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1 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
2 %% Name: function.tex
3 %% Purpose: Functions and macros
4 %% Author: wxWidgets Team
5 %% Modified by:
6 %% Created:
7 %% RCS-ID: $Id$
8 %% Copyright: (c) wxWidgets Team
9 %% License: wxWindows license
10 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
11
12 \chapter{Functions and macros}\label{functions}
13 \setheader{{\it CHAPTER \thechapter}}{}{}{}{}{{\it CHAPTER \thechapter}}%
14 \setfooter{\thepage}{}{}{}{}{\thepage}
15
16 The functions and macros defined in wxWidgets are described here: you can
17 either look up a function using the alphabetical listing of them or find it in
18 the corresponding topic.
19
20 \section{Alphabetical functions and macros list}\label{functionsalphabetically}
21
22 \helpref{CLASSINFO}{classinfo}\\
23 \helpref{DECLARE\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}{declareabstractclass}\\
24 \helpref{DECLARE\_APP}{declareapp}\\
25 \helpref{DECLARE\_CLASS}{declareclass}\\
26 \helpref{DECLARE\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}{declaredynamicclass}\\
27 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS2}{implementabstractclass2}\\
28 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}{implementabstractclass}\\
29 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_APP}{implementapp}\\
30 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS2}{implementclass2}\\
31 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS}{implementclass}\\
32 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS2}{implementdynamicclass2}\\
33 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}{implementdynamicclass}\\
34 \helpref{wxAboutBox}{wxaboutbox}\\
35 \helpref{wxASSERT}{wxassert}\\
36 \helpref{wxASSERT\_MIN\_BITSIZE}{wxassertminbitsize}\\
37 \helpref{wxASSERT\_MSG}{wxassertmsg}\\
38 \helpref{wxAtomicDec}{wxatomicdec}\\
39 \helpref{wxAtomicInc}{wxatomicinc}\\
40 \helpref{wxBase64Decode}{wxbase64decode}\\
41 \helpref{wxBase64Encode}{wxbase64encode}\\
42 \helpref{wxBeginBusyCursor}{wxbeginbusycursor}\\
43 \helpref{wxBell}{wxbell}\\
44 \helpref{wxBITMAP}{wxbitmapmacro}\\
45 \helpref{wxCHANGE\_UMASK}{wxchangeumask}\\
46 \helpref{wxCHECK}{wxcheck}\\
47 \helpref{wxCHECK2\_MSG}{wxcheck2msg}\\
48 \helpref{wxCHECK2}{wxcheck2}\\
49 \helpref{wxCHECK\_GCC\_VERSION}{wxcheckgccversion}\\
50 \helpref{wxCHECK\_MSG}{wxcheckmsg}\\
51 \helpref{wxCHECK\_RET}{wxcheckret}\\
52 \helpref{wxCHECK\_SUNCC\_VERSION}{wxchecksunccversion}\\
53 \helpref{wxCHECK\_VERSION}{wxcheckversion}\\
54 \helpref{wxCHECK\_VERSION\_FULL}{wxcheckversionfull}\\
55 \helpref{wxCHECK\_W32API\_VERSION}{wxcheckw32apiversion}\\
56 \helpref{wxClientDisplayRect}{wxclientdisplayrect}\\
57 \helpref{wxClipboardOpen}{functionwxclipboardopen}\\
58 \helpref{wxCloseClipboard}{wxcloseclipboard}\\
59 \helpref{wxColourDisplay}{wxcolourdisplay}\\
60 \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}{wxcompiletimeassert}\\
61 \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT2}{wxcompiletimeassert2}\\
62 \helpref{wxCONCAT}{wxconcat}\\
63 \helpref{wxConcatFiles}{wxconcatfiles}\\
64 \helpref{wxConstCast}{wxconstcast}\\
65 \helpref{wxCopyFile}{wxcopyfile}\\
66 \helpref{wxCreateDynamicObject}{wxcreatedynamicobject}\\
67 \helpref{wxCreateFileTipProvider}{wxcreatefiletipprovider}\\
68 \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}{wxcritsectdeclare}\\
69 \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE\_MEMBER}{wxcritsectdeclaremember}\\
70 \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_LOCKER}{wxcritsectlocker}\\
71 \helpref{wxCRITICAL\_SECTION}{wxcriticalsectionmacro}\\ % wxcs already taken!
72 \helpref{wxDDECleanUp}{wxddecleanup}\\
73 \helpref{wxDDEInitialize}{wxddeinitialize}\\
74 \helpref{wxDROP\_ICON}{wxdropicon}\\
75 \helpref{wxDebugMsg}{wxdebugmsg}\\
76 \helpref{WXDEBUG\_NEW}{debugnew}\\
77 \helpref{wxDEPRECATED}{wxdeprecated}\\
78 \helpref{wxDEPRECATED\_BUT\_USED\_INTERNALLY}{wxdeprecatedbutusedinternally}\\
79 \helpref{wxDEPRECATED\_INLINE}{wxdeprecatedinline}\\
80 \helpref{wxDirExists}{functionwxdirexists}\\
81 \helpref{wxDirSelector}{wxdirselector}\\
82 \helpref{wxDisplayDepth}{wxdisplaydepth}\\
83 \helpref{wxDisplaySize}{wxdisplaysize}\\
84 \helpref{wxDisplaySizeMM}{wxdisplaysizemm}\\
85 \helpref{wxDos2UnixFilename}{wxdos2unixfilename}\\
86 \helpref{wxDynamicCastThis}{wxdynamiccastthis}\\
87 \helpref{wxDynamicCast}{wxdynamiccast}\\
88 \helpref{wxDYNLIB\_FUNCTION}{wxdynlibfunction}\\
89 \helpref{wxEmptyClipboard}{wxemptyclipboard}\\
90 \helpref{wxEnableTopLevelWindows}{wxenabletoplevelwindows}\\
91 \helpref{wxEndBusyCursor}{wxendbusycursor}\\
92 \helpref{wxENTER\_CRIT\_SECT}{wxentercritsect}\\
93 \helpref{wxEntry}{wxentry}\\
94 \helpref{wxEntryStart}{wxentrystart}\\
95 \helpref{wxEntryCleanup}{wxentrycleanup}\\
96 \helpref{wxEnumClipboardFormats}{wxenumclipboardformats}\\
97 \helpref{wxError}{wxerror}\\
98 \helpref{wxExecute}{wxexecute}\\
99 \helpref{wxExit}{wxexit}\\
100 \helpref{wxEXPLICIT}{wxexplicit}\\
101 \helpref{wxFAIL\_MSG}{wxfailmsg}\\
102 \helpref{wxFAIL}{wxfail}\\
103 \helpref{wxFatalError}{wxfatalerror}\\
104 \helpref{wxFileExists}{functionwxfileexists}\\
105 \helpref{wxFileModificationTime}{wxfilemodificationtime}\\
106 \helpref{wxFileNameFromPath}{wxfilenamefrompath}\\
107 \helpref{wxFileSelector}{wxfileselector}\\
108 \helpref{wxFindFirstFile}{wxfindfirstfile}\\
109 \helpref{wxFindMenuItemId}{wxfindmenuitemid}\\
110 \helpref{wxFindNextFile}{wxfindnextfile}\\
111 \helpref{wxFindWindowAtPointer}{wxfindwindowatpointer}\\
112 \helpref{wxFindWindowAtPoint}{wxfindwindowatpoint}\\
113 \helpref{wxFindWindowByLabel}{wxfindwindowbylabel}\\
114 \helpref{wxFindWindowByName}{wxfindwindowbyname}\\
115 \helpref{wxFinite}{wxfinite}\\
116 \helpref{wxGenericAboutBox}{wxgenericaboutbox}\\
117 \helpref{wxGetActiveWindow}{wxgetactivewindow}\\
118 \helpref{wxGetApp}{wxgetapp}\\
119 \helpref{wxGetBatteryState}{wxgetbatterystate}\\
120 \helpref{wxGetClipboardData}{wxgetclipboarddata}\\
121 \helpref{wxGetClipboardFormatName}{wxgetclipboardformatname}\\
122 \helpref{wxGetColourFromUser}{wxgetcolourfromuser}\\
123 \helpref{wxGetCwd}{wxgetcwd}\\
124 \helpref{wxGetDiskSpace}{wxgetdiskspace}\\
125 \helpref{wxGetDisplayName}{wxgetdisplayname}\\
126 \helpref{wxGetDisplaySize}{wxdisplaysize}\\
127 \helpref{wxGetDisplaySizeMM}{wxdisplaysizemm}\\
128 \helpref{wxGetEmailAddress}{wxgetemailaddress}\\
129 \helpref{wxGetEnv}{wxgetenv}\\
130 \helpref{wxGetFileKind}{wxgetfilekind}\\
131 \helpref{wxGetFontFromUser}{wxgetfontfromuser}\\
132 \helpref{wxGetFreeMemory}{wxgetfreememory}\\
133 \helpref{wxGetFullHostName}{wxgetfullhostname}\\
134 \helpref{wxGetHomeDir}{wxgethomedir}\\
135 \helpref{wxGetHostName}{wxgethostname}\\
136 \helpref{wxGetKeyState}{wxgetkeystate}\\
137 \helpref{wxGetLocalTimeMillis}{wxgetlocaltimemillis}\\
138 \helpref{wxGetLocalTime}{wxgetlocaltime}\\
139 \helpref{wxGetMousePosition}{wxgetmouseposition}\\
140 \helpref{wxGetMouseState}{wxgetmousestate}\\
141 \helpref{wxGetMultipleChoices}{wxgetmultiplechoices}\\
142 \helpref{wxGetNumberFromUser}{wxgetnumberfromuser}\\
143 \helpref{wxGetOSDirectory}{wxgetosdirectory}\\
144 \helpref{wxGetOsDescription}{wxgetosdescription}\\
145 \helpref{wxGetOsVersion}{wxgetosversion}\\
146 \helpref{wxGetPasswordFromUser}{wxgetpasswordfromuser}\\
147 \helpref{wxGetPowerType}{wxgetpowertype}\\
148 \helpref{wxGetPrinterCommand}{wxgetprintercommand}\\
149 \helpref{wxGetPrinterFile}{wxgetprinterfile}\\
150 \helpref{wxGetPrinterMode}{wxgetprintermode}\\
151 \helpref{wxGetPrinterOptions}{wxgetprinteroptions}\\
152 \helpref{wxGetPrinterOrientation}{wxgetprinterorientation}\\
153 \helpref{wxGetPrinterPreviewCommand}{wxgetprinterpreviewcommand}\\
154 \helpref{wxGetPrinterScaling}{wxgetprinterscaling}\\
155 \helpref{wxGetPrinterTranslation}{wxgetprintertranslation}\\
156 \helpref{wxGetProcessId}{wxgetprocessid}\\
157 \helpref{wxGetSingleChoiceData}{wxgetsinglechoicedata}\\
158 \helpref{wxGetSingleChoiceIndex}{wxgetsinglechoiceindex}\\
159 \helpref{wxGetSingleChoice}{wxgetsinglechoice}\\
160 \helpref{wxGetTempFileName}{wxgettempfilename}\\
161 \helpref{wxGetTextFromUser}{wxgettextfromuser}\\
162 \helpref{wxGetTopLevelParent}{wxgettoplevelparent}\\
163 \helpref{wxGetTranslation}{wxgettranslation}\\
164 \helpref{wxGetUTCTime}{wxgetutctime}\\
165 \helpref{wxGetUserHome}{wxgetuserhome}\\
166 \helpref{wxGetUserId}{wxgetuserid}\\
167 \helpref{wxGetUserName}{wxgetusername}\\
168 \helpref{wxGetWorkingDirectory}{wxgetworkingdirectory}\\
169 \helpref{wxGetenv}{wxgetenvmacro}\\
170 \helpref{wxHandleFatalExceptions}{wxhandlefatalexceptions}\\
171 \helpref{wxICON}{wxiconmacro}\\
172 \helpref{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}{intswapalways}\\
173 \helpref{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}{intswaponbe}\\
174 \helpref{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}{intswaponle}\\
175 \helpref{wxInitAllImageHandlers}{wxinitallimagehandlers}\\
176 \helpref{wxInitialize}{wxinitialize}\\
177 \helpref{wxIsAbsolutePath}{wxisabsolutepath}\\
178 \helpref{wxIsBusy}{wxisbusy}\\
179 \helpref{wxIsClipboardFormatAvailable}{wxisclipboardformatavailable}\\
180 \helpref{wxIsDebuggerRunning}{wxisdebuggerrunning}\\
181 \helpref{wxIsEmpty}{wxisempty}\\
182 \helpref{wxIsMainThread}{wxismainthread}\\
183 \helpref{wxIsNaN}{wxisnan}\\
184 \helpref{wxIsPlatformLittleEndian}{wxisplatformlittleendian}\\
185 \helpref{wxIsPlatform64Bit}{wxisplatform64bit}\\
186 \helpref{wxIsWild}{wxiswild}\\
187 \helpref{wxJoin}{wxjoin}\\
188 \helpref{wxKill}{wxkill}\\
189 \helpref{wxLaunchDefaultBrowser}{wxlaunchdefaultbrowser}\\
190 \helpref{wxLEAVE\_CRIT\_SECT}{wxleavecritsect}\\
191 \helpref{wxLoadUserResource}{wxloaduserresource}\\
192 \helpref{wxLogDebug}{wxlogdebug}\\
193 \helpref{wxLogError}{wxlogerror}\\
194 \helpref{wxLogFatalError}{wxlogfatalerror}\\
195 \helpref{wxLogMessage}{wxlogmessage}\\
196 \helpref{wxLogStatus}{wxlogstatus}\\
197 \helpref{wxLogSysError}{wxlogsyserror}\\
198 \helpref{wxLogTrace}{wxlogtrace}\\
199 \helpref{wxLogVerbose}{wxlogverbose}\\
200 \helpref{wxLogWarning}{wxlogwarning}\\
201 \helpref{wxLL}{wxll}\\
202 \helpref{wxLongLongFmtSpec}{wxlonglongfmtspec}\\
203 \helpref{wxMakeMetafilePlaceable}{wxmakemetafileplaceable}\\
204 \helpref{wxMatchWild}{wxmatchwild}\\
205 \helpref{wxMessageBox}{wxmessagebox}\\
206 \helpref{wxMilliSleep}{wxmillisleep}\\
207 \helpref{wxMicroSleep}{wxmicrosleep}\\
208 \helpref{wxMkdir}{wxmkdir}\\
209 \helpref{wxMutexGuiEnter}{wxmutexguienter}\\
210 \helpref{wxMutexGuiLeave}{wxmutexguileave}\\
211 \helpref{wxNewId}{wxnewid}\\
212 \helpref{wxNow}{wxnow}\\
213 \helpref{wxOnAssert}{wxonassert}\\
214 \helpref{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT}{wxonblockexit}\\
215 \helpref{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ}{wxonblockexitobj}\\
216 \helpref{wxOpenClipboard}{wxopenclipboard}\\
217 \helpref{wxParseCommonDialogsFilter}{wxparsecommondialogsfilter}\\
218 \helpref{wxPathOnly}{wxpathonly}\\
219 \helpref{wxPLURAL}{wxplural}\\
220 \helpref{wxPostDelete}{wxpostdelete}\\
221 \helpref{wxPostEvent}{wxpostevent}\\
222 \helpref{wxRegisterClipboardFormat}{wxregisterclipboardformat}\\
223 \helpref{wxRegisterId}{wxregisterid}\\
224 \helpref{wxRemoveFile}{wxremovefile}\\
225 \helpref{wxRenameFile}{wxrenamefile}\\
226 \helpref{wxRmdir}{wxrmdir}\\
227 \helpref{wxSafeShowMessage}{wxsafeshowmessage}\\
228 \helpref{wxSafeYield}{wxsafeyield}\\
229 \helpref{wxSetClipboardData}{wxsetclipboarddata}\\
230 \helpref{wxSetCursor}{wxsetcursor}\\
231 \helpref{wxSetDisplayName}{wxsetdisplayname}\\
232 \helpref{wxSetEnv}{wxsetenv}\\
233 \helpref{wxSetPrinterCommand}{wxsetprintercommand}\\
234 \helpref{wxSetPrinterFile}{wxsetprinterfile}\\
235 \helpref{wxSetPrinterMode}{wxsetprintermode}\\
236 \helpref{wxSetPrinterOptions}{wxsetprinteroptions}\\
237 \helpref{wxSetPrinterOrientation}{wxsetprinterorientation}\\
238 \helpref{wxSetPrinterPreviewCommand}{wxsetprinterpreviewcommand}\\
239 \helpref{wxSetPrinterScaling}{wxsetprinterscaling}\\
240 \helpref{wxSetPrinterTranslation}{wxsetprintertranslation}\\
241 \helpref{wxSetWorkingDirectory}{wxsetworkingdirectory}\\
242 \helpref{wxShell}{wxshell}\\
243 \helpref{wxShowTip}{wxshowtip}\\
244 \helpref{wxShutdown}{wxshutdown}\\
245 \helpref{wxSleep}{wxsleep}\\
246 \helpref{wxSnprintf}{wxsnprintf}\\
247 \helpref{wxSplit}{wxsplit}\\
248 \helpref{wxSplitPath}{wxsplitfunction}\\
249 \helpref{wxStaticCast}{wxstaticcast}\\
250 \helpref{wxStrcmp}{wxstrcmp}\\
251 \helpref{wxStricmp}{wxstricmp}\\
252 \helpref{wxStringEq}{wxstringeq}\\
253 \helpref{wxStringMatch}{wxstringmatch}\\
254 \helpref{wxStringTokenize}{wxstringtokenize}\\
255 \helpref{wxStripMenuCodes}{wxstripmenucodes}\\
256 \helpref{wxStrlen}{wxstrlen}\\
257 \helpref{wxSTRINGIZE}{wxstringize}\\
258 \helpref{wxSTRINGIZE\_T}{wxstringizet}\\
259 \helpref{wxSUPPRESS\_GCC\_PRIVATE\_DTOR\_WARNING}{wxsuppressgccprivatedtorwarning}\\
260 \helpref{wxSysErrorCode}{wxsyserrorcode}\\
261 \helpref{wxSysErrorMsg}{wxsyserrormsg}\\
262 \helpref{wxT}{wxt}\\
263 \helpref{wxTrace}{wxtrace}\\
264 \helpref{WXTRACE}{trace}\\
265 \helpref{wxTraceLevel}{wxtracelevel}\\
266 \helpref{WXTRACELEVEL}{tracelevel}\\
267 \helpref{wxTransferFileToStream}{wxtransferfiletostream}\\
268 \helpref{wxTransferStreamToFile}{wxtransferstreamtofile}\\
269 \helpref{wxTrap}{wxtrap}\\
270 \helpref{wxULL}{wxull}\\
271 \helpref{wxUninitialize}{wxuninitialize}\\
272 \helpref{wxUnix2DosFilename}{wxunix2dosfilename}\\
273 \helpref{wxUnsetEnv}{wxunsetenv}\\
274 \helpref{wxUsleep}{wxusleep}\\
275 \helpref{wxVaCopy}{wxvacopy}\\
276 \helpref{wxVsnprintf}{wxvsnprintf}\\
277 \helpref{wxWakeUpIdle}{wxwakeupidle}\\
278 \helpref{wxYield}{wxyield}\\
279 \helpref{wx\_const\_cast}{wxconstcastraw}\\
280 \helpref{wx\_reinterpret\_cast}{wxreinterpretcastraw}\\
281 \helpref{wx\_static\_cast}{wxstaticcastraw}\\
282 \helpref{wx\_truncate\_cast}{wxtruncatecast}\\
283 \helpref{\_}{underscore}\\
284 \helpref{\_T}{underscoret}
285 \helpref{\_\_WXFUNCTION\_\_}{wxfunction}
286
287
288
289 \section{Version macros}\label{versionfunctions}
290
291 The following constants are defined in wxWidgets:
292
293 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
294 \item {\tt wxMAJOR\_VERSION} is the major version of wxWidgets
295 \item {\tt wxMINOR\_VERSION} is the minor version of wxWidgets
296 \item {\tt wxRELEASE\_NUMBER} is the release number
297 \item {\tt wxSUBRELEASE\_NUMBER} is the subrelease number which is $0$ for all
298 official releases
299 \end{itemize}
300
301 For example, the values or these constants for wxWidgets 2.1.15 are 2, 1 and
302 15.
