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1 \section{wxRichTextCtrl overview}\label{wxrichtextctrloverview}
2
3 Classes: \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl}{wxrichtextctrl}, \helpref{wxRichTextBuffer}{wxrichtextbuffer},
4 \helpref{wxRichTextAttr}{wxrichtextattr}, \helpref{wxTextAttrEx}{wxtextattrex},
5 \helpref{wxRichTextCharacterStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextcharacterstyledefinition},
6 \helpref{wxRichTextParagraphStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextparagraphstyledefinition},
7 \helpref{wxRichTextListStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextliststyledefinition},
8 \helpref{wxRichTextStyleSheet}{wxrichtextstylesheet},
9 \helpref{wxRichTextStyleComboCtrl}{wxrichtextstylecomboctrl},
10 \helpref{wxRichTextStyleListBox}{wxrichtextstylelistbox},
11 \helpref{wxRichTextEvent}{wxrichtextevent}, \helpref{wxRichTextRange}{wxrichtextrange},
12 \helpref{wxRichTextFileHandler}{wxrichtextfilehandler}, \helpref{wxRichTextHTMLHandler}{wxrichtexthtmlhandler},
13 \helpref{wxRichTextXMLHandler}{wxrichtextxmlhandler},
14 \helpref{wxRichTextFormattingDialog}{wxrichtextformattingdialog},
15 \helpref{wxSymbolPickerDialog}{wxsymbolpickerdialog}
16
17 wxRichTextCtrl provides a generic implementation of a rich text editor that can handle different character
18 styles, paragraph formatting, and images. It's aimed at editing 'natural' language text - if you need an editor that supports code editing,
19 wxStyledTextCtrl is a better choice.
20
21 Despite its name, it cannot currently read or write RTF (rich text format) files. Instead, it
22 uses its own XML format, and can also read and write plain text. In future we expect to provide
23 RTF file capabilities. Custom file formats can be supported by creating additional
24 file handlers and registering them with the control.
25
26 wxRichTextCtrl is largely compatible with the wxTextCtrl API, but extends it where necessary.
27 The control can be used where the native rich text capabilities of wxTextCtrl are not
28 adequate (this is particularly true on Windows) and where more direct access to
29 the content representation is required. It is difficult and inefficient to read
30 the style information in a wxTextCtrl, whereas this information is readily
31 available in wxRichTextCtrl. Since it's written in pure wxWidgets, any customizations
32 you make to wxRichTextCtrl will be reflected on all platforms.
33
34 There are of course a few disadvantages to using wxRichTextCtrl. It is not native,
35 so does not behave exactly as a native wxTextCtrl, although common editing conventions
36 are followed. Users may miss the built-in spelling correction on Mac OS X, or any
37 special character input that may be provided by the native control. It would also
38 be a bad choice if intended users rely on screen readers that would be unhappy
39 with non-native text input implementation. You might mitigate this by providing
40 the choice between wxTextCtrl and wxRichTextCtrl, with fewer features in the
41 former case.
42
43 wxRichTextCtrl does not yet support printing directly, but content can be converted
44 to HTML which can then be used with \helpref{wxHtmlEasyPrinting}{wxhtmleasyprinting}.
