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1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: sizer.h
3 // Purpose: topic overview
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // Licence: wxWindows licence
6 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
7
8 /**
9
10 @page overview_sizer Sizers Overview
11
12 @tableofcontents
13
14 Sizers, as represented by the wxSizer class and its descendants in the
15 wxWidgets class hierarchy, have become the method of choice to define the
16 layout of controls in dialogs in wxWidgets because of their ability to create
17 visually appealing dialogs independent of the platform, taking into account
18 the differences in size and style of the individual controls. Unlike the
19 original wxWidgets Dialog Editor, editors such as wxDesigner, DialogBlocks,
20 XRCed and wxWorkshop create dialogs based exclusively on sizers, practically
21 forcing the user to create platform independent layouts without compromises.
22
23 The next section describes and shows what can be done with sizers. The
24 following sections briefly describe how to program with individual sizer
25 classes.
26
27 For information about the wxWidgets resource system, which can describe
28 sizer-based dialogs, see the @ref overview_xrc.
29
30 @see wxSizer, wxBoxSizer, wxStaticBoxSizer, wxGridSizer, wxFlexGridSizer,
31 wxGridBagSizer
32
33
34
35 @section overview_sizer_idea The Idea Behind Sizers
36
37 The layout algorithm used by sizers in wxWidgets is closely related to layout
38 systems in other GUI toolkits, such as Java's AWT, the GTK toolkit or the Qt
39 toolkit. It is based upon the idea of individual subwindows reporting their
40 minimal required size and their ability to get stretched if the size of the
41 parent window has changed. This will most often mean that the programmer does
42 not set the start-up size of a dialog, the dialog will rather be assigned a
43 sizer and this sizer will be queried about the recommended size. This sizer in
44 turn will query its children (which can be normal windows, empty space or other
45 sizers) so that a hierarchy of sizers can be constructed. Note that wxSizer
46 does not derive from wxWindow and thus does not interfere with tab ordering and
47 requires very few resources compared to a real window on screen.
48
49 What makes sizers so well fitted for use in wxWidgets is the fact that every
50 control reports its own minimal size and the algorithm can handle differences
51 in font sizes or different window (dialog item) sizes on different platforms
52 without problems. For example, if the standard font as well as the overall
53 design of Linux/GTK widgets requires more space than on Windows, the initial
54 dialog size will automatically be bigger on Linux/GTK than on Windows.
55
56 There are currently five different kinds of sizers available in wxWidgets. Each
57 represents either a certain way to lay out dialog items in a dialog or it
58 fulfills a special task such as wrapping a static box around a dialog item (or
59 another sizer). These sizers will be discussed one by one in the text below.
60 For more detailed information on how to use sizers programmatically, please
61 refer to the section @ref overview_sizer_box.
62
63
64 @section overview_sizer_features Common Features
65
66 All sizers are containers, that is, they are used to lay out one dialog item
67 (or several dialog items), which they contain. Such items are sometimes
68 referred to as the children of the sizer. Independent of how the individual
69 sizers lay out their children, all children have certain features in common:
70
71 <b>A minimal size</b>: This minimal size is usually identical to the initial
72 size of the controls and may either be set explicitly in the wxSize field of
73 the control constructor or may be calculated by wxWidgets, typically by setting
74 the height and/or the width of the item to -1. Note that only some controls can
75 calculate their size (such as a checkbox) whereas others (such as a listbox)
76 don't have any natural width or height and thus require an explicit size. Some
77 controls can calculate their height, but not their width (e.g. a single line
78 text control):
79
80 @image html overview_sizer_03.png
81
82 @image html overview_sizer_04.png
83
84 @image html overview_sizer_05.png
85
86 <b>A border</b>: The border is just empty space and is used to separate dialog
87 items in a dialog. This border can either be all around, or at any combination
88 of sides such as only above and below the control. The thickness of this border
89 must be set explicitly, typically 5 points. The following samples show dialogs
90 with only one dialog item (a button) and a border of 0, 5, and 10 pixels around
91 the button:
92
93 @image html overview_sizer_00.png
94
95 @image html overview_sizer_01.png
