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11 <div class="document" id="wxpython-2-5-migration-guide">
12 <h1 class="title">wxPython 2.5 Migration Guide</h1>
13 <p>This document will help explain some of the major changes in wxPython
14 2.5 and let you know what you need to do to adapt your programs to
15 those changes. Be sure to also check in the CHANGES.txt file like
16 usual to see info about the not so major changes and other things that
17 have been added to wxPython.</p>
18 <div class="section" id="module-initialization">
19 <h1><a name="module-initialization">Module Initialization</a></h1>
20 <p>The import-startup-bootstrap process employed by wxPython was changed
21 such that wxWindows and the underlying gui toolkit are <strong>not</strong>
22 initialized until the wx.App object is created (but before wx.App.OnInit
23 is called.) This was required because of some changes that were made
24 to the C++ wxApp class.</p>
25 <p>There are both benefits and potential problems with this change. The
26 benefits are that you can import wxPython without requiring access to
27 a GUI (for checking version numbers, etc.) and that in a
28 multi-threaded environment the thread that creates the app object will
29 now be the GUI thread instead of the one that imports wxPython. Some
30 potential problems are that the C++ side of the &quot;stock-objects&quot;
31 (wx.BLUE_PEN, wx.TheColourDatabase, etc.) are not initialized until
32 the wx.App object is created, so you should not use them until after
33 you have created your wx.App object. If you do then an exception will
34 be raised telling you that the C++ object has not bene initialized
35 yet.</p>
36 <p>Also, you will probably not be able to do any kind of GUI or bitmap
37 operation unless you first have created an app object, (even on
38 Windows where most anything was possible before.)</p>
39 </div>
40 <div class="section" id="swig-1-3">
41 <h1><a name="swig-1-3">SWIG 1.3</a></h1>
42 <p>wxPython is now using SWIG 1.3.x from CVS (with several of my own
43 customizations added that I hope to get folded back into the main SWIG
44 distribution.) This has some far reaching ramifications:</p>
45 <blockquote>
46 <p>All classes derive from object and so all are now &quot;new-style
47 classes&quot;</p>
48 <p>Public data members of the C++ classes are wrapped as Python
49 properties using property() instead of using __getattr__/__setattr__
50 like before. Normally you shouldn't notice any difference, but if
51 you were previously doing something with __getattr__/__setattr__
52 in derived classes then you may have to adjust things.</p>
53 <p>Static C++ methods are wrapped using the staticmethod()
54 feature of Python and so are accessible as ClassName.MethodName
55 as expected. They are still available as top level functions
56 ClassName_MethodName as before.</p>
57 <p>The relationship between the wxFoo and wxFooPtr classes have
58 changed for the better. Specifically, all instances that you see
59 will be wxFoo even if they are created internally using wxFooPtr,
60 because wxFooPtr.__init__ will change the instance's __class__ as
61 part of the initialization. If you have any code that checks
62 class type using something like isinstance(obj, wxFooPtr) you will
63 need to change it to isinstance(obj, wxFoo).</p>
64 </blockquote>
65 </div>
66 <div class="section" id="binding-events">
67 <h1><a name="binding-events">Binding Events</a></h1>
68 <p>All of the EVT_* functions are now instances of the wx.PyEventBinder
69 class. They have a __call__ method so they can still be used as
70 functions like before, but making them instances adds some
71 flexibility.</p>
72 <p>wx.EvtHandler (the base class for wx.Window) now has a Bind method that
73 makes binding events to windows a little easier. Here is its
74 definition and docstring:</p>
75 <pre class="literal-block">
76 def Bind(self, event, handler, source=None, id=wxID_ANY, id2=wxID_ANY):
77 &quot;&quot;&quot;
78 Bind an event to an event handler.
79
80 event One of the EVT_* objects that specifies the
81 type of event to bind.
82
83 handler A callable object to be invoked when the event
84 is delivered to self. Pass None to disconnect an
85 event handler.
86
87 source Sometimes the event originates from a different window
88 than self, but you still want to catch it in self. (For
89 example, a button event delivered to a frame.) By
90 passing the source of the event, the event handling
91 system is able to differentiate between the same event
92 type from different controls.