45
46 The following screenshot shows the wxRichTextCtrl sample in action:
47
48 $$\image{8cm;0cm}{richtextctrl.gif}$$
49
50 \wxheading{Example}\label{wxrichtextctrlexample}
51
52 The following code is taken from the sample, and adds text and styles to a rich text control programmatically.
53
54 {\small
55 \begin{verbatim}
56 wxRichTextCtrl* richTextCtrl = new wxRichTextCtrl(splitter, wxID_ANY, wxEmptyString, wxDefaultPosition, wxSize(200, 200), wxVSCROLL|wxHSCROLL|wxNO_BORDER|wxWANTS_CHARS);
57
58 wxFont textFont = wxFont(12, wxROMAN, wxNORMAL, wxNORMAL);
59 wxFont boldFont = wxFont(12, wxROMAN, wxNORMAL, wxBOLD);
60 wxFont italicFont = wxFont(12, wxROMAN, wxITALIC, wxNORMAL);
61
62 wxFont font(12, wxROMAN, wxNORMAL, wxNORMAL);
63
64 m_richTextCtrl->SetFont(font);
65
66 wxRichTextCtrl& r = richTextCtrl;
67
68 r.BeginSuppressUndo();
69
70 r.BeginParagraphSpacing(0, 20);
71
72 r.BeginAlignment(wxTEXT_ALIGNMENT_CENTRE);
73 r.BeginBold();
74
75 r.BeginFontSize(14);
76 r.WriteText(wxT("Welcome to wxRichTextCtrl, a wxWidgets control for editing and presenting styled text and images"));
77 r.EndFontSize();
78 r.Newline();
79
80 r.BeginItalic();
81 r.WriteText(wxT("by Julian Smart"));
82 r.EndItalic();
83
84 r.EndBold();
85
86 r.Newline();
87 r.WriteImage(wxBitmap(zebra_xpm));
88
89 r.EndAlignment();
90
91 r.Newline();
92 r.Newline();
93
94 r.WriteText(wxT("What can you do with this thing? "));
95 r.WriteImage(wxBitmap(smiley_xpm));
96 r.WriteText(wxT(" Well, you can change text "));
97
98 r.BeginTextColour(wxColour(255, 0, 0));
99 r.WriteText(wxT("colour, like this red bit."));
100 r.EndTextColour();
101
102 r.BeginTextColour(wxColour(0, 0, 255));
103 r.WriteText(wxT(" And this blue bit."));
104 r.EndTextColour();
105
106 r.WriteText(wxT(" Naturally you can make things "));
107 r.BeginBold();
108 r.WriteText(wxT("bold "));
109 r.EndBold();
110 r.BeginItalic();
111 r.WriteText(wxT("or italic "));
112 r.EndItalic();
113 r.BeginUnderline();
114 r.WriteText(wxT("or underlined."));
115 r.EndUnderline();
116
117 r.BeginFontSize(14);
118 r.WriteText(wxT(" Different font sizes on the same line is allowed, too."));
119 r.EndFontSize();
120
121 r.WriteText(wxT(" Next we'll show an indented paragraph."));
122
123 r.BeginLeftIndent(60);
124 r.Newline();
125
126 r.WriteText(wxT("Indented paragraph."));
127 r.EndLeftIndent();
128
129 r.Newline();
130
131 r.WriteText(wxT("Next, we'll show a first-line indent, achieved using BeginLeftIndent(100, -40)."));
132
133 r.BeginLeftIndent(100, -40);
134 r.Newline();
135
136 r.WriteText(wxT("It was in January, the most down-trodden month of an Edinburgh winter."));
137 r.EndLeftIndent();
138
139 r.Newline();
140
141 r.WriteText(wxT("Numbered bullets are possible, again using subindents:"));
142
143 r.BeginNumberedBullet(1, 100, 60);
144 r.Newline();
145
146 r.WriteText(wxT("This is my first item. Note that wxRichTextCtrl doesn't automatically do numbering, but this will be added later."));
147 r.EndNumberedBullet();
148
149 r.BeginNumberedBullet(2, 100, 60);
150 r.Newline();
151
152 r.WriteText(wxT("This is my second item."));
153 r.EndNumberedBullet();
154
155 r.Newline();
156
157 r.WriteText(wxT("The following paragraph is right-indented:"));
158
159 r.BeginRightIndent(200);
160 r.Newline();
161
162 r.WriteText(wxT("It was in January, the most down-trodden month of an Edinburgh winter. An attractive woman came into the cafe, which is nothing remarkable."));
163 r.EndRightIndent();
164
165 r.Newline();
166
167 wxArrayInt tabs;
168 tabs.Add(400);
169 tabs.Add(600);
170 tabs.Add(800);
171 tabs.Add(1000);
172 wxTextAttrEx attr;
173 attr.SetFlags(wxTEXT_ATTR_TABS);
174 attr.SetTabs(tabs);
175 r.SetDefaultStyle(attr);
176
177 r.WriteText(wxT("This line contains tabs:\tFirst tab\tSecond tab\tThird tab"));
178
179 r.Newline();
180 r.WriteText(wxT("Other notable features of wxRichTextCtrl include:"));
181
182 r.BeginSymbolBullet(wxT('*'), 100, 60);
183 r.Newline();
184 r.WriteText(wxT("Compatibility with wxTextCtrl API"));
185 r.EndSymbolBullet();
186
187 r.WriteText(wxT("Note: this sample content was generated programmatically from within the MyFrame constructor in the demo. The images were loaded from inline XPMs. Enjoy wxRichTextCtrl!"));
188
189 r.EndSuppressUndo();
190 \end{verbatim}
191 }
192
193 \subsection{Programming with wxRichTextCtrl}
194
195 \subsubsection{Starting to use wxRichTextCtrl}
196
197 You need to include {\tt <wx/richtext/richtextctrl.h>} in your source, and link
198 with the appropriate wxWidgets library with {\tt richtext} suffix. Put the rich text
199 library first in your link line to avoid unresolved symbols.