303
304 Additionally, {\tt wxVERSION\_STRING} is a user-readable string containing
305 the full wxWidgets version and {\tt wxVERSION\_NUMBER} is a combination of the
306 three version numbers above: for 2.1.15, it is 2115 and it is 2200 for
307 wxWidgets 2.2.
308
309 The subrelease number is only used for the sources in between official releases
310 and so normally is not useful.
311
312 \wxheading{Include files}
313
314 <wx/version.h> or <wx/defs.h>
315
316
317 \membersection{wxCHECK\_GCC\_VERSION}\label{wxcheckgccversion}
318
319 \func{bool}{wxCHECK\_GCC\_VERSION}{\param{}{major, minor}}
320
321 Returns $1$ if the compiler being used to compile the code is GNU C++
322 compiler (g++) version major.minor or greater. Otherwise, and also if
323 the compiler is not GNU C++ at all, returns $0$.
324
325
326 \membersection{wxCHECK\_SUNCC\_VERSION}\label{wxchecksunccversion}
327
328 \func{bool}{wxCHECK\_SUNCC\_VERSION}{\param{}{major, minor}}
329
330 Returns $1$ if the compiler being used to compile the code is Sun CC Pro
331 compiler and its version is at least \texttt{major.minor}. Otherwise returns
332 $0$.
333
334
335 \membersection{wxCHECK\_VERSION}\label{wxcheckversion}
336
337 \func{bool}{wxCHECK\_VERSION}{\param{}{major, minor, release}}
338
339 This is a macro which evaluates to true if the current wxWidgets version is at
340 least major.minor.release.
341
342 For example, to test if the program is compiled with wxWidgets 2.2 or higher,
343 the following can be done:
344
345 \begin{verbatim}
346 wxString s;
347 #if wxCHECK_VERSION(2, 2, 0)
348 if ( s.StartsWith("foo") )
349 #else // replacement code for old version
350 if ( strncmp(s, "foo", 3) == 0 )
351 #endif
352 {
353 ...
354 }
355 \end{verbatim}
356
357
358 \membersection{wxCHECK\_VERSION\_FULL}\label{wxcheckversionfull}
359
360 \func{bool}{wxCHECK\_VERSION\_FULL}{\param{}{major, minor, release, subrel}}
361
362 Same as \helpref{wxCHECK\_VERSION}{wxcheckversion} but also checks that
363 \texttt{wxSUBRELEASE\_NUMBER} is at least \arg{subrel}.
364
365
366 \membersection{wxCHECK\_W32API\_VERSION}\label{wxcheckw32apiversion}
367
368 \func{bool}{wxCHECK\_W32API\_VERSION}{\param{}{major, minor, release}}
369
370 Returns $1$ if the version of w32api headers used is major.minor.release or
371 greater. Otherwise, and also if we are not compiling with mingw32/cygwin under
372 Win32 at all, returns $0$.
373
374
375
376 \section{Application initialization and termination}\label{appinifunctions}
377
378 The functions in this section are used on application startup/shutdown and also
379 to control the behaviour of the main event loop of the GUI programs.
380
381
382 \membersection{::wxEntry}\label{wxentry}
383
384 This initializes wxWidgets in a platform-dependent way. Use this if you are not
385 using the default wxWidgets entry code (e.g. main or WinMain). For example, you
386 can initialize wxWidgets from an Microsoft Foundation Classes application using
387 this function.
388
389 The following overload of wxEntry is available under all platforms:
390
391 \func{int}{wxEntry}{\param{int\&}{ argc}, \param{wxChar **}{argv}}
392
393 Under MS Windows, an additional overload suitable for calling from
394 \texttt{WinMain} is available:
395
396 \func{int}{wxEntry}{\param{HINSTANCE }{hInstance}, \param{HINSTANCE }{hPrevInstance = \NULL}, \param{char *}{pCmdLine = \NULL}, \param{int }{nCmdShow = \texttt{SW\_SHOWNORMAL}}}
397
398 (notice that under Windows CE platform, and only there, the type of
399 \arg{pCmdLine} is \texttt{wchar\_t *}, otherwise it is \texttt{char *}, even in
400 Unicode build).
401
402 \wxheading{See also}
403
404 \helpref{wxEntryStart}{wxentrystart}
405
406 \wxheading{Remarks}
407
408 To clean up wxWidgets, call wxApp::OnExit followed by the static function
409 wxApp::CleanUp. For example, if exiting from an MFC application that also uses wxWidgets:
410
411 \begin{verbatim}
412 int CTheApp::ExitInstance()
413 {
414 // OnExit isn't called by CleanUp so must be called explicitly.
415 wxTheApp->OnExit();
416 wxApp::CleanUp();
417
418 return CWinApp::ExitInstance();
419 }
420 \end{verbatim}
421
422 \wxheading{Include files}
423
424 <wx/app.h>
425
426
427
428 \membersection{::wxEntryCleanup}\label{wxentrycleanup}
429
430 \func{void}{wxEntryCleanup}{\void}
431
432 Free resources allocated by a successful call to \helpref{wxEntryStart}{wxentrystart}.
433
434 \wxheading{Include files}
435
436 <wx/init.h>
437
438
439 \membersection{::wxEntryStart}\label{wxentrystart}
440
441 \func{bool}{wxEntryStart}{\param{int\&}{ argc}, \param{wxChar **}{argv}}
442
443 This function can be used to perform the initialization of wxWidgets if you
444 can't use the default initialization code for any reason.
445
446 If the function returns \true, the initialization was successful and the global
447 \helpref{wxApp}{wxapp} object \texttt{wxTheApp} has been created. Moreover,
448 \helpref{wxEntryCleanup}{wxentrycleanup} must be called afterwards. If the
449 function returns \false, a catastrophic initialization error occured and (at
450 least the GUI part of) the library can't be used at all.
451
452 Notice that parameters \arg{argc} and \arg{argv} may be modified by this
453 function.
454
455 An additional overload of wxEntryStart() is provided under MSW only: it is
456 meant to be called with the parameters passed to \texttt{WinMain()}.
457
458 \func{bool}{wxEntryStart}{\param{HINSTANCE }{hInstance}, \param{HINSTANCE }{hPrevInstance = \NULL}, \param{char *}{pCmdLine = \NULL}, \param{int }{nCmdShow = \texttt{SW\_SHOWNORMAL}}}
459
460 (notice that under Windows CE platform, and only there, the type of
461 \arg{pCmdLine} is \texttt{wchar\_t *}, otherwise it is \texttt{char *}, even in
462 Unicode build).
463
464 \wxheading{Include files}
465
466 <wx/init.h>
467
468
469 \membersection{::wxGetApp}\label{wxgetapp}
470
471 \func{wxAppDerivedClass\&}{wxGetApp}{\void}
472
473 This function doesn't exist in wxWidgets but it is created by using
474 the \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_APP}{implementapp} macro. Thus, before using it
475 anywhere but in the same module where this macro is used, you must make it
476 available using \helpref{DECLARE\_APP}{declareapp}.
477
478 The advantage of using this function compared to directly using the global
479 wxTheApp pointer is that the latter is of type {\tt wxApp *} and so wouldn't
480 allow you to access the functions specific to your application class but not
481 present in wxApp while wxGetApp() returns the object of the right type.
482
483
484 \membersection{::wxHandleFatalExceptions}\label{wxhandlefatalexceptions}
485
486 \func{bool}{wxHandleFatalExceptions}{\param{bool}{ doIt = true}}
487
488 If {\it doIt} is true, the fatal exceptions (also known as general protection
489 faults under Windows or segmentation violations in the Unix world) will be
490 caught and passed to \helpref{wxApp::OnFatalException}{wxapponfatalexception}.
491 By default, i.e. before this function is called, they will be handled in the
492 normal way which usually just means that the application will be terminated.
493 Calling wxHandleFatalExceptions() with {\it doIt} equal to false will restore
494 this default behaviour.
495
496 Notice that this function is only available if
497 \texttt{wxUSE\_ON\_FATAL\_EXCEPTION} is $1$ and under Windows platform this
498 requires a compiler with support for SEH (structured exception handling) which
499 currently means only Microsoft Visual C++ or a recent Borland C++ version.
500
501
502 \membersection{::wxInitAllImageHandlers}\label{wxinitallimagehandlers}
503
504 \func{void}{wxInitAllImageHandlers}{\void}
505
506 Initializes all available image handlers. For a list of available handlers,
507 see \helpref{wxImage}{wximage}.
508
509 \wxheading{See also}
510
511 \helpref{wxImage}{wximage}, \helpref{wxImageHandler}{wximagehandler}
512
513 \wxheading{Include files}
514
515 <wx/image.h>
516
517
518 \membersection{::wxInitialize}\label{wxinitialize}
519
520 \func{bool}{wxInitialize}{\void}
521
522 This function is used in wxBase only and only if you don't create
523 \helpref{wxApp}{wxapp} object at all. In this case you must call it from your
524 {\tt main()} function before calling any other wxWidgets functions.
525
526 If the function returns \false the initialization could not be performed,
527 in this case the library cannot be used and
528 \helpref{wxUninitialize}{wxuninitialize} shouldn't be called neither.
529
530 This function may be called several times but
531 \helpref{wxUninitialize}{wxuninitialize} must be called for each successful
532 call to this function.
533
534 \wxheading{Include files}
535
536 <wx/app.h>
537
538
539 \membersection{::wxSafeYield}\label{wxsafeyield}
540
541 \func{bool}{wxSafeYield}{\param{wxWindow*}{ win = NULL}, \param{bool}{
542 onlyIfNeeded = false}}
543
544 This function is similar to wxYield, except that it disables the user input to
545 all program windows before calling wxYield and re-enables it again
546 afterwards. If {\it win} is not NULL, this window will remain enabled,
547 allowing the implementation of some limited user interaction.
548
549 Returns the result of the call to \helpref{::wxYield}{wxyield}.
550
551 \wxheading{Include files}
552
553 <wx/utils.h>
554
555
556 \membersection{::wxUninitialize}\label{wxuninitialize}
557
558 \func{void}{wxUninitialize}{\void}
559
560 This function is for use in console (wxBase) programs only. It must be called
561 once for each previous successful call to \helpref{wxInitialize}{wxinitialize}.
562
563 \wxheading{Include files}
564
565 <wx/app.h>
566
567
568 \membersection{::wxYield}\label{wxyield}
569
570 \func{bool}{wxYield}{\void}
571
572 Calls \helpref{wxApp::Yield}{wxappyield}.
573
574 This function is kept only for backwards compatibility. Please use
575 the \helpref{wxApp::Yield}{wxappyield} method instead in any new code.
576
577 \wxheading{Include files}
578
579 <wx/app.h> or <wx/utils.h>
580
581
582 \membersection{::wxWakeUpIdle}\label{wxwakeupidle}
583
584 \func{void}{wxWakeUpIdle}{\void}
585
586 This functions wakes up the (internal and platform dependent) idle system, i.e. it
587 will force the system to send an idle event even if the system currently {\it is}
588 idle and thus would not send any idle event until after some other event would get
589 sent. This is also useful for sending events between two threads and is used by
590 the corresponding functions \helpref{::wxPostEvent}{wxpostevent} and
591 \helpref{wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent}{wxevthandleraddpendingevent}.
592
593 \wxheading{Include files}
594
595 <wx/app.h>
596
597
598
599 \section{Process control functions}\label{processfunctions}
600
601 The functions in this section are used to launch or terminate the other
602 processes.
603
604
605 \membersection{::wxExecute}\label{wxexecute}
606
607 \func{long}{wxExecute}{\param{const wxString\& }{command}, \param{int }{sync = wxEXEC\_ASYNC}, \param{wxProcess *}{callback = NULL}}
608
609 \perlnote{In wxPerl this function is called \texttt{Wx::ExecuteCommand}}
610
611 \func{long}{wxExecute}{\param{char **}{argv}, \param{int }{flags = wxEXEC\_ASYNC}, \param{wxProcess *}{callback = NULL}}
612
613 \perlnote{In wxPerl this function is called \texttt{Wx::ExecuteArgs}}
614
615 \func{long}{wxExecute}{\param{const wxString\& }{command}, \param{wxArrayString\& }{output}, \param{int }{flags = 0}}
616
617 \perlnote{In wxPerl this function is called \texttt{Wx::ExecuteStdout} and it
618 only takes the {\tt command} argument,
619 and returns a 2-element list {\tt ( status, output )}, where {\tt output} is
620 an array reference.}
621
622 \func{long}{wxExecute}{\param{const wxString\& }{command}, \param{wxArrayString\& }{output}, \param{wxArrayString\& }{errors}, \param{int }{flags = 0}}
623
624 \perlnote{In wxPerl this function is called \texttt{Wx::ExecuteStdoutStderr}
625 and it only takes the {\tt command} argument,
626 and returns a 3-element list {\tt ( status, output, errors )}, where
627 {\tt output} and {\tt errors} are array references.}
628
629 Executes another program in Unix or Windows.
630
631 The first form takes a command string, such as {\tt "emacs file.txt"}.
632
633 The second form takes an array of values: a command, any number of
634 arguments, terminated by NULL.
635
636 The semantics of the third and fourth versions is different from the first two
637 and is described in more details below.
638
639 If {\it flags} parameter contains {\tt wxEXEC\_ASYNC} flag (the default), flow
640 of control immediately returns. If it contains {\tt wxEXEC\_SYNC}, the current
641 application waits until the other program has terminated.
642
643 In the case of synchronous execution, the return value is the exit code of
644 the process (which terminates by the moment the function returns) and will be
645 $-1$ if the process couldn't be started and typically 0 if the process
646 terminated successfully. Also, while waiting for the process to
647 terminate, wxExecute will call \helpref{wxYield}{wxyield}. Because of this, by
648 default this function disables all application windows to avoid unexpected
649 reentrancies which could result from the users interaction with the program
650 while the child process is running. If you are sure that it is safe to not
651 disable the program windows, you may pass \texttt{wxEXEC\_NODISABLE} flag to
652 prevent this automatic disabling from happening.
653
654 For asynchronous execution, however, the return value is the process id and
655 zero value indicates that the command could not be executed. As an added
656 complication, the return value of $-1$ in this case indicates that we didn't
657 launch a new process, but connected to the running one (this can only happen in
658 case of using DDE under Windows for command execution). In particular, in this,
659 and only this, case the calling code will not get the notification about
660 process termination.
661
662 If callback isn't NULL and if execution is asynchronous,
663 \helpref{wxProcess::OnTerminate}{wxprocessonterminate} will be called when
664 the process finishes. Specifying this parameter also allows you to redirect the
665 standard input and/or output of the process being launched by calling
666 \helpref{Redirect}{wxprocessredirect}. If the child process IO is redirected,
667 under Windows the process window is not shown by default (this avoids having to
668 flush an unnecessary console for the processes which don't create any windows
669 anyhow) but a {\tt wxEXEC\_NOHIDE} flag can be used to prevent this from
670 happening, i.e. with this flag the child process window will be shown normally.
671
672 Under Unix the flag {\tt wxEXEC\_MAKE\_GROUP\_LEADER} may be used to ensure
673 that the new process is a group leader (this will create a new session if
674 needed). Calling \helpref{wxKill}{wxkill} passing wxKILL\_CHILDREN will
675 kill this process as well as all of its children (except those which have
676 started their own session).
677
678 The {\tt wxEXEC\_NOEVENTS} flag prevents processing of any events from taking
679 place while the child process is running. It should be only used for very
680 short-lived processes as otherwise the application windows risk becoming
681 unresponsive from the users point of view. As this flag only makes sense with
682 {\tt wxEXEC\_SYNC}, {\tt wxEXEC\_BLOCK} equal to the sum of both of these flags
683 is provided as a convenience.
684
685 Finally, you may use the third overloaded version of this function to execute
686 a process (always synchronously, the contents of \arg{flags} is or'd with
687 \texttt{wxEXEC\_SYNC}) and capture its output in the array \arg{output}. The
688 fourth version adds the possibility to additionally capture the messages from
689 standard error output in the \arg{errors} array.
690
691 {\bf NB:} Currently wxExecute() can only be used from the main thread, calling
692 this function from another thread will result in an assert failure in debug
693 build and won't work.
694
695 \wxheading{See also}
696
697 \helpref{wxShell}{wxshell}, \helpref{wxProcess}{wxprocess}, \helpref{Exec sample}{sampleexec}.
698
699 \wxheading{Parameters}
700
701 \docparam{command}{The command to execute and any parameters to pass to it as a
702 single string.}
703
704 \docparam{argv}{The command to execute should be the first element of this
705 array, any additional ones are the command parameters and the array must be
706 terminated with a NULL pointer.}
707
708 \docparam{flags}{Combination of bit masks {\tt wxEXEC\_ASYNC},\rtfsp
709 {\tt wxEXEC\_SYNC} and {\tt wxEXEC\_NOHIDE}}
710
711 \docparam{callback}{An optional pointer to \helpref{wxProcess}{wxprocess}}
712
713 \wxheading{Include files}
714
715 <wx/utils.h>
716
717
718 \membersection{::wxExit}\label{wxexit}
719
720 \func{void}{wxExit}{\void}
721
722 Exits application after calling \helpref{wxApp::OnExit}{wxapponexit}.
723 Should only be used in an emergency: normally the top-level frame
724 should be deleted (after deleting all other frames) to terminate the
725 application. See \helpref{wxCloseEvent}{wxcloseevent} and \helpref{wxApp}{wxapp}.
726
727 \wxheading{Include files}
728
729 <wx/app.h>
730
731
732 \membersection{::wxJoin}\label{wxjoin}
733
734 \func{wxString}{wxJoin}{\param{const wxArrayString\&}{ arr}, \param{const wxChar}{ sep}, \param{const wxChar}{ escape = '$\backslash$'}}
735
736 Concatenate all lines of the given \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring} object using the separator \arg{sep} and returns
737 the result as a \helpref{wxString}{wxstring}.
738
739 If the \arg{escape} character is non-\NULL, then it's used as prefix for each occurrence of \arg{sep}
740 in the strings contained in \arg{arr} before joining them which is necessary
741 in order to be able to recover the original array contents from the string
742 later using \helpref{wxSplit}{wxsplit}.
743
744 \wxheading{Include files}
745
746 <wx/arrstr.h>
747
748
749 \membersection{::wxKill}\label{wxkill}
750
751 \func{int}{wxKill}{\param{long}{ pid}, \param{int}{ sig = wxSIGTERM}, \param{wxKillError }{*rc = NULL}, \param{int }{flags = 0}}
752
753 Equivalent to the Unix kill function: send the given signal {\it sig} to the
754 process with PID {\it pid}. The valid signal values are
755
756 \begin{verbatim}
757 enum wxSignal
758 {
759 wxSIGNONE = 0, // verify if the process exists under Unix
760 wxSIGHUP,
761 wxSIGINT,
762 wxSIGQUIT,
763 wxSIGILL,
764 wxSIGTRAP,
765 wxSIGABRT,
766 wxSIGEMT,
767 wxSIGFPE,
768 wxSIGKILL, // forcefully kill, dangerous!
