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1 \section{\class{wxPen}}\label{wxpen}
2
3 A pen is a drawing tool for drawing outlines. It is used for drawing
4 lines and painting the outline of rectangles, ellipses, etc. It has a
5 colour, a width and a style.
6
7 \wxheading{Derived from}
8
9 \helpref{wxGDIObject}{wxgdiobject}\\
10 \helpref{wxObject}{wxobject}
11
12 \wxheading{Include files}
13
14 <wx/pen.h>
15
16 \wxheading{Predefined objects}
17
18 Objects:
19
20 {\bf wxNullPen}
21
22 Pointers:
23
24 {\bf wxRED\_PEN\\
25 wxCYAN\_PEN\\
26 wxGREEN\_PEN\\
27 wxBLACK\_PEN\\
28 wxWHITE\_PEN\\
29 wxTRANSPARENT\_PEN\\
30 wxBLACK\_DASHED\_PEN\\
31 wxGREY\_PEN\\
32 wxMEDIUM\_GREY\_PEN\\
33 wxLIGHT\_GREY\_PEN}
34
35 \wxheading{Remarks}
36
37 On a monochrome display, wxWindows shows all non-white pens as black.
38
39 Do not initialize objects on the stack before the program commences,
40 since other required structures may not have been set up yet. Instead,
41 define global pointers to objects and create them in {\it OnInit} or
42 when required.
43
44 An application may wish to dynamically create pens with different
45 characteristics, and there is the consequent danger that a large number
46 of duplicate pens will be created. Therefore an application may wish to
47 get a pointer to a pen by using the global list of pens {\bf
48 wxThePenList}, and calling the member function {\bf FindOrCreatePen}.
49 See the entry for \helpref{wxPenList}{wxpenlist}.
50
51 wxPen uses a reference counting system, so assignments between brushes are very
52 cheap. You can therefore use actual wxPen objects instead of pointers without
53 efficiency problems. Once one wxPen object changes its data it will create its
54 own pen data internally so that other pens, which previously shared the
55 data using the reference counting, are not affected.
56
57 %TODO: an overview for wxPen.
58 \wxheading{See also}
59
60 \helpref{wxPenList}{wxpenlist}, \helpref{wxDC}{wxdc}, \helpref{wxDC::SetPen}{wxdcsetpen}
61
62 \latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}}
63
64 \membersection{wxPen::wxPen}\label{wxpenconstr}
65
66 \func{}{wxPen}{\void}
67
68 Default constructor. The pen will be uninitialised, and \helpref{wxPen::Ok}{wxpenok} will
69 return FALSE.
70
71 \func{}{wxPen}{\param{const wxColour\&}{ colour}, \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ style}}
72
73 Constructs a pen from a colour object, pen width and style.
74
75 \func{}{wxPen}{\param{const wxString\& }{colourName}, \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ style}}
