1 These two classes make it easier to lay objects out on a screen. The
2 first class is the wxMultiCellCanvas, which uses the wxFlexGridSizer
3 control, so it is subject to the same limitations of that control. Among
4 them is the fact that if the window is resized smaller than the control,
5 then some of the objects will be obscured by the window edge.
7 The second class is the wxMultiCellSizer, which is significantly more
8 powerful than the wxMultiCell Canvas. This control supports resizing of
9 objects on the fly, objects spanning cells, etc.
11 Use the wxMultiCellCanvas when you have a simple layout which won't resize
12 and doesn't have any unusual requirements. Use the wxMultiCellSizer when
13 your needs are greater
19 The wxMultiCellCanvas class allows you to add objects to a wxFlexGridSizer
20 by specifying a row and a column location. When all objects have been
21 added, you need to call a member function CalculateConstraints(), which
22 will insert the objects into the wxFlexGridSizer. If there are empty
23 cells the canvas will insert empty wxStaticText objects as placeholders.
25 Upon creation of the canvas the size of the canvas needs to be specified.
26 Attempting to insert a cell outside those limits will cause an assertion
29 When adding cells, the cell locations are specified as a row,column
30 location, both being zero-based. 0,0 is the upper left corner of the
37 The wxMultiCellSizer class manages a collection of child windows in a way
38 similar to that of data stored in a spreadsheet. A multicell canvas is a
39 two-dimensional array of cells with an origin of (0,0) in the upper-left
40 corner. Windows are added to a multicell sizer by first creating a
41 wxMultiCellItemHandle object which specifies a starting cell and,
42 optionally, a number of contiguous columns, rows, or a combination
43 thereof, and then adding it to the sizer.
45 This class bases the initial cell sizes on the minimum sizes returned by
46 each child window of the sizer. You can override the minimum sizes
47 provided by the wxWindows Class Library by doing either of the following:
49 o Specifying the size when creating the wxMultiCellItemHandle object
50 o Creating a derived class and implementing a CalcMin function
52 The wxMultiCellItemHandle must be passed the row and column of the item,
53 at a minimum. Optionally, more information can be passed:
55 int row Row position, zero based
56 int column Column position, zero based
57 int height Number of rows this cell will occupy, default is 1
58 int width Number of columns this cell will occupy, default is 1
60 Note that if the height or width is greater than one that
61 dimension is assumed to be resizable because it is spanning
64 wxSize minSize Minimum size of the object.
65 wxResizable Style Is this object resizable, and if so, how. Allowable styles are:
67 wxHORIZENTAL_RESIZABLE
70 wxSize weight If this is a resizable object, the weight applied to the specific dimension.
71 This is useful if you have several resizable rows and/or columns, and you want
72 one to get more of the available space than the others.
73 int align This is a wxAlignment value, it is an integer so you can 'or multiple
74 values together. The acceptable values are:
76 wxALIGN_CENTER_HORIZONTAL
77 wxALIGN_CENTRE_HORIZONTAL
82 wxALIGN_CENTER_VERTICAL
83 wxALIGN_CENTRE_VERTICAL
86 Note that some combinations of these make no sense, for example wxALIGN_LEFT | wxALIGN_RIGHT.
87 See the definition of wxAlignment for more information
92 void RecalcSizes() Should not be called by the user, needed by the wxSizer class
93 wxSize CalcMin() Should not be called by the user, needed by the wxSizer class
94 bool SetDefaultCellSize Set the default cell size of an empty cell
95 bool SetColumnWidth Set the width of a column, optionally specifying it as resizable
96 bool SetRowHeight Set the height of a row, optionally specifying it as resizable
98 Sometimes it can be very confusing to determine the relationship between rows, columns, and
99 which ones are resizable or not. Three functions are supplied to make this easier:
101 bool EnableGridLines(wxWindow *win); Call this to either enable or disable the grid lines.
102 Pass the window the sizer is on, or NULL to disable.
103 Currently the window is not used, but it may be in the
105 bool SetGridPen(wxPen *pen); Set the pen color, the default pen color is red
106 void OnPaint(wxDC& dc); Call this from an OnPaint function associated with the
107 window the sizer is attached to. See the example program
108 mtest.cpp for specific details on how to do this.
115 // wxMultiCellCanvas and wxMultiCellSizer
116 makefile Makefile for the MingW32 compiler
117 multicell.cpp Class source code file
118 multicell.h Class header file
121 mtest.cpp Example program, demonstrates both classes
128 This was inspired by the gbsizer class written by Alex Andruschak, and the IMultiCellCanvas
129 class in the IBM Class Libraries in the VisualeAge C++ compilers.