769 wxSIGBUS,
770 wxSIGSEGV,
771 wxSIGSYS,
772 wxSIGPIPE,
773 wxSIGALRM,
774 wxSIGTERM // terminate the process gently
775 };
776 \end{verbatim}
777
778 {\tt wxSIGNONE}, {\tt wxSIGKILL} and {\tt wxSIGTERM} have the same meaning
779 under both Unix and Windows but all the other signals are equivalent to
780 {\tt wxSIGTERM} under Windows.
781
782 Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure. If {\it rc} parameter is not NULL, it will
783 be filled with an element of {\tt wxKillError} enum:
784
785 \begin{verbatim}
786 enum wxKillError
787 {
788 wxKILL_OK, // no error
789 wxKILL_BAD_SIGNAL, // no such signal
790 wxKILL_ACCESS_DENIED, // permission denied
791 wxKILL_NO_PROCESS, // no such process
792 wxKILL_ERROR // another, unspecified error
793 };
794 \end{verbatim}
795
796 The {\it flags} parameter can be wxKILL\_NOCHILDREN (the default),
797 or wxKILL\_CHILDREN, in which case the child processes of this
798 process will be killed too. Note that under Unix, for wxKILL\_CHILDREN
799 to work you should have created the process by passing wxEXEC\_MAKE\_GROUP\_LEADER
800 to wxExecute.
801
802 \wxheading{See also}
803
804 \helpref{wxProcess::Kill}{wxprocesskill},\rtfsp
805 \helpref{wxProcess::Exists}{wxprocessexists},\rtfsp
806 \helpref{Exec sample}{sampleexec}
807
808 \wxheading{Include files}
809
810 <wx/utils.h>
811
812
813 \membersection{::wxGetProcessId}\label{wxgetprocessid}
814
815 \func{unsigned long}{wxGetProcessId}{\void}
816
817 Returns the number uniquely identifying the current process in the system.
818
819 If an error occurs, $0$ is returned.
820
821 \wxheading{Include files}
822
823 <wx/utils.h>
824
825
826 \membersection{::wxShell}\label{wxshell}
827
828 \func{bool}{wxShell}{\param{const wxString\& }{command = NULL}}
829
830 Executes a command in an interactive shell window. If no command is
831 specified, then just the shell is spawned.
832
833 See also \helpref{wxExecute}{wxexecute}, \helpref{Exec sample}{sampleexec}.
834
835 \wxheading{Include files}
836
837 <wx/utils.h>
838
839
840 \membersection{::wxShutdown}\label{wxshutdown}
841
842 \func{bool}{wxShutdown}{\param{wxShutdownFlags}{flags}}
843
844 This function shuts down or reboots the computer depending on the value of the
845 {\it flags}. Please notice that doing this requires the corresponding access
846 rights (superuser under Unix, {\tt SE\_SHUTDOWN} privilege under Windows NT)
847 and that this function is only implemented under Unix and Win32.
848
849 \wxheading{Parameters}
850
851 \docparam{flags}{Either {\tt wxSHUTDOWN\_POWEROFF} or {\tt wxSHUTDOWN\_REBOOT}}
852
853 \wxheading{Returns}
854
855 \true on success, \false if an error occurred.
856
857 \wxheading{Include files}
858
859 <wx/utils.h>
860
861
862
863 \section{Thread functions}\label{threadfunctions}
864
865 The functions and macros here mainly exist to make it writing the code which
866 may be compiled in multi thread build ({\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} $= 1$) as well as
867 in single thread configuration ({\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} $= 0$).
868
869 For example, a static variable must be protected against simultaneous access by
870 multiple threads in the former configuration but in the latter the extra
871 overhead of using the critical section is not needed. To solve this problem,
872 the \helpref{wxCRITICAL\_SECTION}{wxcriticalsectionmacro} macro may be used
873 to create and use the critical section only when needed.
874
875 \wxheading{Include files}
876
877 <wx/thread.h>
878
879 \wxheading{See also}
880
881 \helpref{wxThread}{wxthread}, \helpref{wxMutex}{wxmutex}, \helpref{Multithreading overview}{wxthreadoverview}
882
883
884
885 \membersection{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}\label{wxcritsectdeclare}
886
887 \func{}{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}{\param{}{cs}}
888
889 This macro declares a (static) critical section object named {\it cs} if
890 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $1$ and does nothing if it is $0$.
891
892
893
894 \membersection{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE\_MEMBER}\label{wxcritsectdeclaremember}
895
896 \func{}{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}{\param{}{cs}}
897
898 This macro declares a critical section object named {\it cs} if
899 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $1$ and does nothing if it is $0$. As it doesn't
900 include the {\tt static} keyword (unlike
901 \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}{wxcritsectdeclare}), it can be used to declare
902 a class or struct member which explains its name.
903
904
905
906 \membersection{wxCRIT\_SECT\_LOCKER}\label{wxcritsectlocker}
907
908 \func{}{wxCRIT\_SECT\_LOCKER}{\param{}{name}, \param{}{cs}}
909
910 This macro creates a \helpref{critical section lock}{wxcriticalsectionlocker}
911 object named {\it name} and associated with the critical section {\it cs} if
912 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $1$ and does nothing if it is $0$.
913
914
915
916 \membersection{wxCRITICAL\_SECTION}\label{wxcriticalsectionmacro}
917
918 \func{}{wxCRITICAL\_SECTION}{\param{}{name}}
919
920 This macro combines \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_DECLARE}{wxcritsectdeclare} and
921 \helpref{wxCRIT\_SECT\_LOCKER}{wxcritsectlocker}: it creates a static critical
922 section object and also the lock object associated with it. Because of this, it
923 can be only used inside a function, not at global scope. For example:
924
925 \begin{verbatim}
926 int IncCount()
927 {
928 static int s_counter = 0;
929
930 wxCRITICAL_SECTION(counter);
931
932 return ++s_counter;
933 }
934 \end{verbatim}
935
936 (note that we suppose that the function is called the first time from the main
937 thread so that the critical section object is initialized correctly by the time
938 other threads start calling it, if this is not the case this approach can
939 {\bf not} be used and the critical section must be made a global instead).
940
941
942
943 \membersection{wxENTER\_CRIT\_SECT}\label{wxentercritsect}
944
945 \func{}{wxENTER\_CRIT\_SECT}{\param{wxCriticalSection\& }{cs}}
946
947 This macro is equivalent to \helpref{cs.Enter()}{wxcriticalsectionenter} if
948 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $1$ and does nothing if it is $0$.
949
950
951
952 \membersection{::wxIsMainThread}\label{wxismainthread}
953
954 \func{bool}{wxIsMainThread}{\void}
955
956 Returns \true if this thread is the main one. Always returns \true if
957 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $0$.
958
959
960
961 \membersection{wxLEAVE\_CRIT\_SECT}\label{wxleavecritsect}
962
963 \func{}{wxLEAVE\_CRIT\_SECT}{\param{wxCriticalSection\& }{cs}}
964
965 This macro is equivalent to \helpref{cs.Leave()}{wxcriticalsectionleave} if
966 {\tt wxUSE\_THREADS} is $1$ and does nothing if it is $0$.
967
968
969
970 \membersection{::wxMutexGuiEnter}\label{wxmutexguienter}
971
972 \func{void}{wxMutexGuiEnter}{\void}
973
974 This function must be called when any thread other than the main GUI thread
975 wants to get access to the GUI library. This function will block the execution
976 of the calling thread until the main thread (or any other thread holding the
977 main GUI lock) leaves the GUI library and no other thread will enter the GUI
978 library until the calling thread calls \helpref{::wxMutexGuiLeave()}{wxmutexguileave}.
979
980 Typically, these functions are used like this:
981
982 \begin{verbatim}
983 void MyThread::Foo(void)
984 {
985 // before doing any GUI calls we must ensure that this thread is the only
986 // one doing it!
987
988 wxMutexGuiEnter();
989
990 // Call GUI here:
991 my_window->DrawSomething();
992
993 wxMutexGuiLeave();
994 }
995 \end{verbatim}
996
997 Note that under GTK, no creation of top-level windows is allowed in any
998 thread but the main one.
999
1000 This function is only defined on platforms which support preemptive
1001 threads.
1002
1003
1004 \membersection{::wxMutexGuiLeave}\label{wxmutexguileave}
1005
1006 \func{void}{wxMutexGuiLeave}{\void}
1007
1008 See \helpref{::wxMutexGuiEnter()}{wxmutexguienter}.
1009
1010 This function is only defined on platforms which support preemptive
1011 threads.
1012
1013
1014
1015 \section{File functions}\label{filefunctions}
1016
1017 \wxheading{Include files}
1018
1019 <wx/filefn.h>
1020
1021 \wxheading{See also}
1022
1023 \helpref{wxPathList}{wxpathlist}\\
1024 \helpref{wxDir}{wxdir}\\
1025 \helpref{wxFile}{wxfile}\\
1026 \helpref{wxFileName}{wxfilename}
1027
1028
1029 \membersection{::wxDos2UnixFilename}\label{wxdos2unixfilename}
1030
1031 \func{void}{wxDos2UnixFilename}{\param{wxChar *}{s}}
1032
1033 Converts a DOS to a Unix filename by replacing backslashes with forward
1034 slashes.
1035
1036
1037 \membersection{::wxFileExists}\label{functionwxfileexists}
1038
1039 \func{bool}{wxFileExists}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}}
1040
1041 Returns true if the file exists and is a plain file.
1042
1043
1044 \membersection{::wxFileModificationTime}\label{wxfilemodificationtime}
1045
1046 \func{time\_t}{wxFileModificationTime}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}}
1047
1048 Returns time of last modification of given file.
1049
1050 The function returns \texttt{(time\_t)}$-1$ if an error occurred (e.g. file not
1051 found).
1052
1053
1054 \membersection{::wxFileNameFromPath}\label{wxfilenamefrompath}
1055
1056 \func{wxString}{wxFileNameFromPath}{\param{const wxString\& }{path}}
1057
1058 \func{char *}{wxFileNameFromPath}{\param{char *}{path}}
1059
1060 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, please use
1061 \helpref{wxFileName::SplitPath}{wxfilenamesplitpath} instead.
1062
1063 Returns the filename for a full path. The second form returns a pointer to
1064 temporary storage that should not be deallocated.
1065
1066
1067 \membersection{::wxFindFirstFile}\label{wxfindfirstfile}
1068
1069 \func{wxString}{wxFindFirstFile}{\param{const wxString\& }{spec}, \param{int}{ flags = 0}}
1070
1071 This function does directory searching; returns the first file
1072 that matches the path {\it spec}, or the empty string. Use \helpref{wxFindNextFile}{wxfindnextfile} to
1073 get the next matching file. Neither will report the current directory "." or the
1074 parent directory "..".
1075
1076 \wxheading{Warning}
1077
1078 As of wx 2.5.2, these functions are not thread-safe! (they use static variables). You probably want to use \helpref{wxDir::GetFirst}{wxdirgetfirst} or \helpref{wxDirTraverser}{wxdirtraverser} instead.
1079
1080 {\it spec} may contain wildcards.
1081
1082 {\it flags} may be wxDIR for restricting the query to directories, wxFILE for files or zero for either.
1083
1084 For example:
1085
1086 \begin{verbatim}
1087 wxString f = wxFindFirstFile("/home/project/*.*");
1088 while ( !f.empty() )
1089 {
1090 ...
1091 f = wxFindNextFile();
1092 }
1093 \end{verbatim}
1094
1095
1096 \membersection{::wxFindNextFile}\label{wxfindnextfile}
1097
1098 \func{wxString}{wxFindNextFile}{\void}
1099
1100 Returns the next file that matches the path passed to \helpref{wxFindFirstFile}{wxfindfirstfile}.
1101
1102 See \helpref{wxFindFirstFile}{wxfindfirstfile} for an example.
1103
1104
1105 \membersection{::wxGetDiskSpace}\label{wxgetdiskspace}
1106
1107 \func{bool}{wxGetDiskSpace}{\param{const wxString\& }{path}, \param{wxLongLong }{*total = NULL}, \param{wxLongLong }{*free = NULL}}
1108
1109 This function returns the total number of bytes and number of free bytes on
1110 the disk containing the directory {\it path} (it should exist). Both
1111 {\it total} and {\it free} parameters may be {\tt NULL} if the corresponding
1112 information is not needed.
1113
1114 \wxheading{Returns}
1115
1116 \true on success, \false if an error occurred (for example, the
1117 directory doesn't exist).
1118
1119 \wxheading{Portability}
1120
1121 The generic Unix implementation depends on the system having
1122 the \texttt{statfs()} or \texttt{statvfs()} function.
1123
1124 This function first appeared in wxWidgets 2.3.2.
1125
1126
1127 \membersection{::wxGetFileKind}\label{wxgetfilekind}
1128
1129 \func{wxFileKind}{wxGetFileKind}{\param{int }{fd}}
1130
1131 \func{wxFileKind}{wxGetFileKind}{\param{FILE *}{fp}}
1132
1133 Returns the type of an open file. Possible return values are:
1134
1135 \begin{verbatim}
1136 enum wxFileKind
1137 {
1138 wxFILE_KIND_UNKNOWN,
1139 wxFILE_KIND_DISK, // a file supporting seeking to arbitrary offsets
1140 wxFILE_KIND_TERMINAL, // a tty
1141 wxFILE_KIND_PIPE // a pipe
1142 };
1143
1144 \end{verbatim}
1145
1146 \wxheading{Include files}
1147
1148 <wx/filefn.h>
1149
1150
1151 \membersection{::wxGetOSDirectory}\label{wxgetosdirectory}
1152
1153 \func{wxString}{wxGetOSDirectory}{\void}
1154
1155 Returns the Windows directory under Windows; on other platforms returns the empty string.
1156
1157
1158 \membersection{::wxIsAbsolutePath}\label{wxisabsolutepath}
1159
1160 \func{bool}{wxIsAbsolutePath}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}}
1161
1162 Returns true if the argument is an absolute filename, i.e. with a slash
1163 or drive name at the beginning.
1164
1165
1166 \membersection{::wxDirExists}\label{functionwxdirexists}
1167
1168 \func{bool}{wxDirExists}{\param{const wxString\& }{dirname}}
1169
1170 Returns true if \arg{dirname} exists and is a directory.
1171
1172
1173 \membersection{::wxPathOnly}\label{wxpathonly}
1174
1175 \func{wxString}{wxPathOnly}{\param{const wxString\& }{path}}
1176
1177 Returns the directory part of the filename.
1178
1179
1180 \membersection{::wxUnix2DosFilename}\label{wxunix2dosfilename}
1181
1182 \func{void}{wxUnix2DosFilename}{\param{wxChar *}{s}}
1183
1184 This function is deprecated, use \helpref{wxFileName}{wxfilename} instead.
1185
1186 Converts a Unix to a DOS filename by replacing forward
1187 slashes with backslashes.
1188
1189
1190 \membersection{wxCHANGE\_UMASK}\label{wxchangeumask}
1191
1192 \func{}{wxCHANGE\_UMASK}{\param{int }{mask}}
1193
1194 Under Unix this macro changes the current process umask to the given value,
1195 unless it is equal to $-1$ in which case nothing is done, and restores it to
1196 the original value on scope exit. It works by declaring a variable which sets
1197 umask to \arg{mask} in its constructor and restores it in its destructor.
1198
1199 Under other platforms this macro expands to nothing.
1200
1201
1202 \membersection{::wxConcatFiles}\label{wxconcatfiles}
1203
1204 \func{bool}{wxConcatFiles}{\param{const wxString\& }{file1}, \param{const wxString\& }{file2},
1205 \param{const wxString\& }{file3}}
1206
1207 Concatenates {\it file1} and {\it file2} to {\it file3}, returning
1208 true if successful.
1209
1210
1211 \membersection{::wxCopyFile}\label{wxcopyfile}
1212
1213 \func{bool}{wxCopyFile}{\param{const wxString\& }{file1}, \param{const wxString\& }{file2}, \param{bool }{overwrite = true}}
1214
1215 Copies {\it file1} to {\it file2}, returning true if successful. If
1216 {\it overwrite} parameter is \true (default), the destination file is overwritten
1217 if it exists, but if {\it overwrite} is \false, the functions fails in this
1218 case.
1219
1220 This function supports resources forks under Mac OS.
1221
1222
1223 \membersection{::wxGetCwd}\label{wxgetcwd}
1224
1225 \func{wxString}{wxGetCwd}{\void}
1226
1227 Returns a string containing the current (or working) directory.
1228
1229
1230 \membersection{::wxGetWorkingDirectory}\label{wxgetworkingdirectory}
1231
1232 \func{wxString}{wxGetWorkingDirectory}{\param{char *}{buf=NULL}, \param{int }{sz=1000}}
1233
1234 {\bf NB:} This function is deprecated: use \helpref{wxGetCwd}{wxgetcwd} instead.
1235
1236 Copies the current working directory into the buffer if supplied, or
1237 copies the working directory into new storage (which you {\emph must} delete
1238 yourself) if the buffer is NULL.
1239
1240 {\it sz} is the size of the buffer if supplied.
1241
1242
1243 \membersection{::wxGetTempFileName}\label{wxgettempfilename}
1244
1245 \func{char *}{wxGetTempFileName}{\param{const wxString\& }{prefix}, \param{char *}{buf=NULL}}
1246
1247 \func{bool}{wxGetTempFileName}{\param{const wxString\& }{prefix}, \param{wxString\& }{buf}}
1248
1249 %% Makes a temporary filename based on {\it prefix}, opens and closes the file,
1250 %% and places the name in {\it buf}. If {\it buf} is NULL, new store
1251 %% is allocated for the temporary filename using {\it new}.
1252 %%
1253 %% Under Windows, the filename will include the drive and name of the
1254 %% directory allocated for temporary files (usually the contents of the
1255 %% TEMP variable). Under Unix, the {\tt /tmp} directory is used.
1256 %%
1257 %% It is the application's responsibility to create and delete the file.
1258
1259 {\bf NB:} These functions are obsolete, please use\rtfsp
1260 \helpref{wxFileName::CreateTempFileName}{wxfilenamecreatetempfilename}\rtfsp
1261 instead.
1262
1263
1264 \membersection{::wxIsWild}\label{wxiswild}
1265
1266 \func{bool}{wxIsWild}{\param{const wxString\& }{pattern}}
1267
1268 Returns true if the pattern contains wildcards. See \helpref{wxMatchWild}{wxmatchwild}.
1269
1270
1271 \membersection{::wxMatchWild}\label{wxmatchwild}
1272
1273 \func{bool}{wxMatchWild}{\param{const wxString\& }{pattern}, \param{const wxString\& }{text}, \param{bool}{ dot\_special}}
1274
1275 Returns true if the \arg{pattern}\/ matches the {\it text}\/; if {\it
1276 dot\_special}\/ is true, filenames beginning with a dot are not matched
1277 with wildcard characters. See \helpref{wxIsWild}{wxiswild}.
1278
1279
1280 \membersection{::wxMkdir}\label{wxmkdir}
1281
1282 \func{bool}{wxMkdir}{\param{const wxString\& }{dir}, \param{int }{perm = 0777}}
1283
1284 Makes the directory \arg{dir}, returning true if successful.
1285
1286 {\it perm} is the access mask for the directory for the systems on which it is
1287 supported (Unix) and doesn't have any effect on the other ones.
1288
1289
1290 \membersection{::wxParseCommonDialogsFilter}\label{wxparsecommondialogsfilter}
1291
1292 \func{int}{wxParseCommonDialogsFilter}{\param{const wxString\& }{wildCard}, \param{wxArrayString\& }{descriptions}, \param{wxArrayString\& }{filters}}
1293
1294 Parses the \arg{wildCard}, returning the number of filters.
1295 Returns 0 if none or if there's a problem.
1296 The arrays will contain an equal number of items found before the error.
1297 On platforms where native dialogs handle only one filter per entry,
1298 entries in arrays are automatically adjusted.