76
77 Constructs a pen from a colour name, pen width and style.
78
79 \func{}{wxPen}{\param{const wxBitmap\&}{ stipple}, \param{int}{ width}}
80
81 Constructs a stippled pen from a stipple bitmap and a width.
82
83 \func{}{wxPen}{\param{const wxPen\&}{ pen}}
84
85 Copy constructor. This uses reference counting so is a cheap operation.
86
87 \wxheading{Parameters}
88
89 \docparam{colour}{A colour object.}
90
91 \docparam{colourName}{A colour name.}
92
93 \docparam{width}{Pen width. Under Windows, the pen width cannot be greater than 1 if
94 the style is wxDOT, wxLONG\_DASH, wxSHORT\_DASH, wxDOT\_DASH, or wxUSER\_DASH.}
95
96 \docparam{stipple}{A stipple bitmap.}
97
98 \docparam{pen}{A pointer or reference to a pen to copy.}
99
100 \docparam{style}{The style may be one of the following:
101
102 \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt
103 \twocolitem{{\bf wxSOLID}}{Solid style.}
104 \twocolitem{{\bf wxTRANSPARENT}}{No pen is used.}
105 \twocolitem{{\bf wxDOT}}{Dotted style.}
106 \twocolitem{{\bf wxLONG\_DASH}}{Long dashed style.}
107 \twocolitem{{\bf wxSHORT\_DASH}}{Short dashed style.}
108 \twocolitem{{\bf wxDOT\_DASH}}{Dot and dash style.}
109 \twocolitem{{\bf wxSTIPPLE}}{Use the stipple bitmap.}
110 \twocolitem{{\bf wxUSER\_DASH}}{Use the user dashes: see \helpref{wxPen::SetDashes}{wxpensetdashes}.}
111 \twocolitem{{\bf wxBDIAGONAL\_HATCH}}{Backward diagonal hatch.}
112 \twocolitem{{\bf wxCROSSDIAG\_HATCH}}{Cross-diagonal hatch.}
113 \twocolitem{{\bf wxFDIAGONAL\_HATCH}}{Forward diagonal hatch.}
114 \twocolitem{{\bf wxCROSS\_HATCH}}{Cross hatch.}
115 \twocolitem{{\bf wxHORIZONTAL\_HATCH}}{Horizontal hatch.}
116 \twocolitem{{\bf wxVERTICAL\_HATCH}}{Vertical hatch.}
117 \end{twocollist}}
118
119 \wxheading{Remarks}
120
121 Different versions of Windows and different versions of other platforms
122 support {\it very} different subsets of the styles above - there is no
123 similarity even between Windows95 and Windows98 - so handle with care.
124
125 If the named colour form is used, an appropriate {\bf wxColour} structure
126 is found in the colour database.
127
128 \wxheading{See also}
129
130 \helpref{wxPen::SetStyle}{wxpensetstyle}, \helpref{wxPen::SetColour}{wxpensetcolour},\rtfsp
131 \helpref{wxPen::SetWidth}{wxpensetwidth}, \helpref{wxPen::SetStipple}{wxpensetstipple}
132
133 \perlnote{Constructors supported by wxPerl are:\par
134 \begin{itemize}
135 \item{Wx::Pen->new( colour, width, style )}
136 \item{Wx::Pen->new( colourName, width, style )}
137 \item{Wx::Pen->new( stipple, width )}
138 \end{itemize}
139 }
140
141 \membersection{wxPen::\destruct{wxPen}}
142
143 \func{}{\destruct{wxPen}}{\void}
144
145 Destructor.
146
147 \wxheading{Remarks}
148
149 The destructor may not delete the underlying pen object of the native windowing
150 system, since wxBrush uses a reference counting system for efficiency.
151
152 Although all remaining pens are deleted when the application exits,
153 the application should try to clean up all pens itself. This is because
154 wxWindows cannot know if a pointer to the pen object is stored in an
155 application data structure, and there is a risk of double deletion.
156
157 \membersection{wxPen::GetCap}\label{wxpengetcap}
158
159 \constfunc{int}{GetCap}{\void}
160
161 Returns the pen cap style, which may be one of {\bf wxCAP\_ROUND}, {\bf wxCAP\_PROJECTING} and
162 \rtfsp{\bf wxCAP\_BUTT}. The default is {\bf wxCAP\_ROUND}.
163
164 \wxheading{See also}
165
166 \helpref{wxPen::SetCap}{wxpensetcap}
167
168 \membersection{wxPen::GetColour}\label{wxpengetcolour}
169
170 \constfunc{wxColour\&}{GetColour}{\void}
171
172 Returns a reference to the pen colour.
173
174 \wxheading{See also}
175
176 \helpref{wxPen::SetColour}{wxpensetcolour}
177
178 \membersection{wxPen::GetDashes}\label{wxpengetdashes}
179
180 \constfunc{int}{GetDashes}{\param{wxDash**}{ dashes}}
181
182 Gets an array of dashes (defined as char in X, DWORD under Windows).
183 {\it dashes} is a pointer to the internal array. Do not deallocate or store this pointer.
184 The function returns the number of dashes associated with this pen.
185
186 \wxheading{See also}
187
188 \helpref{wxPen::SetDashes}{wxpensetdashes}
189
190 \membersection{wxPen::GetJoin}\label{wxpengetjoin}
191
192 \constfunc{int}{GetJoin}{\void}
193
194 Returns the pen join style, which may be one of {\bf wxJOIN\_BEVEL}, {\bf wxJOIN\_ROUND} and
195 \rtfsp{\bf wxJOIN\_MITER}. The default is {\bf wxJOIN\_ROUND}.
