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git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blob - interface/wx/mimetype.h
1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3 // Purpose: interface of wxMimeTypesManager
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // Licence: wxWindows licence
6 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
9 @class wxMimeTypesManager
11 This class allows the application to retrieve informations about all known
12 MIME types from a system-specific location and the filename extensions to the
13 MIME types and vice versa.
15 MIME stands for "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions" and was originally
16 used in mail protocols. It's standardized by several RFCs.
18 Under Windows, the MIME type information is queried from registry.
19 Under Linux and Unix, it is queried from the XDG data directories.
21 Currently, wxMimeTypesManager is limited to @e reading MIME type information.
23 The application should not construct its own manager: it should use the
24 object pointer ::wxTheMimeTypesManager.
25 The functions GetFileTypeFromMimeType() and GetFileTypeFromExtension()
26 return a wxFileType object which may be further queried for file description,
27 icon and other attributes.
29 @section mimetypemanager_helpers Helper functions
31 All of these functions are static (i.e. don't need a wxMimeTypesManager object
32 to call them) and provide some useful operations for string representations of
33 MIME types. Their usage is recommended instead of directly working with MIME
34 types using wxString functions.
36 - wxMimeTypesManager::IsOfType()
38 @section mimetypemanager_query Query database
40 These functions are the heart of this class: they allow to find a file type
41 object from either file extension or MIME type.
42 If the function is successful, it returns a pointer to the wxFileType object
43 which must be deleted by the caller, otherwise @NULL will be returned.
45 - wxMimeTypesManager::GetFileTypeFromMimeType()
46 - wxMimeTypesManager::GetFileTypeFromExtension()
53 class wxMimeTypesManager
57 Constructor puts the object in the "working" state.
62 Destructor is not virtual, so this class should not be derived from.
64 ~wxMimeTypesManager();
67 This function may be used to provide hard-wired fallbacks for the MIME types
68 and extensions that might not be present in the system MIME database.
69 Please see the typetest sample for an example of using it.
71 void AddFallbacks(const wxFileTypeInfo
* fallbacks
);
74 Gather information about the files with given extension and return the
75 corresponding wxFileType object or @NULL if the extension is unknown.
77 The @a extension parameter may have, or not, the leading dot, if it has it,
78 it is stripped automatically. It must not however be empty.
80 wxFileType
* GetFileTypeFromExtension(const wxString
& extension
);
83 Gather information about the files with given MIME type and return the
84 corresponding wxFileType object or @NULL if the MIME type is unknown.
86 wxFileType
* GetFileTypeFromMimeType(const wxString
& mimeType
);
90 This function returns @true if either the given @a mimeType is exactly
91 the same as @a wildcard or if it has the same category and the subtype of
92 @a wildcard is '*'. Note that the '*' wildcard is not allowed in
95 The comparison don by this function is case insensitive so it is not
96 necessary to convert the strings to the same case before calling it.
98 static bool IsOfType(const wxString
& mimeType
, const wxString
& wildcard
);
102 Create a new association using the fields of wxFileTypeInfo (at least
103 the MIME type and the extension should be set).
105 wxFileType
*Associate(const wxFileTypeInfo
& ftInfo
);
110 bool Unassociate(wxFileType
*ft
) ;
113 Enumerate all known file types. Returns the number of retrieved items.
115 size_t EnumAllFileTypes(wxArrayString
& mimetypes
);
121 The global wxMimeTypesManager instance.
123 wxMimeTypesManager
* wxTheMimeTypesManager
;
130 This class holds information about a given @e file type.
132 File type is the same as MIME type under Unix, but under Windows it corresponds
133 more to an extension than to MIME type (in fact, several extensions may
134 correspond to a file type).
136 This object may be created in several different ways: the program might know the
137 file extension and wish to find out the corresponding MIME type or, conversely, it
138 might want to find the right extension for the file to which it writes the
139 contents of given MIME type. Depending on how it was created some fields may be
140 unknown so the return value of all the accessors @b must be checked: @false
141 will be returned if the corresponding information couldn't be found.
143 The objects of this class are never created by the application code but are
144 returned by wxMimeTypesManager::GetFileTypeFromMimeType and
145 wxMimeTypesManager::GetFileTypeFromExtension methods.
146 But it is your responsibility to delete the returned pointer when you're done
149 A brief reminder about what the MIME types are (see the RFC 1341 for more
150 information): basically, it is just a pair category/type (for example,
151 "text/plain") where the category is a basic indication of what a file is.