1299 \arg{wildCard} is in the form:
1300 \begin{verbatim}
1301 "All files (*)|*|Image Files (*.jpeg *.png)|*.jpg;*.png"
1302 \end{verbatim}
1303
1304 \membersection{::wxRemoveFile}\label{wxremovefile}
1305
1306 \func{bool}{wxRemoveFile}{\param{const wxString\& }{file}}
1307
1308 Removes \arg{file}, returning true if successful.
1309
1310
1311 \membersection{::wxRenameFile}\label{wxrenamefile}
1312
1313 \func{bool}{wxRenameFile}{\param{const wxString\& }{file1}, \param{const wxString\& }{file2}, \param{bool }{overwrite = true}}
1314
1315 Renames \arg{file1} to \arg{file2}, returning true if successful.
1316
1317 If \arg{overwrite} parameter is true (default), the destination file is
1318 overwritten if it exists, but if \arg{overwrite} is false, the functions fails
1319 in this case.
1320
1321
1322 \membersection{::wxRmdir}\label{wxrmdir}
1323
1324 \func{bool}{wxRmdir}{\param{const wxString\& }{dir}, \param{int}{ flags=0}}
1325
1326 Removes the directory {\it dir}, returning true if successful. Does not work under VMS.
1327
1328 The {\it flags} parameter is reserved for future use.
1329
1330 Please notice that there is also a wxRmDir() function which simply wraps the
1331 standard POSIX rmdir() function and so return an integer error code instead of
1332 a boolean value (but otherwise is currently identical to wxRmdir), don't
1333 confuse these two functions.
1334
1335
1336 \membersection{::wxSetWorkingDirectory}\label{wxsetworkingdirectory}
1337
1338 \func{bool}{wxSetWorkingDirectory}{\param{const wxString\& }{dir}}
1339
1340 Sets the current working directory, returning true if the operation succeeded.
1341 Under MS Windows, the current drive is also changed if {\it dir} contains a drive specification.
1342
1343
1344 \membersection{::wxSplit}\label{wxsplit}
1345
1346 \func{wxArrayString}{wxSplit}{\param{const wxString\&}{ str}, \param{const wxChar}{ sep}, \param{const wxChar}{ escape = '\\'}}
1347
1348 Splits the given \helpref{wxString}{wxstring} object using the separator \arg{sep} and returns the
1349 result as a \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring}.
1350
1351 If the \arg{escape} character is non-\NULL, then the occurrences of \arg{sep} immediately prefixed
1352 with \arg{escape} are not considered as separators.
1353
1354 Note that empty tokens will be generated if there are two or more adjacent separators.
1355
1356 \wxheading{See also}
1357
1358 \helpref{wxJoin}{wxjoin}
1359
1360 \wxheading{Include files}
1361
1362 <wx/arrstr.h>
1363
1364
1365 \membersection{::wxSplitPath}\label{wxsplitfunction}
1366
1367 \func{void}{wxSplitPath}{\param{const wxString\&}{ fullname}, \param{wxString *}{ path}, \param{wxString *}{ name}, \param{wxString *}{ ext}}
1368
1369 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, please use
1370 \helpref{wxFileName::SplitPath}{wxfilenamesplitpath} instead.
1371
1372 This function splits a full file name into components: the path (including possible disk/drive
1373 specification under Windows), the base name and the extension. Any of the output parameters
1374 ({\it path}, {\it name} or {\it ext}) may be NULL if you are not interested in the value of
1375 a particular component.
1376
1377 wxSplitPath() will correctly handle filenames with both DOS and Unix path separators under
1378 Windows, however it will not consider backslashes as path separators under Unix (where backslash
1379 is a valid character in a filename).
1380
1381 On entry, {\it fullname} should be non-NULL (it may be empty though).
1382
1383 On return, {\it path} contains the file path (without the trailing separator), {\it name}
1384 contains the file name and {\it ext} contains the file extension without leading dot. All
1385 three of them may be empty if the corresponding component is. The old contents of the
1386 strings pointed to by these parameters will be overwritten in any case (if the pointers
1387 are not NULL).
1388
1389
1390 \membersection{::wxTransferFileToStream}\label{wxtransferfiletostream}
1391
1392 \func{bool}{wxTransferFileToStream}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}, \param{ostream\& }{stream}}
1393
1394 Copies the given file to {\it stream}. Useful when converting an old application to
1395 use streams (within the document/view framework, for example).
1396
1397 \wxheading{Include files}
1398
1399 <wx/docview.h>
1400
1401
1402 \membersection{::wxTransferStreamToFile}\label{wxtransferstreamtofile}
1403
1404 \func{bool}{wxTransferStreamToFile}{\param{istream\& }{stream} \param{const wxString\& }{filename}}
1405
1406 Copies the given stream to the file {\it filename}. Useful when converting an old application to
1407 use streams (within the document/view framework, for example).
1408
1409 \wxheading{Include files}
1410
1411 <wx/docview.h>
1412
1413
1414
1415 \section{Network, user and OS functions}\label{networkfunctions}
1416
1417 The functions in this section are used to retrieve information about the
1418 current computer and/or user characteristics.
1419
1420
1421 \membersection{::wxGetEmailAddress}\label{wxgetemailaddress}
1422
1423 \func{wxString}{wxGetEmailAddress}{\void}
1424
1425 \func{bool}{wxGetEmailAddress}{\param{char * }{buf}, \param{int }{sz}}
1426
1427 Copies the user's email address into the supplied buffer, by
1428 concatenating the values returned by \helpref{wxGetFullHostName}{wxgetfullhostname}\rtfsp
1429 and \helpref{wxGetUserId}{wxgetuserid}.
1430
1431 Returns true if successful, false otherwise.
1432
1433 \wxheading{Include files}
1434
1435 <wx/utils.h>
1436
1437
1438 \membersection{::wxGetFreeMemory}\label{wxgetfreememory}
1439
1440 \func{wxMemorySize}{wxGetFreeMemory}{\void}
1441
1442 Returns the amount of free memory in bytes under environments which
1443 support it, and -1 if not supported or failed to perform measurement.
1444
1445 \wxheading{Include files}
1446
1447 <wx/utils.h>
1448
1449
1450 \membersection{::wxGetFullHostName}\label{wxgetfullhostname}
1451
1452 \func{wxString}{wxGetFullHostName}{\void}
1453
1454 Returns the FQDN (fully qualified domain host name) or an empty string on
1455 error.
1456
1457 \wxheading{See also}
1458
1459 \helpref{wxGetHostName}{wxgethostname}
1460
1461 \wxheading{Include files}
1462
1463 <wx/utils.h>
1464
1465
1466 \membersection{::wxGetHomeDir}\label{wxgethomedir}
1467
1468 \func{wxString}{wxGetHomeDir}{\void}
1469
1470 Return the (current) user's home directory.
1471
1472 \wxheading{See also}
1473
1474 \helpref{wxGetUserHome}{wxgetuserhome}\\
1475 \helpref{wxStandardPaths}{wxstandardpaths}
1476
1477 \wxheading{Include files}
1478
1479 <wx/utils.h>
1480
1481
1482 \membersection{::wxGetHostName}\label{wxgethostname}
1483
1484 \func{wxString}{wxGetHostName}{\void}
1485
1486 \func{bool}{wxGetHostName}{\param{char * }{buf}, \param{int }{sz}}
1487
1488 Copies the current host machine's name into the supplied buffer. Please note
1489 that the returned name is {\it not} fully qualified, i.e. it does not include
1490 the domain name.
1491
1492 Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the environment
1493 variable SYSTEM\_NAME; if this is not found, the entry {\bf HostName}\rtfsp
1494 in the {\bf wxWidgets} section of the WIN.INI file is tried.
1495
1496 The first variant of this function returns the hostname if successful or an
1497 empty string otherwise. The second (deprecated) function returns true
1498 if successful, false otherwise.
1499
1500 \wxheading{See also}
1501
1502 \helpref{wxGetFullHostName}{wxgetfullhostname}
1503
1504 \wxheading{Include files}
1505
1506 <wx/utils.h>
1507
1508
1509 \membersection{::wxGetOsDescription}\label{wxgetosdescription}
1510
1511 \func{wxString}{wxGetOsDescription}{\void}
1512
1513 Returns the string containing the description of the current platform in a
1514 user-readable form. For example, this function may return strings like
1515 {\tt Windows NT Version 4.0} or {\tt Linux 2.2.2 i386}.
1516
1517 \wxheading{See also}
1518
1519 \helpref{::wxGetOsVersion}{wxgetosversion}
1520
1521 \wxheading{Include files}
1522
1523 <wx/utils.h>
1524
1525
1526 \membersection{::wxGetOsVersion}\label{wxgetosversion}
1527
1528 \func{wxOperatingSystemId}{wxGetOsVersion}{\param{int *}{major = NULL}, \param{int *}{minor = NULL}}
1529
1530 Gets the version and the operating system ID for currently running OS.
1531 See \helpref{wxPlatformInfo}{wxplatforminfo} for more details about wxOperatingSystemId.
1532
1533 \wxheading{See also}
1534
1535 \helpref{::wxGetOsDescription}{wxgetosdescription},
1536 \helpref{wxPlatformInfo}{wxplatforminfo}
1537
1538 \wxheading{Include files}
1539
1540 <wx/utils.h>
1541
1542
1543 \membersection{::wxIsPlatformLittleEndian}\label{wxisplatformlittleendian}
1544
1545 \func{bool}{wxIsPlatformLittleEndian}{\void}
1546
1547 Returns \true if the current platform is little endian (instead of big endian).
1548 The check is performed at run-time.
1549
1550 \wxheading{See also}
1551
1552 \helpref{Byte order macros}{byteordermacros}
1553
1554 \wxheading{Include files}
1555
1556 <wx/utils.h>
1557
1558
1559 \membersection{::wxIsPlatform64Bit}\label{wxisplatform64bit}
1560
1561 \func{bool}{wxIsPlatform64Bit}{\void}
1562
1563 Returns \true if the operating system the program is running under is 64 bit.
1564 The check is performed at run-time and may differ from the value available at
1565 compile-time (at compile-time you can just check if {\tt sizeof(void*)==8})
1566 since the program could be running in emulation mode or in a mixed 32/64 bit system
1567 (bi-architecture operating system).
1568
1569 Very important: this function is not 100\% reliable on some systems given the fact
1570 that there isn't always a standard way to do a reliable check on the OS architecture.
1571
1572 \wxheading{Include files}
1573
1574 <wx/utils.h>
1575
1576
1577 \membersection{::wxGetUserHome}\label{wxgetuserhome}
1578
1579 \func{wxString}{wxGetUserHome}{\param{const wxString\& }{user = ""}}
1580
1581 Returns the home directory for the given user. If the \arg{user} is empty
1582 (default value), this function behaves like
1583 \helpref{wxGetHomeDir}{wxgethomedir} i.e. returns the current user home
1584 directory.
1585
1586 If the home directory couldn't be determined, an empty string is returned.
1587
1588 \wxheading{Include files}
1589
1590 <wx/utils.h>
1591
1592
1593 \membersection{::wxGetUserId}\label{wxgetuserid}
1594
1595 \func{wxString}{wxGetUserId}{\void}
1596
1597 \func{bool}{wxGetUserId}{\param{char * }{buf}, \param{int }{sz}}
1598
1599 This function returns the "user id" also known as "login name" under Unix i.e.
1600 something like "jsmith". It uniquely identifies the current user (on this system).
1601
1602 Under Windows or NT, this function first looks in the environment
1603 variables USER and LOGNAME; if neither of these is found, the entry {\bf UserId}\rtfsp
1604 in the {\bf wxWidgets} section of the WIN.INI file is tried.
1605
1606 The first variant of this function returns the login name if successful or an
1607 empty string otherwise. The second (deprecated) function returns true
1608 if successful, false otherwise.
1609
1610 \wxheading{See also}
1611
1612 \helpref{wxGetUserName}{wxgetusername}
1613
1614 \wxheading{Include files}
1615
1616 <wx/utils.h>
1617
1618
1619 \membersection{::wxGetUserName}\label{wxgetusername}
1620
1621 \func{wxString}{wxGetUserName}{\void}
1622
1623 \func{bool}{wxGetUserName}{\param{char * }{buf}, \param{int }{sz}}
1624
1625 This function returns the full user name (something like "Mr. John Smith").
1626
1627 Under Windows or NT, this function looks for the entry {\bf UserName}\rtfsp
1628 in the {\bf wxWidgets} section of the WIN.INI file. If PenWindows
1629 is running, the entry {\bf Current} in the section {\bf User} of
1630 the PENWIN.INI file is used.
1631
1632 The first variant of this function returns the user name if successful or an
1633 empty string otherwise. The second (deprecated) function returns \true
1634 if successful, \false otherwise.
1635
1636 \wxheading{See also}
1637
1638 \helpref{wxGetUserId}{wxgetuserid}
1639
1640 \wxheading{Include files}
1641
1642 <wx/utils.h>
1643
1644
1645
1646 \section{String functions}\label{stringfunctions}
1647
1648 \membersection{::wxGetTranslation}\label{wxgettranslation}
1649
1650 \func{const wxString\& }{wxGetTranslation}{\param{const wxString\& }{str},
1651 \param{const wxString\& }{domain = wxEmptyString}}
1652
1653 \func{const wxString\& }{wxGetTranslation}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}, \param{const wxString\& }{strPlural}, \param{size\_t }{n},
1654 \param{const wxString\& }{domain = wxEmptyString}}
1655
1656 This function returns the translation of string {\it str} in the current
1657 \helpref{locale}{wxlocale}. If the string is not found in any of the loaded
1658 message catalogs (see \helpref{internationalization overview}{internationalization}), the
1659 original string is returned. In debug build, an error message is logged -- this
1660 should help to find the strings which were not yet translated. If
1661 {\it domain} is specified then only that domain/catalog is searched
1662 for a matching string. As this function
1663 is used very often, an alternative (and also common in Unix world) syntax is
1664 provided: the \helpref{\_()}{underscore} macro is defined to do the same thing
1665 as wxGetTranslation.
1666
1667 The second form is used when retrieving translation of string that has
1668 different singular and plural form in English or different plural forms in some
1669 other language. It takes two extra arguments: as above, \arg{str}
1670 parameter must contain the singular form of the string to be converted and
1671 is used as the key for the search in the catalog. The \arg{strPlural} parameter
1672 is the plural form (in English). The parameter \arg{n} is used to determine the
1673 plural form. If no message catalog is found \arg{str} is returned if `n == 1',
1674 otherwise \arg{strPlural}.
1675
1676 See \urlref{GNU gettext manual}{http://www.gnu.org/manual/gettext/html\_chapter/gettext\_10.html\#SEC150}
1677 for additional information on plural forms handling. For a shorter alternative
1678 see the \helpref{wxPLURAL()}{wxplural} macro.
1679
1680 Both versions call \helpref{wxLocale::GetString}{wxlocalegetstring}.
1681
1682 Note that this function is not suitable for literal strings in Unicode
1683 builds, since the literal strings must be enclosed into
1684 \helpref{\_T()}{underscoret} or \helpref{wxT}{wxt} macro which makes them
1685 unrecognised by \texttt{xgettext}, and so they are not extracted to the message
1686 catalog. Instead, use the \helpref{\_()}{underscore} and
1687 \helpref{wxPLURAL}{wxplural} macro for all literal strings.
1688
1689
1690 \membersection{::wxIsEmpty}\label{wxisempty}
1691
1692 \func{bool}{wxIsEmpty}{\param{const char *}{ p}}
1693
1694 Returns \true if the pointer is either {\tt NULL} or points to an empty
1695 string, \false otherwise.
1696
1697
1698 \membersection{::wxStrcmp}\label{wxstrcmp}
1699
1700 \func{int}{wxStrcmp}{\param{const char *}{p1}, \param{const char *}{p2}}
1701
1702 Returns a negative value, 0, or positive value if {\it p1} is less than, equal
1703 to or greater than {\it p2}. The comparison is case-sensitive.
1704
1705 This function complements the standard C function {\it stricmp()} which performs
1706 case-insensitive comparison.
1707
1708
1709 \membersection{::wxStricmp}\label{wxstricmp}
1710
1711 \func{int}{wxStricmp}{\param{const char *}{p1}, \param{const char *}{p2}}
1712
1713 Returns a negative value, 0, or positive value if {\it p1} is less than, equal
1714 to or greater than {\it p2}. The comparison is case-insensitive.
1715
1716 This function complements the standard C function {\it strcmp()} which performs
1717 case-sensitive comparison.
1718
1719
1720 \membersection{::wxStringEq}\label{wxstringeq}
1721
1722 \func{bool}{wxStringEq}{\param{const wxString\& }{s1}, \param{const wxString\& }{s2}}
1723
1724 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, use \helpref{wxString}{wxstring} instead.
1725
1726 A macro defined as:
1727
1728 \begin{verbatim}
1729 #define wxStringEq(s1, s2) (s1 && s2 && (strcmp(s1, s2) == 0))
1730 \end{verbatim}
1731
1732
1733 \membersection{::wxStringMatch}\label{wxstringmatch}
1734
1735 \func{bool}{wxStringMatch}{\param{const wxString\& }{s1}, \param{const wxString\& }{s2},\\
1736 \param{bool}{ subString = true}, \param{bool}{ exact = false}}
1737
1738 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, use \helpref{wxString::Find}{wxstringfind} instead.
1739
1740 Returns \true if the substring {\it s1} is found within {\it s2},
1741 ignoring case if {\it exact} is false. If {\it subString} is \false,
1742 no substring matching is done.
1743
1744
1745 \membersection{::wxStringTokenize}\label{wxstringtokenize}
1746
1747 \func{wxArrayString}{wxStringTokenize}{\param{const wxString\& }{str},\\
1748 \param{const wxString\& }{delims = wxDEFAULT\_DELIMITERS},\\
1749 \param{wxStringTokenizerMode }{mode = wxTOKEN\_DEFAULT}}
1750
1751 This is a convenience function wrapping
1752 \helpref{wxStringTokenizer}{wxstringtokenizer} which simply returns all tokens
1753 found in the given \arg{str} in an array.
1754
1755 Please see
1756 \helpref{wxStringTokenizer::wxStringTokenizer}{wxstringtokenizerwxstringtokenizer}
1757 for the description of the other parameters.
1758
1759
1760 \membersection{::wxStrlen}\label{wxstrlen}
1761
1762 \func{size\_t}{wxStrlen}{\param{const char *}{ p}}
1763
1764 This is a safe version of standard function {\it strlen()}: it does exactly the
1765 same thing (i.e. returns the length of the string) except that it returns 0 if
1766 {\it p} is the {\tt NULL} pointer.
1767
1768
1769 \membersection{::wxSnprintf}\label{wxsnprintf}
1770
1771 \func{int}{wxSnprintf}{\param{wxChar *}{buf}, \param{size\_t }{len}, \param{const wxChar *}{format}, \param{}{...}}
1772
1773 This function replaces the dangerous standard function {\tt sprintf()} and is
1774 like {\tt snprintf()} available on some platforms. The only difference with
1775 sprintf() is that an additional argument - buffer size - is taken and the
1776 buffer is never overflowed.
1777
1778 Returns the number of characters copied to the buffer or -1 if there is not
1779 enough space.