196
197 \wxheading{See also}
198
199 \helpref{wxPen::SetJoin}{wxpensetjoin}
200
201 \membersection{wxPen::GetStipple}\label{wxpengetstipple}
202
203 \constfunc{wxBitmap* }{GetStipple}{\void}
204
205 Gets a pointer to the stipple bitmap.
206
207 \wxheading{See also}
208
209 \helpref{wxPen::SetStipple}{wxpensetstipple}
210
211 \membersection{wxPen::GetStyle}\label{wxpengetstyle}
212
213 \constfunc{int}{GetStyle}{\void}
214
215 Returns the pen style.
216
217 \wxheading{See also}
218
219 \helpref{wxPen::wxPen}{wxpenconstr}, \helpref{wxPen::SetStyle}{wxpensetstyle}
220
221 \membersection{wxPen::GetWidth}\label{wxpengetwidth}
222
223 \constfunc{int}{GetWidth}{\void}
224
225 Returns the pen width.
226
227 \wxheading{See also}
228
229 \helpref{wxPen::SetWidth}{wxpensetwidth}
230
231 \membersection{wxPen::Ok}\label{wxpenok}
232
233 \constfunc{bool}{Ok}{\void}
234
235 Returns TRUE if the pen is initialised.
236
237 \membersection{wxPen::SetCap}\label{wxpensetcap}
238
239 \func{void}{SetCap}{\param{int}{ capStyle}}
240
241 Sets the pen cap style, which may be one of {\bf wxCAP\_ROUND}, {\bf wxCAP\_PROJECTING} and
242 \rtfsp{\bf wxCAP\_BUTT}. The default is {\bf wxCAP\_ROUND}.
243
244 \wxheading{See also}
245
246 \helpref{wxPen::GetCap}{wxpengetcap}
247
248 \membersection{wxPen::SetColour}\label{wxpensetcolour}
249
250 \func{void}{SetColour}{\param{wxColour\&}{ colour}}
251
252 \func{void}{SetColour}{\param{const wxString\& }{colourName}}
253
254 \func{void}{SetColour}{\param{int}{ red}, \param{int}{ green}, \param{int}{ blue}}
255
256 The pen's colour is changed to the given colour.
257
258 \wxheading{See also}
259
260 \helpref{wxPen::GetColour}{wxpengetcolour}
261
262 \membersection{wxPen::SetDashes}\label{wxpensetdashes}
263
264 \func{void}{SetDashes}{\param{int }{n}, \param{wxDash*}{ dashes}}
265
266 Associates an array of pointers to dashes (defined as char in X, DWORD under Windows)
267 with the pen. The array is not deallocated by wxPen, but neither must it be
268 deallocated by the calling application until the pen is deleted or this
269 function is called with a NULL array.
270
271 %TODO: describe in detail.
272 \wxheading{See also}
273
274 \helpref{wxPen::GetDashes}{wxpengetdashes}
275
276 \membersection{wxPen::SetJoin}\label{wxpensetjoin}
277
278 \func{void}{SetJoin}{\param{int}{join\_style}}
279
280 Sets the pen join style, which may be one of {\bf wxJOIN\_BEVEL}, {\bf wxJOIN\_ROUND} and
281 \rtfsp{\bf wxJOIN\_MITER}. The default is {\bf wxJOIN\_ROUND}.
282
283 \wxheading{See also}
284
285 \helpref{wxPen::GetJoin}{wxpengetjoin}
286
287 \membersection{wxPen::SetStipple}\label{wxpensetstipple}
288
289 \func{void}{SetStipple}{\param{wxBitmap* }{stipple}}
290
291 Sets the bitmap for stippling.
292
293 \wxheading{See also}
294
295 \helpref{wxPen::GetStipple}{wxpengetstipple}
296
297 \membersection{wxPen::SetStyle}\label{wxpensetstyle}
298
299 \func{void}{SetStyle}{\param{int}{ style}}
300
301 Set the pen style.
302
303 \wxheading{See also}
304
305 \helpref{wxPen::wxPen}{wxpenconstr}
306
307 \membersection{wxPen::SetWidth}\label{wxpensetwidth}
308
309 \func{void}{SetWidth}{\param{int}{ width}}
310
311 Sets the pen width.
312
313 \wxheading{See also}
314
315 \helpref{wxPen::GetWidth}{wxpengetwidth}
316
317 \membersection{wxPen::operator $=$}\label{wxpenassignment}
318
319 \func{wxPen\&}{operator $=$}{\param{const wxPen\& }{pen}}
320
321 Assignment operator, using reference counting. Returns a reference
322 to `this'.