152 Examples of categories are "application", "image", "text", "binary", and
153 type is a precise definition of the document format: "plain" in the example
154 above means just ASCII text without any formatting, while "text/html" is the
155 HTML document source.
157 A MIME type may have one or more associated extensions: "text/plain" will
158 typically correspond to the extension ".txt", but may as well be associated with
162 @section filetype_example MessageParameters class
164 One of the most common usages of MIME is to encode an e-mail message.
165 The MIME type of the encoded message is an example of a message parameter.
166 These parameters are found in the message headers ("Content-XXX").
168 At the very least, they must specify the MIME type and the version of MIME
169 used, but almost always they provide additional information about the message
170 such as the original file name or the charset (for the text documents).
171 These parameters may be useful to the program used to open, edit, view or
172 print the message, so, for example, an e-mail client program will have to
173 pass them to this program. Because wxFileType itself cannot know about
174 these parameters, it uses MessageParameters class to query them.
176 The default implementation only requires the caller to provide the file name
177 (always used by the program to be called - it must know which file to open)
178 and the MIME type and supposes that there are no other parameters.
180 If you wish to supply additional parameters, you must derive your own class
181 from MessageParameters and override GetParamValue() function, for example:
184 // provide the message parameters for the MIME type manager
185 class MailMessageParameters : public wxFileType::MessageParameters
188 MailMessageParameters(const wxString& filename,
189 const wxString& mimetype)
190 : wxFileType::MessageParameters(filename, mimetype)
194 virtual wxString GetParamValue(const wxString& name) const
196 // parameter names are not case-sensitive
197 if ( name.CmpNoCase("charset") == 0 )
200 return wxFileType::MessageParameters::GetParamValue(name);
205 Now you only need to create an object of this class and pass it to, for example,
206 GetOpenCommand like this:
210 if ( filetype->GetOpenCommand(&command,
211 MailMessageParameters("foo.txt", "text/plain")) )
213 // the full command for opening the text documents is in 'command'
214 // (it might be "notepad foo.txt" under Windows or "cat foo.txt" under Unix)
218 // we don't know how to handle such files...
222 Windows: As only the file name is used by the program associated with the
223 given extension anyhow (but no other message parameters), there is no need
224 to ever derive from MessageParameters class for a Windows-only program.
230 @see wxMimeTypesManager
236 The default constructor is private because you should never create objects of
237 this type: they are only returned by wxMimeTypesManager methods.
243 Class representing message parameters.
245 An object of this class may be passed to wxFileType::GetOpenCommand()
246 and GetPrintCommand() if more than the file name needs to be specified.
248 class MessageParameters
251 /// Trivial default constructor.
254 /// Constructor taking a filename and a mime type.
255 MessageParameters(const wxString
& filename
,
256 const wxString
& mimetype
= wxEmptyString
);
258 /// Return the filename.
259 const wxString
& GetFileName() const;
261 /// Return the MIME type.
262 const wxString
& GetMimeType() const;
264 /// Overridable method for derived classes. Returns empty string by default.
265 virtual wxString
GetParamValue(const wxString
& name
) const;
267 /// Trivial but virtual dtor as this class can be inherited from.
268 virtual ~MessageParameters();
274 wxFileType(const wxFileTypeInfo
& ftInfo
);
277 The destructor of this class is not virtual, so it should not be derived from.
282 This function is primarily intended for GetOpenCommand and GetPrintCommand
283 usage but may be also used by the application directly if, for example, you
284 want to use some non-default command to open the file.
286 The function replaces all occurrences of:
287 - %s with the full file name
288 - %t with the MIME type
289 - %{param} with the value of the parameter @e param
290 using the MessageParameters object you pass to it.
292 If there is no '%s' in the command string (and the string is not empty), it is
293 assumed that the command reads the data on stdin and so the effect is the same
294 as " %s" were appended to the string.
296 Unlike all other functions of this class, there is no error return for this
299 static wxString
ExpandCommand(const wxString
& command
,
300 const MessageParameters
& params
);
303 If the function returns @true, the string pointed to by @a desc is filled
304 with a brief description for this file type: for example, "text document" for
305 the "text/plain" MIME type.
307 bool GetDescription(wxString
* desc
) const;
310 If the function returns @true, the array @a extensions is filled
311 with all extensions associated with this file type: for example, it may
312 contain the following two elements for the MIME type "text/html"
313 (notice the absence of the leading dot): "html" and "htm".
315 @b Windows: This function is currently not implemented: there is no
316 (efficient) way to retrieve associated extensions from the given MIME type
317 on this platform, so it will only return @true if the wxFileType object was
318 created by wxMimeTypesManager::GetFileTypeFromExtension function in the
321 bool GetExtensions(wxArrayString
& extensions
);
324 If the function returns @true, the @c iconLoc is filled with the
325 location of the icon for this MIME type.