93
94 id,id2 Used for menu IDs or for event types that require a
95 range of IDs
96
97 &quot;&quot;&quot;
98 </pre>
99 <p>Some examples of its use:</p>
100 <pre class="literal-block">
101 self.Bind(wx.EVT_SIZE, self.OnSize)
102 self.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self.OnButtonClick, theButton)
103 self.Bind(wx.EVT_MENU, self.OnExit, id=ID_EXIT)
104 </pre>
105 <p>I hope to be able to remove the need for using IDs even for menu
106 events too...</p>
107 <p>If you create your own custom event types and EVT_* functions, and you
108 want to be able to use them with the Bind method above then you should
109 change your EVT_* to be an instance of wxPyEventBinder instead of a
110 function. If you used to have something like this:</p>
111 <pre class="literal-block">
112 myCustomEventType = wxNewEventType()
113 def EVT_MY_CUSTOM_EVENT(win, id, func):
114 win.Connect(id, -1, myCustomEventType, func)
115 </pre>
116 <p>Change it like so:</p>
117 <pre class="literal-block">
118 myCustomEventType = wx.NewEventType()
119 EVT_MY_CUSTOM_EVENT = wx.PyEventBinder(myCustomEventType, 1)
120 </pre>
121 <p>The second parameter is an integer in [0, 1, 2] that specifies the
122 number of IDs that are needed to be passed to Connect.</p>
123 </div>
124 <div class="section" id="the-wx-namespace">
125 <h1><a name="the-wx-namespace">The wx Namespace</a></h1>
126 <p>The second phase of the wx Namespace Transition has begun. That means
127 that the real names of the classes and other symbols do not have the
128 'wx' prefix and the modules are located in a Python package named
129 wx. There is still a Python package named wxPython with modules
130 that have the names with the wx prefix for backwards compatibility.
131 Instead of dynamically changing the names at module load time like in
132 2.4, the compatibility modules are generated at build time and contain
133 assignment statements like this:</p>
134 <pre class="literal-block">
135 wxWindow = wx.core.Window
136 </pre>
137 <p>Don't let the &quot;core&quot; in the name bother you. That and some other
138 modules are implementation details, and everything that was in the
139 wxPython.wx module before will still be in the wx package namespace
140 after this change. So from your code you would use it as wx.Window.</p>
141 <p>A few notes about how all of this was accomplished might be
142 interesting... SWIG is now run twice for each module that it is
143 generating code for. The first time it outputs an XML representaion
144 of the parse tree, which can be up to 20MB and 300K lines in size!
145 That XML is then run through a little Python script that creates a
146 file full of SWIG %rename directives that take the wx off of the
147 names, and also generates the Python compatibility file described
148 above that puts the wx back on the names. SWIG is then run a second
149 time to generate the C++ code to implement the extension module, and
150 uses the %rename directives that were generated in the first step.</p>
151 <p>Not every name is handled correctly (but the bulk of them are) and so
152 some work has to be done by hand, especially for the reverse-renamers.
153 So expect a few flaws here and there until everything gets sorted out.</p>
154 <p>In summary, the wx package and names without the &quot;wx&quot; prefix are now
155 the official form of the wxPython classes. For example:</p>
156 <pre class="literal-block">
157 import wx
158
159 class MyFrame(wx.Frame):
160 def __init__(self, parent, title):
161 wx.Frame.__init__(self, parent, -1, title)
162 p = wx.Panel(self, -1)
163 b = wx.Button(p, -1, &quot;Do It&quot;, (10,10))
164 self.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self.JustDoIt, b)
165
166 def JustDoIt(self, evt):
167 print &quot;It's done!&quot;
168
169 app = wx.PySimpleApp()
170 f = MyFrame(None, &quot;What's up?&quot;)
171 f.Show()
172 app.MainLoop()
173 </pre>
174 <p>You shouldn't need to migrate all your modules over to use the new
175 package and names right away as there are modules in place that try to
176 provide as much backwards compatibility of the names as possible. If
177 you rewrote the above sample using &quot;from wxPython.wx import * &quot;, the
178 old wxNames, and the old style of event binding it will still work
179 just fine.</p>
180 </div>
181 <div class="section" id="new-wx-dc-methods">
182 <h1><a name="new-wx-dc-methods">New wx.DC Methods</a></h1>
183 <p>Many of the Draw methods of wx.DC have alternate forms in C++ that take