200
201 Then you can create a wxRichTextCtrl, with the wxWANT\_CHARS style if you want tabs to
202 be processed by the control rather than being used for navigation between controls.
203
204 \subsubsection{wxRichTextCtrl and styles}
205
206 Styling attributes are represented by one of three classes: \helpref{wxTextAttr}{wxtextattr}, \helpref{wxTextAttrEx}{wxtextattrex} and \helpref{wxRichTextAttr}{wxrichtextattr}.
207 wxTextAttr is shared across all controls that are derived from wxTextCtrl and
208 can store basic character and paragraph attributes. wxTextAttrEx derives
209 from wxTextAttr and adds some further attributes that are only supported
210 by wxRichTextCtrl. Finally, wxRichTextAttr is a more efficient version
211 of wxTextAttrEx that doesn't use a wxFont object and can be used to
212 query styles more quickly. wxTextAttrEx and wxRichTextAttr are largely
213 interchangeable and have suitable conversion operators between them.
214
215 When setting a style, the flags of the attribute object determine which
216 attributes are applied. When querying a style, the passed flags are ignored
217 except (optionally) to determine whether attributes should be retrieved from
218 character content or from the paragraph object.
219
220 wxRichTextCtrl takes a layered approach to styles, so that different parts of
221 the content may be responsible for contributing different attributes to the final
222 style you see on the screen.
223
224 There are four main notions of style within a control:
225
226 \begin{enumerate}\itemsep=0pt
227 \item {\bf Basic style:} the fundamental style of a control, onto which any other
228 styles are layered. It provides default attributes, and changing the basic style
229 may immediately change the look of the content depending on what other styles
230 the content uses. Calling wxRichTextCtrl::SetFont changes the font for the basic style.
231 The basic style is set with \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetBasicStyle}{wxrichtextctrlsetbasicstyle}.
232 \item {\bf Paragraph style:} each paragraph has attributes that are set independently
233 from other paragraphs and independently from the content within the paragraph.
234 Normally, these attributes are paragraph-related, such as alignment and indentation,
235 but it is possible to set character attributes too.
236 The paragraph style can be set independently of its content by passing wxRICHTEXT\_SETSTYLE\_PARAGRAPHS\_ONLY
237 to \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetStyleEx}{wxrichtextctrlsetstyleex}.
238 \item {\bf Character style:} characters within each paragraph can have attributes.
239 A single character, or a run of characters, can have a particular set of attributes.
240 The character style can be with \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetStyle}{wxrichtextctrlsetstyle} or
241 \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetStyleEx}{wxrichtextctrlsetstyleex}.
242 \item {\bf Default style:} this is the `current' style that determines the
243 style of content that is subsequently typed, pasted or programmatically inserted.
244 The default style is set with \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetDefaultStyle}{wxrichtextctrlsetdefaultstyle}.