1780
1781 \wxheading{See also}
1782
1783 \helpref{wxVsnprintf}{wxvsnprintf}, \helpref{wxString::Printf}{wxstringprintf}
1784
1785
1786 \membersection{wxT}\label{wxt}
1787
1788 \func{wxChar}{wxT}{\param{char }{ch}}
1789
1790 \func{const wxChar *}{wxT}{\param{const char *}{s}}
1791
1792 wxT() is a macro which can be used with character and string literals (in other
1793 words, {\tt 'x'} or {\tt "foo"}) to automatically convert them to Unicode in
1794 Unicode build configuration. Please see the
1795 \helpref{Unicode overview}{unicode} for more information.
1796
1797 This macro is simply returns the value passed to it without changes in ASCII
1798 build. In fact, its definition is:
1799 \begin{verbatim}
1800 #ifdef UNICODE
1801 #define wxT(x) L ## x
1802 #else // !Unicode
1803 #define wxT(x) x
1804 #endif
1805 \end{verbatim}
1806
1807
1808 \membersection{wxTRANSLATE}\label{wxtranslate}
1809
1810 \func{const wxChar *}{wxTRANSLATE}{\param{const char *}{s}}
1811
1812 This macro doesn't do anything in the program code -- it simply expands to the
1813 value of its argument.
1814
1815 However it does have a purpose which is to mark the literal strings for the
1816 extraction into the message catalog created by {\tt xgettext} program. Usually
1817 this is achieved using \helpref{\_()}{underscore} but that macro not only marks
1818 the string for extraction but also expands into a
1819 \helpref{wxGetTranslation}{wxgettranslation} function call which means that it
1820 cannot be used in some situations, notably for static array
1821 initialization.
1822
1823 Here is an example which should make it more clear: suppose that you have a
1824 static array of strings containing the weekday names and which have to be
1825 translated (note that it is a bad example, really, as
1826 \helpref{wxDateTime}{wxdatetime} already can be used to get the localized week
1827 day names already). If you write
1828
1829 \begin{verbatim}
1830 static const char * const weekdays[] = { _("Mon"), ..., _("Sun") };
1831 ...
1832 // use weekdays[n] as usual
1833 \end{verbatim}
1834
1835 the code wouldn't compile because the function calls are forbidden in the array
1836 initializer. So instead you should do
1837
1838 \begin{verbatim}
1839 static const char * const weekdays[] = { wxTRANSLATE("Mon"), ..., wxTRANSLATE("Sun") };
1840 ...
1841 // use wxGetTranslation(weekdays[n])
1842 \end{verbatim}
1843
1844 here.
1845
1846 Note that although the code {\bf would} compile if you simply omit
1847 wxTRANSLATE() in the above, it wouldn't work as expected because there would be
1848 no translations for the weekday names in the program message catalog and
1849 wxGetTranslation wouldn't find them.
1850
1851
1852 \membersection{::wxVsnprintf}\label{wxvsnprintf}
1853
1854 \func{int}{wxVsnprintf}{\param{wxChar *}{buf}, \param{size\_t }{len}, \param{const wxChar *}{format}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
1855
1856 The same as \helpref{wxSnprintf}{wxsnprintf} but takes a {\tt va\_list }
1857 argument instead of arbitrary number of parameters.
1858
1859 Note that if \texttt{wxUSE\_PRINTF\_POS\_PARAMS} is set to 1, then this function supports
1860 positional arguments (see \helpref{wxString::Printf}{wxstringprintf} for more information).
1861 However other functions of the same family (wxPrintf, wxSprintf, wxFprintf, wxVfprintf,
1862 wxVfprintf, wxVprintf, wxVsprintf) currently do not to support positional parameters
1863 even when \texttt{wxUSE\_PRINTF\_POS\_PARAMS} is 1.
1864
1865 \wxheading{See also}
1866
1867 \helpref{wxSnprintf}{wxsnprintf}, \helpref{wxString::PrintfV}{wxstringprintfv}
1868
1869
1870
1871 \membersection{\_}\label{underscore}
1872
1873 \func{const wxString\&}{\_}{\param{const wxString\&}{s}}
1874
1875 This macro expands into a call to \helpref{wxGetTranslation}{wxgettranslation}
1876 function, so it marks the message for the extraction by {\tt xgettext} just as
1877 \helpref{wxTRANSLATE}{wxtranslate} does, but also returns the translation of
1878 the string for the current locale during execution.
1879
1880 Don't confuse this macro with \helpref{\_T()}{underscoret}!
1881
1882
1883 \membersection{wxPLURAL}\label{wxplural}
1884
1885 \func{const wxString\&}{wxPLURAL}{\param{const wxString\&}{sing}, \param{const wxString\&}{plur}, \param{size\_t}{n}}
1886
1887 This macro is identical to \helpref{\_()}{underscore} but for the plural variant
1888 of \helpref{wxGetTranslation}{wxgettranslation}.
1889
1890
1891 \membersection{\_T}\label{underscoret}
1892
1893 \func{wxChar}{\_T}{\param{char }{ch}}
1894
1895 \func{const wxChar *}{\_T}{\param{const wxChar }{ch}}
1896
1897 This macro is exactly the same as \helpref{wxT}{wxt} and is defined in
1898 wxWidgets simply because it may be more intuitive for Windows programmers as
1899 the standard Win32 headers also define it (as well as yet another name for the
1900 same macro which is {\tt \_TEXT()}).
1901
1902 Don't confuse this macro with \helpref{\_()}{underscore}!
1903
1904
1905
1906 \section{Dialog functions}\label{dialogfunctions}
1907
1908 Below are a number of convenience functions for getting input from the
1909 user or displaying messages. Note that in these functions the last three
1910 parameters are optional. However, it is recommended to pass a parent frame
1911 parameter, or (in MS Windows or Motif) the wrong window frame may be brought to
1912 the front when the dialog box is popped up.
1913
1914
1915 \membersection{::wxAboutBox}\label{wxaboutbox}
1916
1917 \func{void}{wxAboutBox}{\param{const wxAboutDialogInfo\& }{info}}
1918
1919 This function shows the standard about dialog containing the information
1920 specified in \arg{info}. If the current platform has a native about dialog
1921 which is capable of showing all the fields in \arg{info}, the native dialog is
1922 used, otherwise the function falls back to the generic wxWidgets version of the
1923 dialog, i.e. does the same thing as \helpref{wxGenericAboutBox()}{wxgenericaboutbox}.
1924
1925 Here is an example of how this function may be used:
1926 \begin{verbatim}
1927 void MyFrame::ShowSimpleAboutDialog(wxCommandEvent& WXUNUSED(event))
1928 {
1929 wxAboutDialogInfo info;
1930 info.SetName(_("My Program"));
1931 info.SetVersion(_("1.2.3 Beta"));
1932 info.SetDescription(_("This program does something great."));
1933 info.SetCopyright(_T("(C) 2007 Me <my@email.addre.ss>"));
1934
1935 wxAboutBox(info);
1936 }
1937 \end{verbatim}
1938
1939 Please see the \helpref{dialogs sample}{sampledialogs} for more examples of
1940 using this function and \helpref{wxAboutDialogInfo}{wxaboutdialoginfo} for the
1941 description of the information which can be shown in the about dialog.
1942
1943 \wxheading{Include files}
1944
1945 <wx/aboutdlg.h>
1946
1947
1948 \membersection{::wxBeginBusyCursor}\label{wxbeginbusycursor}
1949
1950 \func{void}{wxBeginBusyCursor}{\param{wxCursor *}{cursor = wxHOURGLASS\_CURSOR}}
1951
1952 Changes the cursor to the given cursor for all windows in the application.
1953 Use \helpref{wxEndBusyCursor}{wxendbusycursor} to revert the cursor back
1954 to its previous state. These two calls can be nested, and a counter
1955 ensures that only the outer calls take effect.
1956
1957 See also \helpref{wxIsBusy}{wxisbusy}, \helpref{wxBusyCursor}{wxbusycursor}.
1958
1959 \wxheading{Include files}
1960
1961 <wx/utils.h>
1962
1963
1964 \membersection{::wxBell}\label{wxbell}
1965
1966 \func{void}{wxBell}{\void}
1967
1968 Ring the system bell.
1969
1970 Note that this function is categorized as a GUI one and so is not thread-safe.
1971
1972 \wxheading{Include files}
1973
1974 <wx/utils.h>
1975
1976
1977 \membersection{::wxCreateFileTipProvider}\label{wxcreatefiletipprovider}
1978
1979 \func{wxTipProvider *}{wxCreateFileTipProvider}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename},
1980 \param{size\_t }{currentTip}}
1981
1982 This function creates a \helpref{wxTipProvider}{wxtipprovider} which may be
1983 used with \helpref{wxShowTip}{wxshowtip}.
1984
1985 \docparam{filename}{The name of the file containing the tips, one per line}
1986 \docparam{currentTip}{The index of the first tip to show - normally this index
1987 is remembered between the 2 program runs.}
1988
1989 \wxheading{See also}
1990
1991 \helpref{Tips overview}{tipsoverview}
1992
1993 \wxheading{Include files}
1994
1995 <wx/tipdlg.h>
1996
1997
1998 \membersection{::wxDirSelector}\label{wxdirselector}
1999
2000 \func{wxString}{wxDirSelector}{\param{const wxString\& }{message = wxDirSelectorPromptStr},\\
2001 \param{const wxString\& }{default\_path = ""},\\
2002 \param{long }{style = 0}, \param{const wxPoint\& }{pos = wxDefaultPosition},\\
2003 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL}}
2004
2005 Pops up a directory selector dialog. The arguments have the same meaning as
2006 those of wxDirDialog::wxDirDialog(). The message is displayed at the top,
2007 and the default\_path, if specified, is set as the initial selection.
2008
2009 The application must check for an empty return value (if the user pressed
2010 Cancel). For example:
2011
2012 \begin{verbatim}
2013 const wxString& dir = wxDirSelector("Choose a folder");
2014 if ( !dir.empty() )
2015 {
2016 ...
2017 }
2018 \end{verbatim}
2019
2020 \wxheading{Include files}
2021
2022 <wx/dirdlg.h>
2023
2024
2025 \membersection{::wxFileSelector}\label{wxfileselector}
2026
2027 \func{wxString}{wxFileSelector}{\param{const wxString\& }{message}, \param{const wxString\& }{default\_path = ""},\\
2028 \param{const wxString\& }{default\_filename = ""}, \param{const wxString\& }{default\_extension = ""},\\
2029 \param{const wxString\& }{wildcard = "*.*"}, \param{int }{flags = 0}, \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2030 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1}}
2031
2032 Pops up a file selector box. In Windows, this is the common file selector
2033 dialog. In X, this is a file selector box with the same functionality.
2034 The path and filename are distinct elements of a full file pathname.
2035 If path is empty, the current directory will be used. If filename is empty,
2036 no default filename will be supplied. The wildcard determines what files
2037 are displayed in the file selector, and file extension supplies a type
2038 extension for the required filename. Flags may be a combination of wxFD\_OPEN,
2039 wxFD\_SAVE, wxFD\_OVERWRITE\_PROMPT or wxFD\_FILE\_MUST\_EXIST. Note that wxFD\_MULTIPLE
2040 can only be used with \helpref{wxFileDialog}{wxfiledialog} and not here as this
2041 function only returns a single file name.
2042
2043 Both the Unix and Windows versions implement a wildcard filter. Typing a
2044 filename containing wildcards (*, ?) in the filename text item, and
2045 clicking on Ok, will result in only those files matching the pattern being
2046 displayed.
2047
2048 The wildcard may be a specification for multiple types of file
2049 with a description for each, such as:
2050
2051 \begin{verbatim}
2052 "BMP files (*.bmp)|*.bmp|GIF files (*.gif)|*.gif"
2053 \end{verbatim}
2054
2055 The application must check for an empty return value (the user pressed
2056 Cancel). For example:
2057
2058 \begin{verbatim}
2059 wxString filename = wxFileSelector("Choose a file to open");
2060 if ( !filename.empty() )
2061 {
2062 // work with the file
2063 ...
2064 }
2065 //else: cancelled by user
2066 \end{verbatim}
2067
2068 \wxheading{Include files}
2069
2070 <wx/filedlg.h>
2071
2072
2073 \membersection{::wxEndBusyCursor}\label{wxendbusycursor}
2074
2075 \func{void}{wxEndBusyCursor}{\void}
2076
2077 Changes the cursor back to the original cursor, for all windows in the application.
2078 Use with \helpref{wxBeginBusyCursor}{wxbeginbusycursor}.
2079
2080 See also \helpref{wxIsBusy}{wxisbusy}, \helpref{wxBusyCursor}{wxbusycursor}.
2081
2082 \wxheading{Include files}
2083
2084 <wx/utils.h>
2085
2086
2087 \membersection{::wxGenericAboutBox}\label{wxgenericaboutbox}
2088
2089 \func{void}{wxGenericAboutBox}{\param{const wxAboutDialogInfo\& }{info}}
2090
2091 This function does the same thing as \helpref{wxAboutBox}{wxaboutbox} except
2092 that it always uses the generic wxWidgets version of the dialog instead of the
2093 native one. This is mainly useful if you need to customize the dialog by e.g.
2094 adding custom controls to it (customizing the native dialog is not currently
2095 supported).
2096
2097 See the \helpref{dialogs sample}{sampledialogs} for an example of about dialog
2098 customization.
2099
2100 \wxheading{See also}
2101
2102 \helpref{wxAboutDialogInfo}{wxaboutdialoginfo}
2103
2104 \wxheading{Include files}
2105
2106 <wx/aboutdlg.h>\\
2107 <wx/generic/aboutdlgg.h>
2108
2109
2110 \membersection{::wxGetColourFromUser}\label{wxgetcolourfromuser}
2111
2112 \func{wxColour}{wxGetColourFromUser}{\param{wxWindow *}{parent}, \param{const wxColour\& }{colInit}, \param{const wxString\& }{caption = wxEmptyString}, \param{wxColourData *}{data = \NULL}}
2113
2114 Shows the colour selection dialog and returns the colour selected by user or
2115 invalid colour (use \helpref{wxColour:IsOk}{wxcolourisok} to test whether a colour
2116 is valid) if the dialog was cancelled.
2117
2118 \wxheading{Parameters}
2119
2120 \docparam{parent}{The parent window for the colour selection dialog}
2121
2122 \docparam{colInit}{If given, this will be the colour initially selected in the dialog.}
2123
2124 \docparam{caption}{If given, this will be used for the dialog caption.}
2125
2126 \docparam{data}{Optional object storing additional colour dialog settings, such
2127 as custom colours. If none is provided the same settings as the last time are
2128 used.}
2129
2130 \wxheading{Include files}
2131
2132 <wx/colordlg.h>
2133
2134
2135 \membersection{::wxGetFontFromUser}\label{wxgetfontfromuser}
2136
2137 \func{wxFont}{wxGetFontFromUser}{\param{wxWindow *}{parent}, \param{const wxFont\& }{fontInit}, \param{const wxString\& }{caption = wxEmptyString}}
2138
2139 Shows the font selection dialog and returns the font selected by user or
2140 invalid font (use \helpref{wxFont:IsOk}{wxfontisok} to test whether a font
2141 is valid) if the dialog was cancelled.
2142
2143 \wxheading{Parameters}
2144
2145 \docparam{parent}{The parent window for the font selection dialog}
2146
2147 \docparam{fontInit}{If given, this will be the font initially selected in the dialog.}
2148
2149 \docparam{caption}{If given, this will be used for the dialog caption.}
2150
2151 \wxheading{Include files}
2152
2153 <wx/fontdlg.h>
2154
2155
2156
2157 \membersection{::wxGetMultipleChoices}\label{wxgetmultiplechoices}
2158
2159 \func{size\_t}{wxGetMultipleChoices}{\\
2160 \param{wxArrayInt\& }{selections},\\
2161 \param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2162 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2163 \param{const wxArrayString\& }{aChoices},\\
2164 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2165 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2166 \param{bool}{ centre = true},\\
2167 \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2168
2169 \func{size\_t}{wxGetMultipleChoices}{\\
2170 \param{wxArrayInt\& }{selections},\\
2171 \param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2172 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2173 \param{int}{ n}, \param{const wxString\& }{choices[]},\\
2174 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2175 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2176 \param{bool}{ centre = true},\\
2177 \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2178
2179 Pops up a dialog box containing a message, OK/Cancel buttons and a
2180 multiple-selection listbox. The user may choose an arbitrary (including 0)
2181 number of items in the listbox whose indices will be returned in
2182 {\it selection} array. The initial contents of this array will be used to
2183 select the items when the dialog is shown.
2184
2185 You may pass the list of strings to choose from either using {\it choices}
2186 which is an array of {\it n} strings for the listbox or by using a single
2187 {\it aChoices} parameter of type \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring}.
2188
2189 If {\it centre} is true, the message text (which may include new line
2190 characters) is centred; if false, the message is left-justified.
2191
2192 \wxheading{Include files}
2193
2194 <wx/choicdlg.h>
2195
2196 \perlnote{In wxPerl there is just an array reference in place of {\tt n}
2197 and {\tt choices}, and no {\tt selections} parameter; the function
2198 returns an array containing the user selections.}
2199
2200
2201 \membersection{::wxGetNumberFromUser}\label{wxgetnumberfromuser}
2202
2203 \func{long}{wxGetNumberFromUser}{
2204 \param{const wxString\& }{message},
2205 \param{const wxString\& }{prompt},
2206 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},
2207 \param{long }{value},
2208 \param{long }{min = 0},
2209 \param{long }{max = 100},
2210 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},
2211 \param{const wxPoint\& }{pos = wxDefaultPosition}}
2212
2213 Shows a dialog asking the user for numeric input. The dialogs title is set to
2214 {\it caption}, it contains a (possibly) multiline {\it message} above the
2215 single line {\it prompt} and the zone for entering the number.
2216
2217 The number entered must be in the range {\it min}..{\it max} (both of which
2218 should be positive) and {\it value} is the initial value of it. If the user
2219 enters an invalid value or cancels the dialog, the function will return -1.
2220
2221 Dialog is centered on its {\it parent} unless an explicit position is given in
2222 {\it pos}.
2223
2224 \wxheading{Include files}
2225
2226 <wx/numdlg.h>
2227
2228
2229 \membersection{::wxGetPasswordFromUser}\label{wxgetpasswordfromuser}
2230
2231 \func{wxString}{wxGetPasswordFromUser}{\param{const wxString\& }{message}, \param{const wxString\& }{caption = ``Input text"},\\
2232 \param{const wxString\& }{default\_value = ``"}, \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2233 \param{int}{ x = wxDefaultCoord}, \param{int}{ y = wxDefaultCoord}, \param{bool}{ centre = true}}
2234
2235 Similar to \helpref{wxGetTextFromUser}{wxgettextfromuser} but the text entered
2236 in the dialog is not shown on screen but replaced with stars. This is intended
2237 to be used for entering passwords as the function name implies.
2238
2239 \wxheading{Include files}
2240
2241 <wx/textdlg.h>
2242
2243
2244 \membersection{::wxGetTextFromUser}\label{wxgettextfromuser}
2245
2246 \func{wxString}{wxGetTextFromUser}{\param{const wxString\& }{message}, \param{const wxString\& }{caption = ``Input text"},\\
2247 \param{const wxString\& }{default\_value = ``"}, \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2248 \param{int}{ x = wxDefaultCoord}, \param{int}{ y = wxDefaultCoord}, \param{bool}{ centre = true}}
2249
2250 Pop up a dialog box with title set to {\it caption}, {\it message}, and a
2251 \rtfsp{\it default\_value}. The user may type in text and press OK to return this text,
2252 or press Cancel to return the empty string.
2253
2254 If {\it centre} is true, the message text (which may include new line characters)
2255 is centred; if false, the message is left-justified.