184 wxPoint or wxSize parameters (let's call these <em>Type A</em>) instead of
185 the individual x, y, width, height, etc. parameters (and we'll call
186 these <em>Type B</em>). In the rest of the library I normally made the <em>Type
187 A</em> forms of the methods be the default method with the &quot;normal&quot; name,
188 and had renamed the <em>Type B</em> forms of the methods to some similar
189 name. For example in wx.Window we have these Python methods:</p>
190 <pre class="literal-block">
191 SetSize(size) # Type A
192 SetSizeWH(width, height) # Type B
193 </pre>
194 <p>For various reasons the new <em>Type A</em> methods in wx.DC were never added
195 and the existing <em>Type B</em> methods were never renamed. Now that lots
196 of other things are also changing in wxPython it has been decided that
197 it is a good time to also do the method renaming in wx.DC too in order
198 to be consistent with the rest of the library. The methods in wx.DC
199 that are affected are listed here:</p>
200 <pre class="literal-block">
201 FloodFillXY(x, y, colour, style = wx.FLOOD_SURFACE)
202 FloodFill(point, colour, style = wx.FLOOD_SURFACE)
203
204 GetPixelXY(x, y)
205 GetPixel(point)
206
207 DrawLineXY(x1, y1, x2, y2)
208 DrawLine(point1, point2)
209
210 CrossHairXY(x, y)
211 CrossHair(point)
212
213 DrawArcXY(x1, y1, x2, y2, xc, yc)
214 DrawArc(point1, point2, center)
215
216 DrawCheckMarkXY(x, y, width, height)
217 DrawCheckMark(rect)
218
219 DrawEllipticArcXY(x, y, w, h, start_angle, end_angle)
220 DrawEllipticArc(point, size, start_angle, end_angle)
221
222 DrawPointXY(x, y)
223 DrawPoint(point)
224
225 DrawRectangleXY(x, y, width, height)
226 DrawRectangle(point, size)
227 DrawRectangleRect(rect)
228
229 DrawRoundedRectangleXY(x, y, width, height, radius)
230 DrawRoundedRectangle(point, size, radius)
231 DrawRoundedRectangleRect(rect, radius)
232
233 DrawCircleXY(x, y, radius)
234 DrawCircle(point, radius)
235
236 DrawEllipseXY(x, y, width, height)
237 DrawEllipse(point, size)
238 DrawEllipseRect(rect)
239
240 DrawIconXY(icon, x, y)
241 DrawIcon(icon, point)
242
243 DrawBitmapXY(bmp, x, y, useMask = FALSE)
244 DrawBitmap(bmp, point, useMask = FALSE)
245
246 DrawTextXY(text, x, y)
247 DrawText(text, point)
248
249 DrawRotatedTextXY(text, x, y, angle)
250 DrawRotatedText(text, point, angle)
251
252
253 BlitXY(xdest, ydest, width, height, sourceDC, xsrc, ysrc,
254 rop = wxCOPY, useMask = FALSE, xsrcMask = -1, ysrcMask = -1)
255 Blit(destPt, size, sourceDC, srcPt,
256 rop = wxCOPY, useMask = FALSE, srcPtMask = wx.DefaultPosition)
257
258 SetClippingRegionXY(x, y, width, height)
259 SetClippingRegion(point, size)
260 SetClippingRect(rect)
261 SetClippingRegionAsRegion(region);
262 </pre>
263 <p>If you have code that draws on a DC and you are using the new wx
264 namespace then you <strong>will</strong> get errors because of these changes, but
265 it should be easy to fix the code. You can either change the name of
266 the <em>Type B</em> method called to the names shown above, or just add
267 parentheses around the parameters as needed to turn them into tuples
268 and let the SWIG typemaps turn them into the wx.Point or wx.Size
269 object that is expected. Then you will be calling the new <em>Type A</em>
270 method. For example, if you had this code before:</p>
271 <pre class="literal-block">
272 dc.DrawRectangle(x, y, width, height)
273 </pre>
274 <p>You could either continue to use the <em>Type B</em> method bu changing the
275 name to DrawRectabgleXY, or just change it to the new <em>Type A</em> by
276 adding some parentheses like this:</p>
277 <pre class="literal-block">
278 dc.DrawRectangle((x, y), (width, height))
279 </pre>
280 <p>Or if you were already using a point and size:</p>
281 <pre class="literal-block">
282 dc.DrawRectangle(p.x, p.y, s.width, s.height)
283 </pre>
284 <p>Then you can just simplify it like this:</p>
285 <pre class="literal-block">
286 dc.DrawRectangle(p, s)
287 </pre>
288 <p>Now before you start yelling and screaming at me for breaking all your
289 code, take note that I said above &quot;...using the new wx namespace...&quot;
290 That's because if you are still importing from wxPython.wx then there
291 are some classes defined there with Draw and etc. methods that have
292 2.4 compatible signatures. However if/when the old wxPython.wx
293 namespace is removed then these classes will be removed too so you