245 \end{enumerate}
246
247 What you see on the screen is the dynamically {\it combined} style, found by merging
248 the first three of the above style types (the fourth is only a guide for future content
249 insertion and therefore does not affect the currently displayed content).
250
251 To make all this more concrete, here are examples of where you might set these different
252 styles:
253
254 \begin{enumerate}\itemsep=0pt
255 \item You might set the {\bf basic style} to have a Times Roman font in 12 point,
256 left-aligned, with two millimetres of spacing after each paragraph.
257 \item You might set the {\bf paragraph style} (for one particular paragraph) to
258 be centred.
259 \item You might set the {\bf character style} of one particular word to bold.
260 \item You might set the {\bf default style} to be underlined, for subsequent
261 inserted text.
262 \end{enumerate}
263
264 Naturally you can do any of these things either using your own UI, or programmatically.
265
266 The basic wxTextCtrl doesn't make the same distinctions as wxRichTextCtrl regarding
267 attribute storage. So we need finer control when setting and retrieving
268 attributes. \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::SetStyleEx}{wxrichtextctrlsetstyleex} takes a {\it flags} parameter:
269
270 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
271 \item wxRICHTEXT\_SETSTYLE\_OPTIMIZE specifies that the style should be changed only if
272 the combined attributes are different from the attributes for the current object. This is important when
273 applying styling that has been edited by the user, because he has just edited the {\it combined} (visible)
274 style, and wxRichTextCtrl wants to leave unchanged attributes associated with their original objects
275 instead of applying them to both paragraph and content objects.
276 \item wxRICHTEXT\_SETSTYLE\_PARAGRAPHS\_ONLY specifies that only paragraph objects within the given range
277 should take on the attributes.
278 \item wxRICHTEXT\_SETSTYLE\_CHARACTERS\_ONLY specifies that only content objects (text or images) within the given range
279 should take on the attributes.
280 \item wxRICHTEXT\_SETSTYLE\_WITH\_UNDO specifies that the operation should be undoable.
281 \end{itemize}
282
283 It's great to be able to change arbitrary attributes in a wxRichTextCtrl, but
284 it can be unwieldy for the user or programmer to set attributes separately. Word processors have collections
285 of styles that you can tailor or use as-is, and this means that you can set a heading with one click
286 instead of marking text in bold, specifying a large font size, and applying a certain
287 paragraph spacing and alignment for every such heading. Similarly,
288 wxWidgets provides a class called \helpref{wxRichTextStyleSheet}{wxrichtextstylesheet} which manages style definitions
289 (\helpref{wxRichTextParagraphStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextparagraphstyledefinition}, \helpref{wxRichTextListStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextliststyledefinition} and \helpref{wxRichTextCharacterStyleDefinition}{wxrichtextcharacterstyledefinition}).
290 Once you have added definitions to a style sheet and associated it with a wxRichTextCtrl,
291 you can apply a named definition to a range of text. The classes \helpref{wxRichTextStyleComboCtrl}{wxrichtextstylecomboctrl}\rtfsp
292 and \helpref{wxRichTextStyleListBox}{wxrichtextstylelistbox} can be used to present the user with a list
293 of styles in a sheet, and apply them to the selected text.
294
295 You can reapply a style sheet to the contents of the control, by calling \helpref{wxRichTextCtrl::ApplyStyleSheet}{wxrichtextctrlapplystylesheet}.
296 This is useful if the style definitions have changed, and you want the content to reflect this.
297 It relies on the fact that when you apply a named style, the style definition name is recorded in the
298 content. So ApplyStyleSheet works by finding the paragraph attributes with style names and re-applying the definition's
299 attributes to the paragraph. Currently, this works with paragraph and list style definitions only.
300
301 \subsection{wxRichTextCtrl dialogs}\label{wxrichtextctrldialogs}
302
303 wxRichTextCtrl comes with standard dialogs to make it easier to implement
304 text editing functionality.
305
306 \helpref{wxRichTextFormattingDialog}{wxrichtextformattingdialog} can be used
307 for character or paragraph formatting, or a combination of both. It's a wxPropertySheetDialog
308 with the following available tabs: Font, Indents \& Spacing, Tabs, Bullets, and Style.
