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git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blob - docs/doxygen/overviews/treectrl.h
1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3 // Purpose: topic overview
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
6 // Licence: wxWindows licence
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11 @page overview_treectrl wxTreeCtrl Overview
15 The tree control displays its items in a tree like structure. Each item has
16 its own (optional) icon and a label. An item may be either collapsed (meaning
17 that its children are not visible) or expanded (meaning that its children are
18 shown). Each item in the tree is identified by its @c itemId which is of opaque
19 data type wxTreeItemId. You can test whether an item is valid by calling
22 @see wxTreeCtrl, wxImageList
24 The items text and image may be retrieved and changed with (Get|Set)ItemText
25 and (Get|Set)ItemImage. In fact, an item may even have two images associated
26 with it: the normal one and another one for selected state which is
27 set/retrieved with (Get|Set)ItemSelectedImage functions, but this functionality
28 might be unavailable on some platforms.
30 Tree items have several attributes: an item may be selected or not, visible or
31 not, bold or not. It may also be expanded or collapsed. All these attributes
32 may be retrieved with the corresponding functions: IsSelected, IsVisible,
33 IsBold and IsExpanded. Only one item at a time may be selected, selecting
34 another one (with SelectItem) automatically unselects the previously selected
37 In addition to its icon and label, a user-specific data structure may be
38 associated with all tree items. If you wish to do it, you should derive a class
39 from wxTreeItemData which is a very simple class having only one function
40 GetId() which returns the id of the item this data is associated with. This
41 data will be freed by the control itself when the associated item is deleted
42 (all items are deleted when the control is destroyed), so you shouldn't delete
43 it yourself (if you do it, you should call SetItemData(@NULL) to prevent the
44 tree from deleting the pointer second time). The associated data may be
45 retrieved with GetItemData() function.
47 Working with trees is relatively straightforward if all the items are added to
48 the tree at the moment of its creation. However, for large trees it may be
49 very inefficient. To improve the performance you may want to delay adding the
50 items to the tree until the branch containing the items is expanded: so, in the
51 beginning, only the root item is created (with AddRoot). Other items are added
52 when EVT_TREE_ITEM_EXPANDING event is received: then all items lying
53 immediately under the item being expanded should be added, but, of course, only
54 when this event is received for the first time for this item - otherwise, the
55 items would be added twice if the user expands/collapses/re-expands the branch.
57 The tree control provides functions for enumerating its items. There are 3
58 groups of enumeration functions: for the children of a given item, for the
59 sibling of the given item and for the visible items (those which are currently
60 shown to the user: an item may be invisible either because its branch is
61 collapsed or because it is scrolled out of view). Child enumeration functions
62 require the caller to give them a @e cookie parameter: it is a number which
63 is opaque to the caller but is used by the tree control itself to allow
64 multiple enumerations to run simultaneously (this is explicitly allowed). The
65 only thing to remember is that the @e cookie passed to GetFirstChild and to
66 GetNextChild should be the same variable (and that nothing should be done with
69 Among other features of the tree control are: item sorting with SortChildren
70 which uses the user-defined comparison function OnCompareItems (by default the
71 comparison is the alphabetic comparison of tree labels), hit testing
72 (determining to which portion of the control the given point belongs, useful
73 for implementing drag-and-drop in the tree) with HitTest and editing of the
74 tree item labels in place (see EditLabel).
76 Finally, the tree control has a keyboard interface: the cursor navigation
77 (arrow) keys may be used to change the current selection. HOME and END are used
78 to go to the first/last sibling of the current item. '+', '-' and '*' expand,
79 collapse and toggle the current branch. Note, however, that DEL and INS keys do
80 nothing by default, but it is common to associate them with deleting an item
81 from a tree and inserting a new one into it.