96
97 @image html overview_sizer_02.png
98
99 <b>An alignment</b>: Often, a dialog item is given more space than its minimal
100 size plus its border. Depending on what flags are used for the respective
101 dialog item, the dialog item can be made to fill out the available space
102 entirely, i.e. it will grow to a size larger than the minimal size, or it will
103 be moved to either the centre of the available space or to either side of the
104 space. The following sample shows a listbox and three buttons in a horizontal
105 box sizer; one button is centred, one is aligned at the top, one is aligned at
106 the bottom:
107
108 @image html overview_sizer_06.png
109
110 <b>A stretch factor</b>: If a sizer contains more than one child and it is
111 offered more space than its children and their borders need, the question
112 arises how to distribute the surplus space among the children. For this
113 purpose, a stretch factor may be assigned to each child, where the default
114 value of 0 indicates that the child will not get more space than its requested
115 minimum size. A value of more than zero is interpreted in relation to the sum
116 of all stretch factors in the children of the respective sizer, i.e. if two
117 children get a stretch factor of 1, they will get half the extra space each
118 <em>independent of whether one control has a minimal sizer inferior to the
119 other or not</em>. The following sample shows a dialog with three buttons, the
120 first one has a stretch factor of 1 and thus gets stretched, whereas the other
121 two buttons have a stretch factor of zero and keep their initial width:
122
123 @image html overview_sizer_07.png
124
125 Within wxDesigner, this stretch factor gets set from the @e Option menu.
126
127
128 @section overview_sizer_hiding Hiding Controls Using Sizers
129
130 You can hide controls contained in sizers the same way you would hide any
131 control, using the wxWindow::Show method. However, wxSizer also offers a
132 separate method which can tell the sizer not to consider that control in its
133 size calculations. To hide a window using the sizer, call wxSizer::Show. You
134 must then call Layout on the sizer to force an update.
135
136 This is useful when hiding parts of the interface, since you can avoid removing
137 the controls from the sizer and having to add them back later.
138
139 @note This is supported only by wxBoxSizer and wxFlexGridSizer.
140
141 @subsection overview_sizer_hiding_box wxBoxSizer
142
143 wxBoxSizer can lay out its children either vertically or horizontally,
144 depending on what flag is being used in its constructor. When using a vertical
145 sizer, each child can be centered, aligned to the right or aligned to the left.
146 Correspondingly, when using a horizontal sizer, each child can be centered,
147 aligned at the bottom or aligned at the top. The stretch factor described in
148 the last paragraph is used for the main orientation, i.e. when using a
149 horizontal box sizer, the stretch factor determines how much the child can be
150 stretched horizontally. The following sample shows the same dialog as in the
151 last sample, only the box sizer is a vertical box sizer now:
152
153 @image html overview_sizer_08.png
154
155 @subsection overview_sizer_hiding_static wxStaticBoxSizer
156
157 wxStaticBoxSixer is the same as a wxBoxSizer, but surrounded by a static box.
158 Here is a sample:
159
160 @image html overview_sizer_09.png
161
162 @subsection overview_sizer_hiding_grid wxGridSizer
163
164 wxGridSizer is a two-dimensional sizer. All children are given the same size,
165 which is the minimal size required by the biggest child, in this case the text
166 control in the left bottom border. Either the number of columns or the number
167 or rows is fixed and the grid sizer will grow in the respectively other
168 orientation if new children are added:
169
170 @image html overview_sizer_10.png
171
172 For programming information, see wxGridSizer.
173
174 @subsection overview_sizer_hiding_flexgrid wxFlexGridSizer
175
176 Another two-dimensional sizer derived from wxGridSizer. The width of each
177 column and the height of each row are calculated individually according to the
178 minimal requirements from the respectively biggest child. Additionally, columns
179 and rows can be declared to be stretchable if the sizer is assigned a size
180 different from the one it requested. The following sample shows the same dialog
181 as the one above, but using a flex grid sizer:
182
183 @image html overview_sizer_11.png
184
185
186 @section overview_sizer_box Programming with wxBoxSizer
187
188 The basic idea behind a wxBoxSizer is that windows will most often be laid out
189 in rather simple basic geometry, typically in a row or a column or several
190 hierarchies of either.
