2 This Windows-specific sample demonstrates how to use wxWidgets-based UI from
3 within a foreign host application that may be written in any toolkit
6 For this to work, you have to overcome two obstacles:
9 (1) wx's event loop in the DLL must not conflict with the host app's loop
10 (2) if the host app is written in wx, its copy of wx must not conflict
14 Number (1) is dealt with by running DLL's event loop in a thread of its own.
15 DLL's wx library will consider this thread to be the "main thread".
17 The simplest way to solve number (2) is to share the wxWidgets library between
18 the DLL and the host, in the form of wxWidgets DLLs build. But this requires
19 both the host and the DLL to be compiled against exactly same wx version,
20 which is often impractical.
22 So we do something else here: the DLL is compiled against *static* build of
23 wx. This way none of its symbols or variables will leak into the host app.
24 Win32 runtime conflicts are eliminated by using DLL's HINSTANCE instead of
25 host app's one and by using unique window class names (automatically done