2256
2257 \wxheading{Include files}
2258
2259 <wx/textdlg.h>
2260
2261
2262 \membersection{::wxGetSingleChoice}\label{wxgetsinglechoice}
2263
2264 \func{wxString}{wxGetSingleChoice}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2265 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2266 \param{const wxArrayString\& }{aChoices},\\
2267 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2268 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2269 \param{bool}{ centre = true},\\
2270 \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2271
2272 \func{wxString}{wxGetSingleChoice}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2273 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2274 \param{int}{ n}, \param{const wxString\& }{choices[]},\\
2275 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2276 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2277 \param{bool}{ centre = true},\\
2278 \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2279
2280 Pops up a dialog box containing a message, OK/Cancel buttons and a
2281 single-selection listbox. The user may choose an item and press OK to return a
2282 string or Cancel to return the empty string. Use
2283 \helpref{wxGetSingleChoiceIndex}{wxgetsinglechoiceindex} if empty string is a
2284 valid choice and if you want to be able to detect pressing Cancel reliably.
2285
2286 You may pass the list of strings to choose from either using {\it choices}
2287 which is an array of {\it n} strings for the listbox or by using a single
2288 {\it aChoices} parameter of type \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring}.
2289
2290 If {\it centre} is true, the message text (which may include new line
2291 characters) is centred; if false, the message is left-justified.
2292
2293 \wxheading{Include files}
2294
2295 <wx/choicdlg.h>
2296
2297 \perlnote{In wxPerl there is just an array reference in place of {\tt n}
2298 and {\tt choices}.}
2299
2300
2301 \membersection{::wxGetSingleChoiceIndex}\label{wxgetsinglechoiceindex}
2302
2303 \func{int}{wxGetSingleChoiceIndex}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2304 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2305 \param{const wxArrayString\& }{aChoices},\\
2306 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL}, \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2307 \param{bool}{ centre = true}, \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2308
2309 \func{int}{wxGetSingleChoiceIndex}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2310 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2311 \param{int}{ n}, \param{const wxString\& }{choices[]},\\
2312 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL}, \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2313 \param{bool}{ centre = true}, \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2314
2315 As {\bf wxGetSingleChoice} but returns the index representing the selected
2316 string. If the user pressed cancel, -1 is returned.
2317
2318 \wxheading{Include files}
2319
2320 <wx/choicdlg.h>
2321
2322 \perlnote{In wxPerl there is just an array reference in place of {\tt n}
2323 and {\tt choices}.}
2324
2325
2326 \membersection{::wxGetSingleChoiceData}\label{wxgetsinglechoicedata}
2327
2328 \func{wxString}{wxGetSingleChoiceData}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2329 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2330 \param{const wxArrayString\& }{aChoices},\\
2331 \param{const wxString\& }{client\_data[]},\\
2332 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2333 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2334 \param{bool}{ centre = true}, \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2335
2336 \func{wxString}{wxGetSingleChoiceData}{\param{const wxString\& }{message},\\
2337 \param{const wxString\& }{caption},\\
2338 \param{int}{ n}, \param{const wxString\& }{choices[]},\\
2339 \param{const wxString\& }{client\_data[]},\\
2340 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL},\\
2341 \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1},\\
2342 \param{bool}{ centre = true}, \param{int }{width=150}, \param{int }{height=200}}
2343
2344 As {\bf wxGetSingleChoice} but takes an array of client data pointers
2345 corresponding to the strings, and returns one of these pointers or NULL if
2346 Cancel was pressed. The {\it client\_data} array must have the same number of
2347 elements as {\it choices} or {\it aChoices}!
2348
2349 \wxheading{Include files}
2350
2351 <wx/choicdlg.h>
2352
2353 \perlnote{In wxPerl there is just an array reference in place of {\tt n}
2354 and {\tt choices}, and the client data array must have the
2355 same length as the choices array.}
2356
2357
2358 \membersection{::wxIsBusy}\label{wxisbusy}
2359
2360 \func{bool}{wxIsBusy}{\void}
2361
2362 Returns true if between two \helpref{wxBeginBusyCursor}{wxbeginbusycursor} and\rtfsp
2363 \helpref{wxEndBusyCursor}{wxendbusycursor} calls.
2364
2365 See also \helpref{wxBusyCursor}{wxbusycursor}.
2366
2367 \wxheading{Include files}
2368
2369 <wx/utils.h>
2370
2371
2372 \membersection{::wxMessageBox}\label{wxmessagebox}
2373
2374 \func{int}{wxMessageBox}{\param{const wxString\& }{message}, \param{const wxString\& }{caption = ``Message"}, \param{int}{ style = wxOK},\\
2375 \param{wxWindow *}{parent = NULL}, \param{int}{ x = -1}, \param{int}{ y = -1}}
2376
2377 General purpose message dialog. {\it style} may be a bit list of the
2378 following identifiers:
2379
2380 \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt
2381 \twocolitem{wxYES\_NO}{Puts Yes and No buttons on the message box. May be combined with
2382 wxCANCEL.}
2383 \twocolitem{wxCANCEL}{Puts a Cancel button on the message box. May only be combined with
2384 wxYES\_NO or wxOK.}
2385 \twocolitem{wxOK}{Puts an Ok button on the message box. May be combined with wxCANCEL.}
2386 \twocolitem{wxICON\_EXCLAMATION}{Displays an exclamation mark symbol.}
2387 \twocolitem{wxICON\_HAND}{Displays an error symbol.}
2388 \twocolitem{wxICON\_ERROR}{Displays an error symbol - the same as wxICON\_HAND.}
2389 \twocolitem{wxICON\_QUESTION}{Displays a question mark symbol.}
2390 \twocolitem{wxICON\_INFORMATION}{Displays an information symbol.}
2391 \end{twocollist}
2392
2393 The return value is one of: wxYES, wxNO, wxCANCEL, wxOK.
2394
2395 For example:
2396
2397 \begin{verbatim}
2398 ...
2399 int answer = wxMessageBox("Quit program?", "Confirm",
2400 wxYES_NO | wxCANCEL, main_frame);
2401 if (answer == wxYES)
2402 main_frame->Close();
2403 ...
2404 \end{verbatim}
2405
2406 {\it message} may contain newline characters, in which case the
2407 message will be split into separate lines, to cater for large messages.
2408
2409 \wxheading{Include files}
2410
2411 <wx/msgdlg.h>
2412
2413
2414 \membersection{::wxShowTip}\label{wxshowtip}
2415
2416 \func{bool}{wxShowTip}{\param{wxWindow *}{parent},
2417 \param{wxTipProvider *}{tipProvider},
2418 \param{bool }{showAtStartup = true}}
2419
2420 This function shows a "startup tip" to the user. The return value is the
2421 state of the `Show tips at startup' checkbox.
2422
2423 \docparam{parent}{The parent window for the modal dialog}
2424
2425 \docparam{tipProvider}{An object which is used to get the text of the tips.
2426 It may be created with the \helpref{wxCreateFileTipProvider}{wxcreatefiletipprovider} function.}
2427
2428 \docparam{showAtStartup}{Should be true if startup tips are shown, false
2429 otherwise. This is used as the initial value for "Show tips at startup"
2430 checkbox which is shown in the tips dialog.}
2431
2432 \wxheading{See also}
2433
2434 \helpref{Tips overview}{tipsoverview}
2435
2436 \wxheading{Include files}
2437
2438 <wx/tipdlg.h>
2439
2440
2441
2442
2443 \section{Math functions}\label{mathfunctions}
2444
2445 \wxheading{Include files}
2446
2447 <wx/math.h>
2448
2449
2450 \membersection{wxFinite}\label{wxfinite}
2451
2452 \func{int}{wxFinite}{\param{double }{x}}
2453
2454 Returns a non-zero value if {\it x} is neither infinite nor NaN (not a number),
2455 returns 0 otherwise.
2456
2457
2458 \membersection{wxIsNaN}\label{wxisnan}
2459
2460 \func{bool}{wxIsNaN}{\param{double }{x}}
2461
2462 Returns a non-zero value if {\it x} is NaN (not a number), returns 0
2463 otherwise.
2464
2465
2466
2467
2468 \section{GDI functions}\label{gdifunctions}
2469
2470 The following are relevant to the GDI (Graphics Device Interface).
2471
2472 \wxheading{Include files}
2473
2474 <wx/gdicmn.h>
2475
2476
2477 \membersection{wxBITMAP}\label{wxbitmapmacro}
2478
2479 \func{}{wxBITMAP}{bitmapName}
2480
2481 This macro loads a bitmap from either application resources (on the platforms
2482 for which they exist, i.e. Windows and OS2) or from an XPM file. It allows to
2483 avoid using {\tt \#ifdef}s when creating bitmaps.
2484
2485 \wxheading{See also}
2486
2487 \helpref{Bitmaps and icons overview}{wxbitmapoverview},
2488 \helpref{wxICON}{wxiconmacro}
2489
2490 \wxheading{Include files}
2491
2492 <wx/gdicmn.h>
2493
2494
2495 \membersection{::wxClientDisplayRect}\label{wxclientdisplayrect}
2496
2497 \func{void}{wxClientDisplayRect}{\param{int *}{x}, \param{int *}{y},
2498 \param{int *}{width}, \param{int *}{height}}
2499
2500 \func{wxRect}{wxGetClientDisplayRect}{\void}
2501
2502 Returns the dimensions of the work area on the display. On Windows
2503 this means the area not covered by the taskbar, etc. Other platforms
2504 are currently defaulting to the whole display until a way is found to
2505 provide this info for all window managers, etc.
2506
2507
2508 \membersection{::wxColourDisplay}\label{wxcolourdisplay}
2509
2510 \func{bool}{wxColourDisplay}{\void}
2511
2512 Returns true if the display is colour, false otherwise.
2513
2514
2515 \membersection{::wxDisplayDepth}\label{wxdisplaydepth}
2516
2517 \func{int}{wxDisplayDepth}{\void}
2518
2519 Returns the depth of the display (a value of 1 denotes a monochrome display).
2520
2521
2522 \membersection{::wxDisplaySize}\label{wxdisplaysize}
2523
2524 \func{void}{wxDisplaySize}{\param{int *}{width}, \param{int *}{height}}
2525
2526 \func{wxSize}{wxGetDisplaySize}{\void}
2527
2528 Returns the display size in pixels.
2529
2530
2531 \membersection{::wxDisplaySizeMM}\label{wxdisplaysizemm}
2532
2533 \func{void}{wxDisplaySizeMM}{\param{int *}{width}, \param{int *}{height}}
2534
2535 \func{wxSize}{wxGetDisplaySizeMM}{\void}
2536
2537 Returns the display size in millimeters.
2538
2539
2540 \membersection{::wxDROP\_ICON}\label{wxdropicon}
2541
2542 \func{wxIconOrCursor}{wxDROP\_ICON}{\param{const char *}{name}}
2543
2544 This macro creates either a cursor (MSW) or an icon (elsewhere) with the given
2545 name. Under MSW, the cursor is loaded from the resource file and the icon is
2546 loaded from XPM file under other platforms.
2547
2548 This macro should be used with
2549 \helpref{wxDropSource constructor}{wxdropsourcewxdropsource}.
2550
2551 \wxheading{Include files}
2552
2553 <wx/dnd.h>
2554
2555
2556 \membersection{wxICON}\label{wxiconmacro}
2557
2558 \func{}{wxICON}{iconName}
2559
2560 This macro loads an icon from either application resources (on the platforms
2561 for which they exist, i.e. Windows and OS2) or from an XPM file. It allows to
2562 avoid using {\tt \#ifdef}s when creating icons.
2563
2564 \wxheading{See also}
2565
2566 \helpref{Bitmaps and icons overview}{wxbitmapoverview},
2567 \helpref{wxBITMAP}{wxbitmapmacro}
2568
2569 \wxheading{Include files}
2570
2571 <wx/gdicmn.h>
2572
2573
2574 \membersection{::wxMakeMetafilePlaceable}\label{wxmakemetafileplaceable}
2575
2576 \func{bool}{wxMakeMetafilePlaceable}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}, \param{int }{minX}, \param{int }{minY},
2577 \param{int }{maxX}, \param{int }{maxY}, \param{float }{scale=1.0}}
2578
2579 Given a filename for an existing, valid metafile (as constructed using \helpref{wxMetafileDC}{wxmetafiledc})
2580 makes it into a placeable metafile by prepending a header containing the given
2581 bounding box. The bounding box may be obtained from a device context after drawing
2582 into it, using the functions wxDC::MinX, wxDC::MinY, wxDC::MaxX and wxDC::MaxY.
2583
2584 In addition to adding the placeable metafile header, this function adds
2585 the equivalent of the following code to the start of the metafile data:
2586
2587 \begin{verbatim}
2588 SetMapMode(dc, MM_ANISOTROPIC);
2589 SetWindowOrg(dc, minX, minY);
2590 SetWindowExt(dc, maxX - minX, maxY - minY);
2591 \end{verbatim}
2592
2593 This simulates the wxMM\_TEXT mapping mode, which wxWidgets assumes.
2594
2595 Placeable metafiles may be imported by many Windows applications, and can be
2596 used in RTF (Rich Text Format) files.
2597
2598 {\it scale} allows the specification of scale for the metafile.
2599
2600 This function is only available under Windows.
2601
2602
2603 \membersection{::wxSetCursor}\label{wxsetcursor}
2604
2605 \func{void}{wxSetCursor}{\param{wxCursor *}{cursor}}
2606
2607 Globally sets the cursor; only has an effect in Windows and GTK.
2608 See also \helpref{wxCursor}{wxcursor}, \helpref{wxWindow::SetCursor}{wxwindowsetcursor}.
2609
2610
2611
2612 \section{Printer settings}\label{printersettings}
2613
2614 {\bf NB:} These routines are obsolete and should no longer be used!
2615
2616 The following functions are used to control PostScript printing. Under
2617 Windows, PostScript output can only be sent to a file.
2618
2619 \wxheading{Include files}
2620
2621 <wx/dcps.h>
2622
2623
2624 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterCommand}\label{wxgetprintercommand}
2625
2626 \func{wxString}{wxGetPrinterCommand}{\void}
2627
2628 Gets the printer command used to print a file. The default is {\tt lpr}.
2629
2630
2631 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterFile}\label{wxgetprinterfile}
2632
2633 \func{wxString}{wxGetPrinterFile}{\void}
2634
2635 Gets the PostScript output filename.
2636
2637
2638 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterMode}\label{wxgetprintermode}
2639
2640 \func{int}{wxGetPrinterMode}{\void}
2641
2642 Gets the printing mode controlling where output is sent (PS\_PREVIEW, PS\_FILE or PS\_PRINTER).
2643 The default is PS\_PREVIEW.
2644
2645
2646 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterOptions}\label{wxgetprinteroptions}
2647
2648 \func{wxString}{wxGetPrinterOptions}{\void}
2649
2650 Gets the additional options for the print command (e.g. specific printer). The default is nothing.
2651
2652
2653 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterOrientation}\label{wxgetprinterorientation}
2654
2655 \func{int}{wxGetPrinterOrientation}{\void}
2656
2657 Gets the orientation (PS\_PORTRAIT or PS\_LANDSCAPE). The default is PS\_PORTRAIT.
2658
2659
2660 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterPreviewCommand}\label{wxgetprinterpreviewcommand}
2661
2662 \func{wxString}{wxGetPrinterPreviewCommand}{\void}
2663
2664 Gets the command used to view a PostScript file. The default depends on the platform.
2665
2666
2667 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterScaling}\label{wxgetprinterscaling}
2668
2669 \func{void}{wxGetPrinterScaling}{\param{float *}{x}, \param{float *}{y}}
2670
2671 Gets the scaling factor for PostScript output. The default is 1.0, 1.0.
2672
2673
2674 \membersection{::wxGetPrinterTranslation}\label{wxgetprintertranslation}
2675
2676 \func{void}{wxGetPrinterTranslation}{\param{float *}{x}, \param{float *}{y}}
2677
2678 Gets the translation (from the top left corner) for PostScript output. The default is 0.0, 0.0.
2679
2680
2681 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterCommand}\label{wxsetprintercommand}
2682
2683 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterCommand}{\param{const wxString\& }{command}}
2684
2685 Sets the printer command used to print a file. The default is {\tt lpr}.
2686
2687
2688 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterFile}\label{wxsetprinterfile}
2689
2690 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterFile}{\param{const wxString\& }{filename}}
2691
2692 Sets the PostScript output filename.
2693
2694
2695 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterMode}\label{wxsetprintermode}
2696
2697 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterMode}{\param{int }{mode}}
2698
2699 Sets the printing mode controlling where output is sent (PS\_PREVIEW, PS\_FILE or PS\_PRINTER).
2700 The default is PS\_PREVIEW.
2701
2702
2703 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterOptions}\label{wxsetprinteroptions}
2704
2705 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterOptions}{\param{const wxString\& }{options}}
2706
2707 Sets the additional options for the print command (e.g. specific printer). The default is nothing.
2708
2709
2710 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterOrientation}\label{wxsetprinterorientation}
2711
2712 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterOrientation}{\param{int}{ orientation}}
2713
2714 Sets the orientation (PS\_PORTRAIT or PS\_LANDSCAPE). The default is PS\_PORTRAIT.
2715
2716
2717 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterPreviewCommand}\label{wxsetprinterpreviewcommand}
2718
2719 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterPreviewCommand}{\param{const wxString\& }{command}}
2720
2721 Sets the command used to view a PostScript file. The default depends on the platform.
2722
2723
2724 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterScaling}\label{wxsetprinterscaling}
2725
2726 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterScaling}{\param{float }{x}, \param{float }{y}}
2727
2728 Sets the scaling factor for PostScript output. The default is 1.0, 1.0.
2729
2730
2731 \membersection{::wxSetPrinterTranslation}\label{wxsetprintertranslation}
2732
2733 \func{void}{wxSetPrinterTranslation}{\param{float }{x}, \param{float }{y}}
2734
2735 Sets the translation (from the top left corner) for PostScript output. The default is 0.0, 0.0.
2736
2737
2738
2739 \section{Clipboard functions}\label{clipsboard}
2740
2741 These clipboard functions are implemented for Windows only. The use of these functions
2742 is deprecated and the code is no longer maintained. Use the \helpref{wxClipboard}{wxclipboard}
2743 class instead.
2744
2745 \wxheading{Include files}
2746
2747 <wx/clipbrd.h>
2748
2749
2750 \membersection{::wxClipboardOpen}\label{functionwxclipboardopen}
2751
2752 \func{bool}{wxClipboardOpen}{\void}
2753
2754 Returns true if this application has already opened the clipboard.
2755
2756
2757 \membersection{::wxCloseClipboard}\label{wxcloseclipboard}
2758
2759 \func{bool}{wxCloseClipboard}{\void}
2760
2761 Closes the clipboard to allow other applications to use it.
2762
2763
2764 \membersection{::wxEmptyClipboard}\label{wxemptyclipboard}
2765
2766 \func{bool}{wxEmptyClipboard}{\void}
2767
2768 Empties the clipboard.
2769
2770
2771 \membersection{::wxEnumClipboardFormats}\label{wxenumclipboardformats}
2772
2773 \func{int}{wxEnumClipboardFormats}{\param{int}{ dataFormat}}
2774
2775 Enumerates the formats found in a list of available formats that belong
2776 to the clipboard. Each call to this function specifies a known
2777 available format; the function returns the format that appears next in
2778 the list.
2779
2780 {\it dataFormat} specifies a known format. If this parameter is zero,
2781 the function returns the first format in the list.
2782
2783 The return value specifies the next known clipboard data format if the
2784 function is successful. It is zero if the {\it dataFormat} parameter specifies
2785 the last format in the list of available formats, or if the clipboard
2786 is not open.