191
192 As an example, we will construct a dialog that will contain a text field at the
193 top and two buttons at the bottom. This can be seen as a top-hierarchy column
194 with the text at the top and buttons at the bottom and a low-hierarchy row with
195 an OK button to the left and a Cancel button to the right. In many cases
196 (particularly dialogs under Unix and normal frames) the main window will be
197 resizable by the user and this change of size will have to get propagated to
198 its children. In our case, we want the text area to grow with the dialog,
199 whereas the button shall have a fixed size. In addition, there will be a thin
200 border around all controls to make the dialog look nice and - to make matter
201 worse - the buttons shall be centred as the width of the dialog changes.
202
203 It is the unique feature of a box sizer, that it can grow in both directions
204 (height and width) but can distribute its growth in the main direction
205 (horizontal for a row) @e unevenly among its children. In our example case, the
206 vertical sizer is supposed to propagate all its height changes to only the text
207 area, not to the button area. This is determined by the @e proportion parameter
208 when adding a window (or another sizer) to a sizer. It is interpreted as a
209 weight factor, i.e. it can be zero, indicating that the window may not be
210 resized at all, or above zero. If several windows have a value above zero, the
211 value is interpreted relative to the sum of all weight factors of the sizer, so
212 when adding two windows with a value of 1, they will both get resized equally
213 much and each half as much as the sizer owning them. Then what do we do when a
214 column sizer changes its width? This behaviour is controlled by @e flags (the
215 second parameter of the Add() function): Zero or no flag indicates that the
216 window will preserve it is original size, wxGROW flag (same as wxEXPAND) forces
217 the window to grow with the sizer, and wxSHAPED flag tells the window to change
218 it is size proportionally, preserving original aspect ratio. When wxGROW flag
219 is not used, the item can be aligned within available space. wxALIGN_LEFT,
220 wxALIGN_TOP, wxALIGN_RIGHT, wxALIGN_BOTTOM, wxALIGN_CENTER_HORIZONTAL and
221 wxALIGN_CENTER_VERTICAL do what they say. wxALIGN_CENTRE (same as
222 wxALIGN_CENTER) is defined as (wxALIGN_CENTER_HORIZONTAL |
223 wxALIGN_CENTER_VERTICAL). Default alignment is wxALIGN_LEFT | wxALIGN_TOP.
224
225 As mentioned above, any window belonging to a sizer may have a border, and it
226 can be specified which of the four sides may have this border, using the wxTOP,
227 wxLEFT, wxRIGHT and wxBOTTOM constants or wxALL for all directions (and you may
228 also use wxNORTH, wxWEST etc instead). These flags can be used in combination
229 with the alignment flags above as the second parameter of the Add() method
230 using the binary or operator |. The sizer of the border also must be made
231 known, and it is the third parameter in the Add() method. This means, that the
232 entire behaviour of a sizer and its children can be controlled by the three
233 parameters of the Add() method.
234
235 @code
236 // We want to get a dialog that is stretchable because it
237 // has a text ctrl at the top and two buttons at the bottom.
238
239 MyDialog::MyDialog(wxFrame *parent, wxWindowID id, const wxString &title )
240 : wxDialog(parent, id, title, wxDefaultPosition, wxDefaultSize,
241 wxDEFAULT_DIALOG_STYLE | wxRESIZE_BORDER)
242 {
243 wxBoxSizer *topsizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxVERTICAL );
244
245 // create text ctrl with minimal size 100x60
246 topsizer->Add(
247 new wxTextCtrl( this, -1, "My text.", wxDefaultPosition, wxSize(100,60), wxTE_MULTILINE),
248 1, // make vertically stretchable
249 wxEXPAND | // make horizontally stretchable
250 wxALL, // and make border all around
251 10 ); // set border width to 10
252
253 wxBoxSizer *button_sizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxHORIZONTAL );
254 button_sizer->Add(
255 new wxButton( this, wxID_OK, "OK" ),
256 0, // make horizontally unstretchable
257 wxALL, // make border all around (implicit top alignment)
258 10 ); // set border width to 10
259 button_sizer->Add(
260 new wxButton( this, wxID_CANCEL, "Cancel" ),
261 0, // make horizontally unstretchable
262 wxALL, // make border all around (implicit top alignment)
263 10 ); // set border width to 10
264
265 topsizer->Add(
266 button_sizer,
267 0, // make vertically unstretchable
268 wxALIGN_CENTER ); // no border and centre horizontally
269
270 SetSizerAndFit(topsizer); // use the sizer for layout and size window
271 // accordingly and prevent it from being resized
272 // to smaller size
273 }
274 @endcode
275
276 Note that the new way of specifying flags to wxSizer is via wxSizerFlags. This
277 class greatly eases the burden of passing flags to a wxSizer.