294 should plan on migrating to the new namespace and new DC Draw methods
295 before that time.</p>
296 </div>
297 <div class="section" id="building-extending-and-embedding-wxpython">
298 <h1><a name="building-extending-and-embedding-wxpython">Building, Extending and Embedding wxPython</a></h1>
299 <p>wxPython's setup.py script now expects to use existing libraries for
300 the contribs (gizmos, stc, xrc, etc.) rather than building local
301 copies of them. If you build your own copies of wxPython please be
302 aware that you now need to also build the ogl, stc, xrc, and gizmos
303 libraries in addition to the main wx lib. [[TODO: update the
304 BUILD.*.txt files too!]]</p>
305 <p>The wxPython.h and other header files are now in
306 .../wxPython/include/wx/wxPython instead of in wxPython/src. You should
307 include it via the &quot;wx/wxPython/wxPython.h&quot; path and add
308 .../wxPython/include to your list of include paths. [[TODO: Install
309 these headers on Linux...]]</p>
310 <p>You no longer need to call wxClassInfo::CleanUpClasses() and
311 wxClassInfo::InitializeClasses() in your extensions or when embedding
312 wxPython.</p>
313 </div>
314 <div class="section" id="two-or-three-phase-create">
315 <h1><a name="two-or-three-phase-create">Two (or Three!) Phase Create</a></h1>
316 <p>If you use the Precreate/Create method of instantiating a window, (for
317 example, to set an extended style flag, or for XRC handlers) then
318 there is now a new method named PostCreate to help with transplanting
319 the brain of the prewindow instance into the derived window instance.
320 For example:</p>
321 <pre class="literal-block">
322 class MyDialog(wx.Dialog):
323 def __init__(self, parent, ID, title, pos, size, style):
324 pre = wx.PreDialog()
325 pre.SetExtraStyle(wx.DIALOG_EX_CONTEXTHELP)
326 pre.Create(parent, ID, title, pos, size, style)
327 self.PostCreate(pre)
328 </pre>
329 </div>
330 <div class="section" id="sizers">
331 <h1><a name="sizers">Sizers</a></h1>
332 <p>The hack allowing the old &quot;option&quot; keyword parameter has been
333 removed. If you use keyworkd args with wxSizer Add, Insert, or
334 Prepend then you will need to use the &quot;proportion&quot; name instead of
335 &quot;option&quot;.</p>
336 <p>When adding a spacer to a sizer you now need to use a wxSize or a
337 2-integer sequence instead of separate width and height parameters.</p>
338 <p>The wxGridBagSizer class (very similar to the RowColSizer in the
339 library) has been added to C++ and wrapped for wxPython. It can also
340 be used from XRC.</p>
341 <p>You should not use AddWindow, AddSizer, AddSpacer (and similar for
342 Insert, Prepend, and etc.) methods any longer. Just use Add and the
343 wrappers will figure out what to do.</p>
344 </div>
345 <div class="section" id="other-stuff">
346 <h1><a name="other-stuff">Other Stuff</a></h1>
347 <p>Instead of over a dozen separate extension modules linked together
348 into a single extension module, the &quot;core&quot; module is now just a few
349 extensions that are linked independently, and then merged together
350 later into the main namespace via Python code.</p>
351 <p>Because of the above, the &quot;internal&quot; module names have changed, but
352 you shouldn't have been using them anyway so it shouldn't bother
353 you. ;-)</p>
354 <p>The wxPython.help module no longer exists and the classes therein are
355 now part of the core module imported with wxPython.wx or the wx
356 package.</p>
357 <p>wxPyDefaultPosition and wxPyDefaultSize are gone. Use the
358 wxDefaultPosition and wxDefaultSize objects instead.</p>
359 <p>Similarly, the wxSystemSettings backwards compatibiility aliases for
360 GetSystemColour, GetSystemFont and GetSystemMetric have also gone into
361 the bit-bucket. Use GetColour, GetFont and GetMetric instead.</p>
362 <p>The wx.NO_FULL_REPAINT_ON_RESIZE style is now the default style for
363 all windows. The name still exists for compatibility, but it is set
364 to zero. If you want to disable the setting (so it matches the old
365 default) then you need to use the new wx.FULL_REPAINT_ON_RESIZE style
366 flag otherwise only the freshly exposed areas of the window will be
367 refreshed.</p>
368 <p>wxPyTypeCast has been removed. Since we've had the OOR (Original
369 Object Return) for a couple years now there should be no need to use
370 wxPyTypeCast at all.</p>
371 </div>
372 </div>
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