326 A wxIcon may be created from @a iconLoc later.
328 @b Windows: The function returns the icon shown by Explorer for the files of
331 @b Mac: This function is not implemented and always returns @false.
333 @b Unix: MIME manager gathers information about icons from GNOME
334 and KDE settings and thus GetIcon's success depends on availability
335 of these desktop environments.
337 bool GetIcon(wxIconLocation
* iconLoc
) const;
340 If the function returns @true, the string pointed to by @a mimeType is filled
341 with full MIME type specification for this file type: for example, "text/plain".
343 bool GetMimeType(wxString
* mimeType
) const;
346 Same as GetMimeType() but returns array of MIME types.
348 This array will contain only one item in most cases but sometimes,
349 notably under Unix with KDE, may contain more MIME types.
350 This happens when one file extension is mapped to different MIME types
351 by KDE, mailcap and mime.types.
353 bool GetMimeTypes(wxArrayString
& mimeTypes
) const;
357 With the first version of this method, if the @true is returned, the
358 string pointed to by @a command is filled with the command which must be
359 executed (see wxExecute()) in order to open the file of the given type.
361 In this case, the name of the file as well as any other parameters
362 is retrieved from MessageParameters() class.
364 In the second case, only the filename is specified and the command to be used
365 to open this kind of file is returned directly. An empty string is returned to
366 indicate that an error occurred (typically meaning that there is no standard way
367 to open this kind of files).
369 bool GetOpenCommand(wxString
* command
, const MessageParameters
& params
);
370 wxString
GetOpenCommand(const wxString
& filename
) const;
374 If the function returns @true, the string pointed to by @a command is filled
375 with the command which must be executed (see wxExecute()) in order to
376 print the file of the given type.
378 The name of the file is retrieved from the MessageParameters class.
380 bool GetPrintCommand(wxString
* command
,
381 const MessageParameters
& params
) const;
384 Returns the number of commands for this mime type, and fills the verbs
385 and commands arrays with the command information.
387 size_t GetAllCommands(wxArrayString
*verbs
, wxArrayString
*commands
,
388 const wxFileType::MessageParameters
& params
) const;
394 Container of information about wxFileType.
396 This class simply stores information associated with the file type. It
397 doesn't do anything on its own and is used only to allow constructing
398 wxFileType from it (instead of specifying all the constituent pieces
399 separately) and also with wxMimeTypesManager::AddFallbacks().
405 Default constructor creates an invalid file type info object.
407 Such invalid/empty object should be used to terminate the list of file
408 types passed to wxMimeTypesManager::AddFallbacks().
413 Constructor specifying just the MIME type name.
415 Use the various setter methods below to fully initialize the object.
419 wxFileTypeInfo(const wxString
& mimeType
);
422 Constructor allowing to specify all the fields at once.
424 This is a vararg constructor taking an arbitrary number of extensions
425 after the first four required parameters. The list must be terminated
426 by @c wxNullPtr, notice that @c NULL can't be used here in portable
427 code (C++0x @c nullptr can be used as well if your compiler supports
430 wxFileTypeInfo(const wxString
& mimeType
,
431 const wxString
& openCmd
,
432 const wxString
& printCmd
,
433 const wxString
& description
,
434 const wxString
& extension
,
438 Constuctor using an array of string elements corresponding to the
439 parameters of the ctor above in the same order.
441 wxFileTypeInfo(const wxArrayString
& sArray
);
444 Add another extension associated with this file type.
448 void AddExtension(const wxString
& ext
);
451 Set the file type description.
455 void SetDescription(const wxString
& description
);
458 Set the command to be used for opening files of this type.
462 void SetOpenCommand(const wxString
& command
);
465 Set the command to be used for printing files of this type.
469 void SetPrintCommand(const wxString
& command
);
472 Set the short description for the files of this type.
474 This is only used under MSW for some of the registry keys used for the
475 file type registration.
477 void SetShortDesc(const wxString
& shortDesc
);
480 Set the icon information.
482 void SetIcon(const wxString
& iconFile
, int iconIndex
= 0);
487 const wxString
& GetMimeType() const;
492 const wxString
& GetOpenCommand() const;
495 Get the print command
497 const wxString
& GetPrintCommand() const;
500 Get the short description (only used under Win32 so far)
502 const wxString
& GetShortDesc() const;
505 Get the long, user visible description
507 const wxString
& GetDescription() const;
510 Get the array of all extensions
512 const wxArrayString
& GetExtensions() const;
515 Get the number of extensions.
517 size_t GetExtensionsCount() const;
520 Get the icon filename
522 const wxString
& GetIconFile() const;
525 Get the index of the icon within the icon file.
527 int GetIconIndex() const;