2787
2788 Before it enumerates the formats function, an application must open the clipboard by using the
2789 wxOpenClipboard function.
2790
2791
2792 \membersection{::wxGetClipboardData}\label{wxgetclipboarddata}
2793
2794 \func{wxObject *}{wxGetClipboardData}{\param{int}{ dataFormat}}
2795
2796 Gets data from the clipboard.
2797
2798 {\it dataFormat} may be one of:
2799
2800 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
2801 \item wxCF\_TEXT or wxCF\_OEMTEXT: returns a pointer to new memory containing a null-terminated text string.
2802 \item wxCF\_BITMAP: returns a new wxBitmap.
2803 \end{itemize}
2804
2805 The clipboard must have previously been opened for this call to succeed.
2806
2807
2808 \membersection{::wxGetClipboardFormatName}\label{wxgetclipboardformatname}
2809
2810 \func{bool}{wxGetClipboardFormatName}{\param{int}{ dataFormat}, \param{const wxString\& }{formatName}, \param{int}{ maxCount}}
2811
2812 Gets the name of a registered clipboard format, and puts it into the buffer {\it formatName} which is of maximum
2813 length {\it maxCount}. {\it dataFormat} must not specify a predefined clipboard format.
2814
2815
2816 \membersection{::wxIsClipboardFormatAvailable}\label{wxisclipboardformatavailable}
2817
2818 \func{bool}{wxIsClipboardFormatAvailable}{\param{int}{ dataFormat}}
2819
2820 Returns true if the given data format is available on the clipboard.
2821
2822
2823 \membersection{::wxOpenClipboard}\label{wxopenclipboard}
2824
2825 \func{bool}{wxOpenClipboard}{\void}
2826
2827 Opens the clipboard for passing data to it or getting data from it.
2828
2829
2830 \membersection{::wxRegisterClipboardFormat}\label{wxregisterclipboardformat}
2831
2832 \func{int}{wxRegisterClipboardFormat}{\param{const wxString\& }{formatName}}
2833
2834 Registers the clipboard data format name and returns an identifier.
2835
2836
2837 \membersection{::wxSetClipboardData}\label{wxsetclipboarddata}
2838
2839 \func{bool}{wxSetClipboardData}{\param{int}{ dataFormat}, \param{wxObject*}{ data}, \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ height}}
2840
2841 Passes data to the clipboard.
2842
2843 {\it dataFormat} may be one of:
2844
2845 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
2846 \item wxCF\_TEXT or wxCF\_OEMTEXT: {\it data} is a null-terminated text string.
2847 \item wxCF\_BITMAP: {\it data} is a wxBitmap.
2848 \item wxCF\_DIB: {\it data} is a wxBitmap. The bitmap is converted to a DIB (device independent bitmap).
2849 \item wxCF\_METAFILE: {\it data} is a wxMetafile. {\it width} and {\it height} are used to give recommended dimensions.
2850 \end{itemize}
2851
2852 The clipboard must have previously been opened for this call to succeed.
2853
2854
2855 \section{Miscellaneous functions and macros}\label{miscellany}
2856
2857
2858 \membersection{wxBase64Decode}\label{wxbase64decode}
2859
2860 \func{size\_t}{wxBase64Decode}{\param{void *}{dst}, \param{size\_t }{dstLen},
2861 \param{const char * }{src}, \param{size\_t }{srcLen = wxNO\_LEN},
2862 \param{wxBase64DecodeMode }{mode = wxBase64DecodeMode\_Strict},
2863 \param{size\_t }{*posErr = \NULL}}
2864
2865 \func{wxMemoryBuffer}{wxBase64Decode}{\\
2866 \param{const char * }{src}, \param{size\_t }{srcLen = wxNO\_LEN},\\
2867 \param{wxBase64DecodeMode }{mode = wxBase64DecodeMode\_Strict},\\
2868 \param{size\_t }{*posErr = \NULL}}
2869
2870 \func{wxMemoryBuffer}{wxBase64Decode}{\\
2871 \param{const wxString\& }{src},\\
2872 \param{wxBase64DecodeMode }{mode = wxBase64DecodeMode\_Strict},\\
2873 \param{size\_t }{*posErr = \NULL}}
2874
2875 These function decode a Base64-encoded string. The first version is a raw
2876 decoding function and decodes the data into the provided buffer \arg{dst} of
2877 the given size \arg{dstLen}. An error is returned if the buffer is not large
2878 enough -- that is not at least \helpref{wxBase64DecodedSize(srcLen)}{wxbase64decodedsize}
2879 bytes. The second version allocates memory internally and returns it as
2880 \helpref{wxMemoryBuffer}{wxmemorybuffer} and is recommended for normal use.
2881
2882 The first version returns the number of bytes written to the buffer or the
2883 necessary buffer size if \arg{dst} was \NULL or \texttt{wxCONV\_FAILED} on
2884 error, e.g. if the output buffer is too small or invalid characters were
2885 encountered in the input string. The second version returns a buffer with the
2886 base64 decoded binary equivalent of the input string. In neither case is the
2887 buffer NUL-terminated.
2888
2889 \wxheading{Parameters}
2890
2891 \docparam{dst}{Pointer to output buffer, may be \NULL to just compute the
2892 necessary buffer size.}
2893
2894 \docparam{dstLen}{The size of the output buffer, ignored if \arg{dst} is
2895 \NULL.}
2896
2897 \docparam{src}{The input string, must not be \NULL. For the version using
2898 wxString, the input string should contain only ASCII characters.}
2899
2900 \docparam{srcLen}{The length of the input string or special value
2901 \texttt{wxNO\_LEN} if the string is \NUL-terminated and the length should be
2902 computed by this function itself.}
2903
2904 \docparam{mode}{This parameter specifies the function behaviour when invalid
2905 characters are encountered in input. By default, any such character stops the
2906 decoding with error. If the mode is wxBase64DecodeMode\_SkipWS, then the white
2907 space characters are silently skipped instead. And if it is
2908 wxBase64DecodeMode\_Relaxed, then all invalid characters are skipped.}
2909
2910 \docparam{posErr}{If this pointer is non-\NULL and an error occurs during
2911 decoding, it is filled with the index of the invalid character.}
2912
2913 \wxheading{Include files}
2914
2915 <wx/base64.h>
2916
2917
2918 \membersection{wxBase64DecodedSize}\label{wxbase64decodedsize}
2919
2920 \func{size\_t}{wxBase64DecodedSize}{\param{size\_t }{srcLen}}
2921
2922 Returns the size of the buffer necessary to contain the data encoded in a
2923 base64 string of length \arg{srcLen}. This can be useful for allocating a
2924 buffer to be passed to \helpref{wxBase64Decode}{wxbase64decode}.
2925
2926
2927 \membersection{wxBase64Encode}\label{wxbase64encode}
2928
2929 \func{size\_t}{wxBase64Encode}{\param{char *}{dst}, \param{size\_t }{dstLen},
2930 \param{const void *}{src}, \param{size\_t }{srcLen}}
2931
2932 \func{wxString}{wxBase64Encode}{\param{const void *}{src}, \param{size\_t }{srcLen}}
2933
2934 \func{wxString}{wxBase64Encode}{\param{const wxMemoryBuffer\& }{buf}}
2935
2936 These functions encode the given data using base64. The first of them is the
2937 raw encoding function writing the output string into provided buffer while the
2938 other ones return the output as wxString. There is no error return for these
2939 functions except for the first one which returns \texttt{wxCONV\_FAILED} if the
2940 output buffer is too small. To allocate the buffer of the correct size, use
2941 \helpref{wxBase64EncodedSize}{wxbase64encodedsize} or call this function with
2942 \arg{dst} set to \NULL -- it will then return the necessary buffer size.
2943
2944 \wxheading{Parameters}
2945
2946 \docparam{dst}{The output buffer, may be \NULL to retrieve the needed buffer
2947 size.}
2948
2949 \docparam{dstLen}{The output buffer size, ignored if \arg{dst} is \NULL.}
2950
2951 \docparam{src}{The input buffer, must not be \NULL.}
2952
2953 \docparam{srcLen}{The length of the input data.}
2954
2955 \wxheading{Include files}
2956
2957 <wx/base64.h>
2958
2959
2960 \membersection{wxBase64EncodedSize}\label{wxbase64encodedsize}
2961
2962 \func{size\_t}{wxBase64EncodedSize}{\param{size\_t }{len}}
2963
2964 Returns the length of the string with base64 representation of a buffer of
2965 specified size \arg{len}. This can be useful for allocating the buffer passed
2966 to \helpref{wxBase64Encode}{wxbase64encode}.
2967
2968
2969 \membersection{wxCONCAT}\label{wxconcat}
2970
2971 \func{}{wxCONCAT}{\param{}{x}, \param{}{y}}
2972
2973 This macro returns the concatenation of two tokens \arg{x} and \arg{y}.
2974
2975
2976 \membersection{wxDECLARE\_APP}\label{wxdeclareapp}
2977
2978 \func{}{wxDECLARE\_APP}{className}
2979
2980 This is used in headers to create a forward declaration of the
2981 \helpref{wxGetApp}{wxgetapp} function implemented by
2982 \helpref{wxIMPLEMENT\_APP}{wximplementapp}. It creates the declaration
2983 {\tt className\& wxGetApp(void)}.
2984
2985 Example:
2986
2987 \begin{verbatim}
2988 wxDECLARE_APP(MyApp)
2989 \end{verbatim}
2990
2991 \wxheading{Include files}
2992
2993 <wx/app.h>
2994
2995
2996 \membersection{wxDYNLIB\_FUNCTION}\label{wxdynlibfunction}
2997
2998 \func{}{wxDYNLIB\_FUNCTION}{\param{}{type}, \param{}{name}, \param{}{dynlib}}
2999
3000 When loading a function from a DLL you always have to cast the returned
3001 {\tt void *} pointer to the correct type and, even more annoyingly, you have to
3002 repeat this type twice if you want to declare and define a function pointer all
3003 in one line
3004
3005 This macro makes this slightly less painful by allowing you to specify the
3006 type only once, as the first parameter, and creating a variable of this type
3007 named after the function but with {\tt pfn} prefix and initialized with the
3008 function \arg{name} from the \helpref{wxDynamicLibrary}{wxdynamiclibrary}
3009 \arg{dynlib}.
3010
3011 \wxheading{Parameters}
3012
3013 \docparam{type}{the type of the function}
3014
3015 \docparam{name}{the name of the function to load, not a string (without quotes,
3016 it is quoted automatically by the macro)}
3017
3018 \docparam{dynlib}{the library to load the function from}
3019
3020
3021
3022 \membersection{wxDEPRECATED}\label{wxdeprecated}
3023
3024 This macro can be used around a function declaration to generate warnings
3025 indicating that this function is deprecated (i.e. obsolete and planned to be
3026 removed in the future) when it is used. Only Visual C++ 7 and higher and g++
3027 compilers currently support this functionality.
3028
3029 Example of use:
3030 \begin{verbatim}
3031 // old function, use wxString version instead
3032 wxDEPRECATED( void wxGetSomething(char *buf, size_t len) );
3033
3034 // ...
3035 wxString wxGetSomething();
3036 \end{verbatim}
3037
3038
3039 \membersection{wxDEPRECATED\_BUT\_USED\_INTERNALLY}\label{wxdeprecatedbutusedinternally}
3040
3041 This is a special version of \helpref{wxDEPRECATED}{wxdeprecated} macro which
3042 only does something when the deprecated function is used from the code outside
3043 wxWidgets itself but doesn't generate warnings when it is used from wxWidgets.
3044 It is used with the virtual functions which are called by the library itself --
3045 even if such function is deprecated the library still has to call it to ensure
3046 that the existing code overriding it continues to work, but the use of this
3047 macro ensures that a deprecation warning will be generated if this function is
3048 used from the user code or, in case of Visual C++, even when it is simply
3049 overridden.
3050
3051
3052 \membersection{wxDEPRECATED\_INLINE}\label{wxdeprecatedinline}
3053
3054 \func{}{wxDEPRECATED\_INLINE}{\param{}{func}, \param{}{body}}
3055
3056 This macro is similar to \helpref{wxDEPRECATED}{wxdeprecated} but can be used
3057 to not only declare the function \arg{func} as deprecated but to also provide
3058 its (inline) implementation \arg{body}.
3059
3060 It can be used as following:
3061 \begin{verbatim}
3062 class wxFoo
3063 {
3064 public:
3065 // OldMethod() is deprecated, use NewMethod() instead
3066 void NewMethod();
3067 wxDEPRECATED_INLINE( void OldMethod(), NewMethod() );
3068 };
3069 \end{verbatim}
3070
3071 \membersection{wxEXPLICIT}\label{wxexplicit}
3072
3073 {\tt wxEXPLICIT} is a macro which expands to the C++ {\tt explicit} keyword if
3074 the compiler supports it or nothing otherwise. Thus, it can be used even in the
3075 code which might have to be compiled with an old compiler without support for
3076 this language feature but still take advantage of it when it is available.
3077
3078
3079
3080 \membersection{::wxGetKeyState}\label{wxgetkeystate}
3081
3082 \func{bool}{wxGetKeyState}{\param{wxKeyCode }{key}}
3083
3084 For normal keys, returns \true if the specified key is currently down.
3085
3086 For togglable keys (Caps Lock, Num Lock and Scroll Lock), returns
3087 \true if the key is toggled such that its LED indicator is lit. There is
3088 currently no way to test whether togglable keys are up or down.
3089
3090 Even though there are virtual key codes defined for mouse buttons, they
3091 cannot be used with this function currently.
3092
3093 \wxheading{Include files}
3094
3095 <wx/utils.h>
3096
3097
3098 \membersection{wxLL}\label{wxll}
3099
3100 \func{wxLongLong\_t}{wxLL}{\param{}{number}}
3101
3102 This macro is defined for the platforms with a native 64 bit integer type and
3103 allows to define 64 bit compile time constants:
3104
3105 \begin{verbatim}
3106 #ifdef wxLongLong_t
3107 wxLongLong_t ll = wxLL(0x1234567890abcdef);
3108 #endif
3109 \end{verbatim}
3110
3111 \wxheading{Include files}
3112
3113 <wx/longlong.h>
3114
3115 \wxheading{See also}
3116
3117 \helpref{wxULL}{wxull}, \helpref{wxLongLong}{wxlonglong}
3118
3119
3120 \membersection{wxLongLongFmtSpec}\label{wxlonglongfmtspec}
3121
3122 This macro is defined to contain the {\tt printf()} format specifier using
3123 which 64 bit integer numbers (i.e. those of type {\tt wxLongLong\_t}) can be
3124 printed. Example of using it:
3125
3126 \begin{verbatim}
3127 #ifdef wxLongLong_t
3128 wxLongLong_t ll = wxLL(0x1234567890abcdef);
3129 printf("Long long = %" wxLongLongFmtSpec "x\n", ll);
3130 #endif
3131 \end{verbatim}
3132
3133 \wxheading{See also}
3134
3135 \helpref{wxLL}{wxll}
3136
3137 \wxheading{Include files}
3138
3139 <wx/longlong.h>
3140
3141
3142 \membersection{::wxNewId}\label{wxnewid}
3143
3144 \func{long}{wxNewId}{\void}
3145
3146 This function is deprecated as the ids generated by it can conflict with the
3147 ids defined by the user code, use \texttt{wxID\_ANY} to assign ids which are
3148 guaranteed to not conflict with the user-defined ids for the controls and menu
3149 items you create instead of using this function.
3150
3151
3152 Generates an integer identifier unique to this run of the program.
3153
3154 \wxheading{Include files}
3155
3156 <wx/utils.h>
3157
3158
3159 \membersection{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT}\label{wxonblockexit}
3160
3161 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT0}{\param{}{func}}
3162
3163 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT1}{\param{}{func}, \param{}{p1}}
3164
3165 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT2}{\param{}{func}, \param{}{p1}, \param{}{p2}}
3166
3167 This family of macros allows to ensure that the global function \arg{func}
3168 with 0, 1, 2 or more parameters (up to some implementaton-defined limit) is
3169 executed on scope exit, whether due to a normal function return or because an
3170 exception has been thrown. A typical example of its usage:
3171 \begin{verbatim}
3172 void *buf = malloc(size);
3173 wxON_BLOCK_EXIT1(free, buf);
3174 \end{verbatim}
3175
3176 Please see the original article by Andrei Alexandrescu and Petru Marginean
3177 published in December 2000 issue of \emph{C/C++ Users Journal} for more
3178 details.
3179
3180 \wxheading{Include files}
3181
3182 <wx/scopeguard.h>
3183
3184 \wxheading{See also}
3185
3186 \helpref{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ}{wxonblockexitobj}
3187
3188
3189 \membersection{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ}\label{wxonblockexitobj}
3190
3191 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ0}{\param{}{obj}, \param{}{method}}
3192
3193 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ1}{\param{}{obj}, \param{}{method}, \param{}{p1}}
3194
3195 \func{}{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT\_OBJ2}{\param{}{obj}, \param{}{method}, \param{}{p1}, \param{}{p2}}
3196
3197 This family of macros is similar to \helpref{wxON\_BLOCK\_EXIT}{wxonblockexit}
3198 but calls a method of the given object instead of a free function.
3199
3200 \wxheading{Include files}
3201
3202 <wx/scopeguard.h>
3203
3204
3205 \membersection{::wxRegisterId}\label{wxregisterid}
3206
3207 \func{void}{wxRegisterId}{\param{long}{ id}}
3208
3209 Ensures that ids subsequently generated by {\bf NewId} do not clash with
3210 the given {\bf id}.
3211
3212 \wxheading{Include files}
3213
3214 <wx/utils.h>
3215
3216
3217 \membersection{::wxDDECleanUp}\label{wxddecleanup}
3218
3219 \func{void}{wxDDECleanUp}{\void}
3220
3221 Called when wxWidgets exits, to clean up the DDE system. This no longer needs to be
3222 called by the application.
3223
3224 See also \helpref{wxDDEInitialize}{wxddeinitialize}.
3225
3226 \wxheading{Include files}
3227
3228 <wx/dde.h>
3229
3230
3231 \membersection{::wxDDEInitialize}\label{wxddeinitialize}
3232
3233 \func{void}{wxDDEInitialize}{\void}
3234
3235 Initializes the DDE system. May be called multiple times without harm.
3236
3237 This no longer needs to be called by the application: it will be called
3238 by wxWidgets if necessary.
3239
3240 See also \helpref{wxDDEServer}{wxddeserver}, \helpref{wxDDEClient}{wxddeclient}, \helpref{wxDDEConnection}{wxddeconnection},\rtfsp
3241 \helpref{wxDDECleanUp}{wxddecleanup}.
3242
3243 \wxheading{Include files}
3244
3245 <wx/dde.h>
3246
3247
3248 \membersection{::wxEnableTopLevelWindows}\label{wxenabletoplevelwindows}
3249
3250 \func{void}{wxEnableTopLevelWindows}{\param{bool}{ enable = true}}
3251
3252 This function enables or disables all top level windows. It is used by
3253 \helpref{::wxSafeYield}{wxsafeyield}.
3254
3255 \wxheading{Include files}
3256
3257 <wx/utils.h>
3258
3259
3260 \membersection{::wxFindMenuItemId}\label{wxfindmenuitemid}
3261
3262 \func{int}{wxFindMenuItemId}{\param{wxFrame *}{frame}, \param{const wxString\& }{menuString}, \param{const wxString\& }{itemString}}
3263
3264 Find a menu item identifier associated with the given frame's menu bar.
3265
3266 \wxheading{Include files}
3267
3268 <wx/utils.h>
3269
3270
3271 \membersection{::wxFindWindowByLabel}\label{wxfindwindowbylabel}
3272
3273 \func{wxWindow *}{wxFindWindowByLabel}{\param{const wxString\& }{label}, \param{wxWindow *}{parent=NULL}}
3274
3275 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, please use
3276 \helpref{wxWindow::FindWindowByLabel}{wxwindowfindwindowbylabel} instead.