278
279 Here's how you'd do the previous example with wxSizerFlags:
280
281 @code
282 // We want to get a dialog that is stretchable because it
283 // has a text ctrl at the top and two buttons at the bottom.
284
285 MyDialog::MyDialog(wxFrame *parent, wxWindowID id, const wxString &title )
286 : wxDialog(parent, id, title, wxDefaultPosition, wxDefaultSize,
287 wxDEFAULT_DIALOG_STYLE | wxRESIZE_BORDER)
288 {
289 wxBoxSizer *topsizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxVERTICAL );
290
291 // create text ctrl with minimal size 100x60 that is horizontally and
292 // vertically stretchable with a border width of 10
293 topsizer->Add(
294 new wxTextCtrl( this, -1, "My text.", wxDefaultPosition, wxSize(100,60), wxTE_MULTILINE),
295 wxSizerFlags(1).Align().Expand().Border(wxALL, 10));
296
297 wxBoxSizer *button_sizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxHORIZONTAL );
298
299 //create two buttons that are horizontally unstretchable,
300 // with an all-around border with a width of 10 and implicit top alignment
301 button_sizer->Add(
302 new wxButton( this, wxID_OK, "OK" ),
303 wxSizerFlags(0).Align().Border(wxALL, 10));
304
305 button_sizer->Add(
306 new wxButton( this, wxID_CANCEL, "Cancel" ),
307 wxSizerFlags(0).Align().Border(wxALL, 10));
308
309 //create a sizer with no border and centered horizontally
310 topsizer->Add(
311 button_sizer,
312 wxSizerFlags(0).Center() );
313
314 SetSizerAndFit(topsizer); // use the sizer for layout and set size and hints
315 }
316 @endcode
317
318
319
320 @section overview_sizer_types Other Types of Sizers
321
322 wxGridSizer is a sizer which lays out its children in a two-dimensional table
323 with all table fields having the same size, i.e. the width of each field is the
324 width of the widest child, the height of each field is the height of the
325 tallest child.
326
327 wxFlexGridSizer is a sizer which lays out its children in a two-dimensional
328 table with all table fields in one row having the same height and all fields in
329 one column having the same width, but all rows or all columns are not
330 necessarily the same height or width as in the wxGridSizer.
331
332 wxStaticBoxSizer is a sizer derived from wxBoxSizer but adds a static box
333 around the sizer. Note that this static box has to be created separately.
334
335 wxGridBagSizer is a rather special kind of sizer which, unlike the other
336 classes, allows to directly put the elements at the given position in the
337 sizer. Please see its documentation for more details.
338
339 @section overview_sizer_button CreateButtonSizer
340
341 As a convenience, wxDialog::CreateButtonSizer(long flags) can be used to create a
342 standard button sizer in which standard buttons are displayed. The following
343 flags can be passed to this function:
344
345 @code
346 wxYES_NO // Add Yes/No subpanel
347 wxYES // return wxID_YES
348 wxNO // return wxID_NO
349 wxNO_DEFAULT // make the wxNO button the default,
350 // otherwise wxYES or wxOK button will be default
351
352 wxOK // return wxID_OK
353 wxCANCEL // return wxID_CANCEL
354 wxHELP // return wxID_HELP
355
356 wxFORWARD // return wxID_FORWARD
357 wxBACKWARD // return wxID_BACKWARD
358 wxSETUP // return wxID_SETUP
359 wxMORE // return wxID_MORE
360 @endcode
361
362 */