309 You can select which pages will be shown by supplying flags to the dialog constructor.
310 In a character formatting dialog, typically only the Font page will be shown.
311 In a paragraph formatting dialog, you'll show the Indents \& Spacing, Tabs and Bullets
312 pages. The Style tab is useful when editing a style definition.
313
314 You can customize this dialog by providing your own wxRichTextFormattingDialogFactory
315 object, which tells the formatting dialog how many pages are supported, what their identifiers
316 are, and how to creates the pages.
317
318 \helpref{wxSymbolPickerDialog}{wxsymbolpickerdialog} lets the user insert a symbol from
319 a specified font. It has no wxRichTextCtrl dependencies besides being included in
320 the rich text library.
321
322 \subsection{How wxRichTextCtrl is implemented}
323
324 Data representation is handled by wxRichTextBuffer, and a wxRichTextCtrl
325 always has one such buffer.
326
327 The content is represented by a hierarchy of objects, all derived from
328 wxRichTextObject. An object might be an image, a fragment of text, a paragraph,
329 or a whole buffer. Objects store a wxRichTextAttr containing style information;
330 although it contains both paragraph formatting and character style, the
331 paragraph style information is ignored by children of a paragraph (only
332 character style is relevant to these objects).
333
334 The top of the hierarchy is the buffer, a kind of wxRichTextParagraphLayoutBox.
335 containing further wxRichTextParagraph objects, each of which can include text,
336 images and potentially other types of object.
337
338 Each object maintains a range (start and end position) measured
339 from the start of the main parent box.
340
341 When Layout is called on an object, it is given a size which the object
342 must limit itself to, or one or more flexible directions (vertical
343 or horizontal). So, for example, a centred paragraph is given the page
344 width to play with (minus any margins), but can extend indefinitely
345 in the vertical direction. The implementation of Layout caches the calculated
346 size and position.
347
348 When the buffer is modified, a range is invalidated (marked as requiring
349 layout), so that only the minimum amount of layout is performed.
350
351 A paragraph of pure text with the same style contains just one further
352 object, a wxRichTextPlainText object. When styling is applied to part of
353 this object, the object is decomposed into separate objects, one object
354 for each different character style. So each object within a paragraph always has
355 just one wxRichTextAttr object to denote its character style. Of course, this can
356 lead to fragmentation after a lot of edit operations, potentially leading
357 to several objects with the same style where just one would do. So
358 a Defragment function is called when updating the control's display, to ensure that
359 the minimum number of objects is used.
360
361 \subsection{wxRichTextCtrl roadmap}
362
363 \wxheading{Bugs}
364
365 This is an incomplete list of bugs.
366
367 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
368 \item Moving the caret up at the beginning of a line sometimes incorrectly positions the
369 caret.
370 \item As the selection is expanded, the text jumps slightly due to kerning differences between
371 drawing a single text string versus drawing several fragments separately. This could
372 be improved by using wxDC::GetPartialTextExtents to calculate exactly where the separate fragments
373 should be drawn.
374 Alternatively, it might be possible to use the difference between the width of text from
375 a to b+1, versus the width of the text from a to b added to the width of b to b+1.
376 Note that this problem also applies to separation of text fragments due to difference in their attributes.
377 \item Selection doesn't work properly for text that contains tabs.
378 \end{itemize}
379
380 \wxheading{Features}
381
382 This is a list of some of the features that have yet to be implemented. Help with them will be appreciated.
383
384 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
385 \item RTF input and output
386 \item Floating images, with content wrapping around them
387 \item A ruler control
388 \item Standard editing toolbars
389 \item Tables
390 \item Bitmap bullets
391 \item Borders
392 \item Text frames
393 \end{itemize}
394
395 There are also things that could be done to take advantage of the underlying text capabilities of the platform;
396 higher-level text formatting APIs are available on some platforms, such as Mac OS X, and some of translation from
397 high level to low level wxDC API is unnecessary. However this would require additions to the wxWidgets API.
398