323
324 \membersection{wxPen::operator $==$}\label{wxpenequals}
325
326 \func{bool}{operator $==$}{\param{const wxPen\& }{pen}}
327
328 Equality operator. Two pens are equal if they contain pointers
329 to the same underlying pen data. It does not compare each attribute,
330 so two independently-created pens using the same parameters will
331 fail the test.
332
333 \membersection{wxPen::operator $!=$}\label{wxpennotequals}
334
335 \func{bool}{operator $!=$}{\param{const wxPen\& }{pen}}
336
337 Inequality operator. Two pens are not equal if they contain pointers
338 to different underlying pen data. It does not compare each attribute.
339
340 \section{\class{wxPenList}}\label{wxpenlist}
341
342 There is only one instance of this class: {\bf wxThePenList}. Use
343 this object to search for a previously created pen of the desired
344 type and create it if not already found. In some windowing systems,
345 the pen may be a scarce resource, so it can pay to reuse old
346 resources if possible. When an application finishes, all pens will
347 be deleted and their resources freed, eliminating the possibility of
348 `memory leaks'. However, it is best not to rely on this automatic
349 cleanup because it can lead to double deletion in some circumstances.
350
351 There are two mechanisms in recent versions of wxWindows which make the
352 pen list less useful than it once was. Under Windows, scarce resources
353 are cleaned up internally if they are not being used. Also, a referencing
354 counting mechanism applied to all GDI objects means that some sharing
355 of underlying resources is possible. You don't have to keep track of pointers,
356 working out when it is safe delete a pen, because the referencing counting does
357 it for you. For example, you can set a pen in a device context, and then
358 immediately delete the pen you passed, because the pen is `copied'.
359
360 So you may find it easier to ignore the pen list, and instead create
361 and copy pens as you see fit. If your Windows resource meter suggests
362 your application is using too many resources, you can resort to using
363 GDI lists to share objects explicitly.
364
365 The only compelling use for the pen list is for wxWindows to keep
366 track of pens in order to clean them up on exit. It is also kept for
367 backward compatibility with earlier versions of wxWindows.
368
369 \wxheading{See also}
370
371 \helpref{wxPen}{wxpen}
372
373 \latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}}
374
375 \membersection{wxPenList::wxPenList}
376
377 \func{void}{wxPenList}{\void}
378
379 Constructor. The application should not construct its own pen list:
380 use the object pointer {\bf wxThePenList}.
381
382 \membersection{wxPenList::AddPen}\label{wxpenlistaddpen}
383
384 \func{void}{AddPen}{\param{wxPen*}{ pen}}
385
386 Used internally by wxWindows to add a pen to the list.
387
388 \membersection{wxPenList::FindOrCreatePen}\label{wxpenlistfindorcreatepen}
389
390 \func{wxPen*}{FindOrCreatePen}{\param{const wxColour\& }{colour}, \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ style}}
391
392 Finds a pen with the specified attributes and returns it, else creates a new pen, adds it
393 to the pen list, and returns it.
394
395 \func{wxPen*}{FindOrCreatePen}{\param{const wxString\& }{colourName}, \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ style}}
396
397 Finds a pen with the specified attributes and returns it, else creates a new pen, adds it
398 to the pen list, and returns it.
399
400 \wxheading{Parameters}
401
402 \docparam{colour}{Colour object.}
403
404 \docparam{colourName}{Colour name, which should be in the \helpref{colour database}{wxcolourdatabase}.}
405
406 \docparam{width}{Width of pen.}
407
408 \docparam{style}{Pen style. See \helpref{wxPen::wxPen}{wxpenconstr} for a list of styles.}
409
410 \membersection{wxPenList::RemovePen}\label{wxpenlistremovepen}
411
412 \func{void}{RemovePen}{\param{wxPen*}{ pen}}
413
414 Used by wxWindows to remove a pen from the list.
415
416