543 The toolbar sample shows the wxToolBar class in action.
544
545 The following things are demonstrated:
546
547 @li Creating the toolbar using wxToolBar::AddTool and wxToolBar::AddControl: see
548 MyApp::InitToolbar in the sample.
549 @li Using @c EVT_UPDATE_UI handler for automatically enabling/disabling
550 toolbar buttons without having to explicitly call EnableTool. This is done
551 in MyFrame::OnUpdateCopyAndCut.
552 @li Using wxToolBar::DeleteTool and wxToolBar::InsertTool to dynamically update the
553 toolbar.
554
555 Some buttons in the main toolbar are check buttons, i.e. they stay checked when
556 pressed. On the platforms which support it, the sample also adds a combobox
557 to the toolbar showing how you can use arbitrary controls and not only buttons
558 in it.
559
560 If you toggle another toolbar in the sample (using @c Ctrl-A) you will also
561 see the radio toolbar buttons in action: the first three buttons form a radio
562 group, i.e. checking any of them automatically unchecks the previously
563 checked one.
564
565
566 @subsection page_utils_samples_treectrl Treectrl sample
567
568 This sample demonstrates using the wxTreeCtrl class. Here
569 you may see how to process various notification messages sent by this control
570 and also when they occur (by looking at the messages in the text control in
571 the bottom part of the frame).
572
573 Adding, inserting and deleting items and branches from the tree as well as
574 sorting (in default alphabetical order as well as in custom one) is
575 demonstrated here as well - try the corresponding menu entries.
576
577
578 @subsection page_utils_samples_widgets Widgets sample
579
580 The widgets sample is the main presentation program for most simple and advanced
581 native controls and complex generic widgets provided by wxWidgets.
582 The sample tests their basic functionality, events, placement, modification
583 in terms of colour and font as well as the possibility to change
584 the controls programmatically, such as adding an item to a list box etc.
585 All widgets are categorized for easy browsing.
586
587
588 @subsection page_utils_samples_wizard Wizard sample
589
590 This sample shows the so-called wizard dialog (implemented using
591 wxWizard and related classes). It shows almost all
592 features supported:
593
594 @li Using bitmaps with the wizard and changing them depending on the page
595 shown (notice that wxValidationPage in the sample has a different image from
596 the other ones)
597 @li Using TransferDataFromWindow
598 to verify that the data entered is correct before passing to the next page
599 (done in wxValidationPage which forces the user to check a checkbox before
600 continuing).
601 @li Using more elaborated techniques to allow returning to the previous
602 page, but not continuing to the next one or vice versa (in wxRadioboxPage)
603 @li This (wxRadioboxPage) page also shows how the page may process the
604 @e Cancel button itself instead of relying on the wizard parent to do it.
605 @li Normally, the order of the pages in the wizard is known at compile-time,
606 but sometimes it depends on the user choices: wxCheckboxPage shows how to
607 dynamically decide which page to display next (see also
608 wxWizardPage)
609
610 */