3277
3278 Find a window by its label. Depending on the type of window, the label may be a window title
3279 or panel item label. If {\it parent} is NULL, the search will start from all top-level
3280 frames and dialog boxes; if non-NULL, the search will be limited to the given window hierarchy.
3281 The search is recursive in both cases.
3282
3283 \wxheading{Include files}
3284
3285 <wx/utils.h>
3286
3287
3288 \membersection{::wxFindWindowByName}\label{wxfindwindowbyname}
3289
3290 \func{wxWindow *}{wxFindWindowByName}{\param{const wxString\& }{name}, \param{wxWindow *}{parent=NULL}}
3291
3292 {\bf NB:} This function is obsolete, please use
3293 \helpref{wxWindow::FindWindowByName}{wxwindowfindwindowbyname} instead.
3294
3295 Find a window by its name (as given in a window constructor or {\bf Create} function call).
3296 If {\it parent} is NULL, the search will start from all top-level
3297 frames and dialog boxes; if non-NULL, the search will be limited to the given window hierarchy.
3298 The search is recursive in both cases.
3299
3300 If no such named window is found, {\bf wxFindWindowByLabel} is called.
3301
3302 \wxheading{Include files}
3303
3304 <wx/utils.h>
3305
3306
3307 \membersection{::wxFindWindowAtPoint}\label{wxfindwindowatpoint}
3308
3309 \func{wxWindow *}{wxFindWindowAtPoint}{\param{const wxPoint\& }{pt}}
3310
3311 Find the deepest window at the given mouse position in screen coordinates,
3312 returning the window if found, or NULL if not.
3313
3314
3315 \membersection{::wxFindWindowAtPointer}\label{wxfindwindowatpointer}
3316
3317 \func{wxWindow *}{wxFindWindowAtPointer}{\param{wxPoint\& }{pt}}
3318
3319 Find the deepest window at the mouse pointer position, returning the window
3320 and current pointer position in screen coordinates.
3321
3322
3323 \membersection{wxFromString}\label{wxfromstring}
3324
3325 \func{bool}{wxFromString}{\param{const wxString\& }{str},
3326 \param{wxColour* }{col}}
3327
3328 \func{bool}{wxFromString}{\param{const wxString\& }{str},
3329 \param{wxFont* }{col}}
3330
3331 Converts string to the type of the second argument. Returns \true on success.
3332 See also: \helpref{wxToString}{wxtostring}.
3333
3334
3335 \membersection{::wxGetActiveWindow}\label{wxgetactivewindow}
3336
3337 \func{wxWindow *}{wxGetActiveWindow}{\void}
3338
3339 Gets the currently active window (implemented for MSW and GTK only currently,
3340 always returns \NULL in the other ports).
3341
3342 \wxheading{Include files}
3343
3344 <wx/window.h>
3345
3346
3347 \membersection{::wxGetBatteryState}\label{wxgetbatterystate}
3348
3349 \func{wxBatteryState}{wxGetBatteryState}{\void}
3350
3351 Returns battery state as one of \texttt{wxBATTERY\_NORMAL\_STATE},
3352 \texttt{wxBATTERY\_LOW\_STATE}, \texttt{wxBATTERY\_CRITICAL\_STATE},
3353 \texttt{wxBATTERY\_SHUTDOWN\_STATE} or \texttt{wxBATTERY\_UNKNOWN\_STATE}.
3354 \texttt{wxBATTERY\_UNKNOWN\_STATE} is also the default on platforms where
3355 this feature is not implemented (currently everywhere but MS Windows).
3356
3357 \wxheading{Include files}
3358
3359 <wx/utils.h>
3360
3361
3362 \membersection{::wxGetDisplayName}\label{wxgetdisplayname}
3363
3364 \func{wxString}{wxGetDisplayName}{\void}
3365
3366 Under X only, returns the current display name. See also \helpref{wxSetDisplayName}{wxsetdisplayname}.
3367
3368 \wxheading{Include files}
3369
3370 <wx/utils.h>
3371
3372
3373 \membersection{::wxGetPowerType}\label{wxgetpowertype}
3374
3375 \func{wxPowerType}{wxGetPowerType}{\void}
3376
3377 Returns the type of power source as one of \texttt{wxPOWER\_SOCKET},
3378 \texttt{wxPOWER\_BATTERY} or \texttt{wxPOWER\_UNKNOWN}.
3379 \texttt{wxPOWER\_UNKNOWN} is also the default on platforms where this
3380 feature is not implemented (currently everywhere but MS Windows).
3381
3382 \wxheading{Include files}
3383
3384 <wx/utils.h>
3385
3386
3387 \membersection{::wxGetMousePosition}\label{wxgetmouseposition}
3388
3389 \func{wxPoint}{wxGetMousePosition}{\void}
3390
3391 Returns the mouse position in screen coordinates.
3392
3393 \wxheading{Include files}
3394
3395 <wx/utils.h>
3396
3397
3398 \membersection{::wxGetMouseState}\label{wxgetmousestate}
3399
3400 \func{wxMouseState}{wxGetMouseState}{\void}
3401
3402 Returns the current state of the mouse. Returns a wxMouseState
3403 instance that contains the current position of the mouse pointer in
3404 screen coordinates, as well as boolean values indicating the up/down
3405 status of the mouse buttons and the modifier keys.
3406
3407 \wxheading{Include files}
3408
3409 <wx/utils.h>
3410
3411 wxMouseState has the following interface:
3412
3413 \begin{verbatim}
3414 class wxMouseState
3415 {
3416 public:
3417 wxMouseState();
3418
3419 wxCoord GetX();
3420 wxCoord GetY();
3421
3422 bool LeftDown();
3423 bool MiddleDown();
3424 bool RightDown();
3425
3426 bool ControlDown();
3427 bool ShiftDown();
3428 bool AltDown();
3429 bool MetaDown();
3430 bool CmdDown();
3431
3432 void SetX(wxCoord x);
3433 void SetY(wxCoord y);
3434
3435 void SetLeftDown(bool down);
3436 void SetMiddleDown(bool down);
3437 void SetRightDown(bool down);
3438
3439 void SetControlDown(bool down);
3440 void SetShiftDown(bool down);
3441 void SetAltDown(bool down);
3442 void SetMetaDown(bool down);
3443 };
3444 \end{verbatim}
3445
3446
3447
3448 \membersection{::wxGetStockLabel}\label{wxgetstocklabel}
3449
3450 \func{wxString}{wxGetStockLabel}{\param{wxWindowID }{id}, \param{bool }{withCodes = true}, \param{const wxString\& }{accelerator = wxEmptyString}}
3451
3452 Returns label that should be used for given {\it id} element.
3453
3454 \wxheading{Parameters}
3455
3456 \docparam{id}{given id of the \helpref{wxMenuItem}{wxmenuitem}, \helpref{wxButton}{wxbutton}, \helpref{wxToolBar}{wxtoolbar} tool, etc.}
3457
3458 \docparam{withCodes}{if false then strip accelerator code from the label;
3459 useful for getting labels without accelerator char code like for toolbar tooltip or
3460 on platforms without traditional keyboard like smartphones}
3461
3462 \docparam{accelerator}{optional accelerator string automatically added to label; useful
3463 for building labels for \helpref{wxMenuItem}{wxmenuitem}}
3464
3465 \wxheading{Include files}
3466
3467 <wx/stockitem.h>
3468
3469
3470 \membersection{::wxGetTopLevelParent}\label{wxgettoplevelparent}
3471
3472 \func{wxWindow *}{wxGetTopLevelParent}{\param{wxWindow }{*win}}
3473
3474 Returns the first top level parent of the given window, or in other words, the
3475 frame or dialog containing it, or {\tt NULL}.
3476
3477 \wxheading{Include files}
3478
3479 <wx/window.h>
3480
3481
3482 \membersection{::wxLaunchDefaultBrowser}\label{wxlaunchdefaultbrowser}
3483
3484 \func{bool}{wxLaunchDefaultBrowser}{\param{const wxString\& }{url}, \param{int }{flags = $0$}}
3485
3486 Open the \arg{url} in user's default browser. If \arg{flags} parameter contains
3487 \texttt{wxBROWSER\_NEW\_WINDOW} flag, a new window is opened for the URL
3488 (currently this is only supported under Windows). The \arg{url} may also be a
3489 local file path (with or without \texttt{file://} prefix), if it doesn't
3490 correspond to an existing file and the URL has no scheme \texttt{http://} is
3491 prepended to it by default.
3492
3493 Returns \true if the application was successfully launched.
3494
3495 Note that for some configurations of the running user, the application which
3496 is launched to open the given URL may be URL-dependent (e.g. a browser may be used for
3497 local URLs while another one may be used for remote URLs).
3498
3499 \wxheading{Include files}
3500
3501 <wx/utils.h>
3502
3503
3504 \membersection{::wxLoadUserResource}\label{wxloaduserresource}
3505
3506 \func{wxString}{wxLoadUserResource}{\param{const wxString\& }{resourceName}, \param{const wxString\& }{resourceType=``TEXT"}}
3507
3508 Loads a user-defined Windows resource as a string. If the resource is found, the function creates
3509 a new character array and copies the data into it. A pointer to this data is returned. If unsuccessful, NULL is returned.
3510
3511 The resource must be defined in the {\tt .rc} file using the following syntax:
3512
3513 \begin{verbatim}
3514 myResource TEXT file.ext
3515 \end{verbatim}
3516
3517 where {\tt file.ext} is a file that the resource compiler can find.
3518
3519 This function is available under Windows only.
3520
3521 \wxheading{Include files}
3522
3523 <wx/utils.h>
3524
3525
3526 \membersection{::wxPostDelete}\label{wxpostdelete}
3527
3528 \func{void}{wxPostDelete}{\param{wxObject *}{object}}
3529
3530 Tells the system to delete the specified object when
3531 all other events have been processed. In some environments, it is
3532 necessary to use this instead of deleting a frame directly with the
3533 delete operator, because some GUIs will still send events to a deleted window.
3534
3535 Now obsolete: use \helpref{wxWindow::Close}{wxwindowclose} instead.
3536
3537 \wxheading{Include files}
3538
3539 <wx/utils.h>
3540
3541
3542 \membersection{::wxPostEvent}\label{wxpostevent}
3543
3544 \func{void}{wxPostEvent}{\param{wxEvtHandler *}{dest}, \param{wxEvent\& }{event}}
3545
3546 In a GUI application, this function posts {\it event} to the specified {\it dest}
3547 object using \helpref{wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent}{wxevthandleraddpendingevent}.
3548 Otherwise, it dispatches {\it event} immediately using
3549 \helpref{wxEvtHandler::ProcessEvent}{wxevthandlerprocessevent}.
3550 See the respective documentation for details (and caveats).
3551
3552 \wxheading{Include files}
3553
3554 <wx/app.h>
3555
3556
3557 \membersection{::wxSetDisplayName}\label{wxsetdisplayname}
3558
3559 \func{void}{wxSetDisplayName}{\param{const wxString\& }{displayName}}
3560
3561 Under X only, sets the current display name. This is the X host and display name such
3562 as ``colonsay:0.0", and the function indicates which display should be used for creating
3563 windows from this point on. Setting the display within an application allows multiple
3564 displays to be used.
3565
3566 See also \helpref{wxGetDisplayName}{wxgetdisplayname}.
3567
3568 \wxheading{Include files}
3569
3570 <wx/utils.h>
3571
3572
3573 \membersection{::wxStripMenuCodes}\label{wxstripmenucodes}
3574
3575 \func{wxString}{wxStripMenuCodes}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}, \param{int }{flags = wxStrip\_All}}
3576
3577 Strips any menu codes from \arg{str} and returns the result.
3578
3579 By default, the functions strips both the mnemonics character (\texttt{'\&'})
3580 which is used to indicate a keyboard shortkey, and the accelerators, which are
3581 used only in the menu items and are separated from the main text by the
3582 \texttt{$\backslash$t} (TAB) character. By using \arg{flags} of
3583 \texttt{wxStrip\_Mnemonics} or \texttt{wxStrip\_Accel} to strip only the former
3584 or the latter part, respectively.
3585
3586 Notice that in most cases
3587 \helpref{wxMenuItem::GetLabelFromText}{wxmenuitemgetlabelfromtext} or
3588 \helpref{wxControl::GetLabelText}{wxcontrolgetlabeltext} can be used instead.
3589
3590 \wxheading{Include files}
3591
3592 <wx/utils.h>
3593
3594
3595 \membersection{wxSTRINGIZE}\label{wxstringize}
3596
3597 \func{}{wxSTRINGIZE}{\param{}{x}}
3598
3599 Returns the string representation of the given symbol which can be either a
3600 literal or a macro (hence the advantage of using this macro instead of the
3601 standard preprocessor \texttt{\#} operator which doesn't work with macros).
3602
3603 Notice that this macro always produces a \texttt{char} string, use
3604 \helpref{wxSTRINGIZE\_T}{wxstringizet} to build a wide string Unicode build.
3605
3606 \wxheading{See also}
3607
3608 \helpref{wxCONCAT}{wxconcat}
3609
3610
3611 \membersection{wxSTRINGIZE\_T}\label{wxstringizet}
3612
3613 \func{}{wxSTRINGIZE\_T}{\param{}{x}}
3614
3615 Returns the string representation of the given symbol as either an ASCII or
3616 Unicode string, depending on the current build. This is the Unicode-friendly
3617 equivalent of \helpref{wxSTRINGIZE}{wxstringize}.
3618
3619
3620 \membersection{wxSUPPRESS\_GCC\_PRIVATE\_DTOR\_WARNING}\label{wxsuppressgccprivatedtorwarning}
3621
3622 \func{}{wxSUPPRESS\_GCC\_PRIVATE\_DTOR\_WARNING}{\param{}{name}}
3623
3624 GNU C++ compiler gives a warning for any class whose destructor is private
3625 unless it has a friend. This warning may sometimes be useful but it doesn't
3626 make sense for reference counted class which always delete themselves (hence
3627 destructor should be private) but don't necessarily have any friends, so this
3628 macro is provided to disable the warning in such case. The \arg{name} parameter
3629 should be the name of the class but is only used to construct a unique friend
3630 class name internally. Example of using the macro:
3631
3632 \begin{verbatim}
3633 class RefCounted
3634 {
3635 public:
3636 RefCounted() { m_nRef = 1; }
3637 void IncRef() { m_nRef++ ; }
3638 void DecRef() { if ( !--m_nRef ) delete this; }
3639
3640 private:
3641 ~RefCounted() { }
3642
3643 wxSUPPRESS_GCC_PRIVATE_DTOR(RefCounted)
3644 };
3645 \end{verbatim}
3646
3647 Notice that there should be no semicolon after this macro.
3648
3649
3650 \membersection{wxToString}\label{wxtostring}
3651
3652 \func{wxString}{wxToString}{\param{const wxColour\& }{col}}
3653
3654 \func{wxString}{wxToString}{\param{const wxFont\& }{col}}
3655
3656 Converts its argument to string.
3657 See also: \helpref{wxFromString}{wxfromstring}.
3658
3659
3660 \membersection{wxULL}\label{wxull}
3661
3662 \func{wxLongLong\_t}{wxULL}{\param{}{number}}
3663
3664 This macro is defined for the platforms with a native 64 bit integer type and
3665 allows to define unsigned 64 bit compile time constants:
3666
3667 \begin{verbatim}
3668 #ifdef wxLongLong_t
3669 unsigned wxLongLong_t ll = wxULL(0x1234567890abcdef);
3670 #endif
3671 \end{verbatim}
3672
3673 \wxheading{Include files}
3674
3675 <wx/longlong.h>
3676
3677 \wxheading{See also}
3678
3679 \helpref{wxLL}{wxll}, \helpref{wxLongLong}{wxlonglong}
3680
3681
3682 \membersection{wxVaCopy}\label{wxvacopy}
3683
3684 \func{void}{wxVaCopy}{\param{va\_list }{argptrDst}, \param{va\_list}{ argptrSrc}}
3685
3686 This macro is the same as the standard C99 \texttt{va\_copy} for the compilers
3687 which support it or its replacement for those that don't. It must be used to
3688 preserve the value of a \texttt{va\_list} object if you need to use it after
3689 passing it to another function because it can be modified by the latter.
3690
3691 As with \texttt{va\_start}, each call to \texttt{wxVaCopy} must have a matching
3692 \texttt{va\_end}.
3693
3694
3695
3696 \membersection{\_\_WXFUNCTION\_\_}\label{wxfunction}
3697
3698 \func{}{\_\_WXFUNCTION\_\_}{\void}
3699
3700 This macro expands to the name of the current function if the compiler supports
3701 any of \texttt{\_\_FUNCTION\_\_}, \texttt{\_\_func\_\_} or equivalent variables
3702 or macros or to \NULL if none of them is available.
3703
3704
3705
3706 \section{Byte order macros}\label{byteordermacros}
3707
3708 The endian-ness issues (that is the difference between big-endian and
3709 little-endian architectures) are important for the portable programs working
3710 with the external binary data (for example, data files or data coming from
3711 network) which is usually in some fixed, platform-independent format. The
3712 macros are helpful for transforming the data to the correct format.
3713
3714
3715 \membersection{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}\label{intswapalways}
3716
3717 \func{wxInt32}{wxINT32\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}{\param{wxInt32 }{value}}
3718
3719 \func{wxUint32}{wxUINT32\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}{\param{wxUint32 }{value}}
3720
3721 \func{wxInt16}{wxINT16\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}{\param{wxInt16 }{value}}
3722
3723 \func{wxUint16}{wxUINT16\_SWAP\_ALWAYS}{\param{wxUint16 }{value}}
3724
3725 These macros will swap the bytes of the {\it value} variable from little
3726 endian to big endian or vice versa unconditionally, i.e. independently of the
3727 current platform.
3728
3729
3730 \membersection{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}\label{intswaponbe}
3731
3732 \func{wxInt32}{wxINT32\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}{\param{wxInt32 }{value}}
3733
3734 \func{wxUint32}{wxUINT32\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}{\param{wxUint32 }{value}}
3735
3736 \func{wxInt16}{wxINT16\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}{\param{wxInt16 }{value}}
3737
3738 \func{wxUint16}{wxUINT16\_SWAP\_ON\_BE}{\param{wxUint16 }{value}}
3739
3740 This macro will swap the bytes of the {\it value} variable from little
3741 endian to big endian or vice versa if the program is compiled on a
3742 big-endian architecture (such as Sun work stations). If the program has
3743 been compiled on a little-endian architecture, the value will be unchanged.
3744
3745 Use these macros to read data from and write data to a file that stores
3746 data in little-endian (for example Intel i386) format.
3747
3748
3749 \membersection{wxINTXX\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}\label{intswaponle}
3750
3751 \func{wxInt32}{wxINT32\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}{\param{wxInt32 }{value}}
3752
3753 \func{wxUint32}{wxUINT32\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}{\param{wxUint32 }{value}}
3754
3755 \func{wxInt16}{wxINT16\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}{\param{wxInt16 }{value}}
3756
3757 \func{wxUint16}{wxUINT16\_SWAP\_ON\_LE}{\param{wxUint16 }{value}}
3758
3759 This macro will swap the bytes of the {\it value} variable from little
3760 endian to big endian or vice versa if the program is compiled on a
3761 little-endian architecture (such as Intel PCs). If the program has
3762 been compiled on a big-endian architecture, the value will be unchanged.
3763
3764 Use these macros to read data from and write data to a file that stores
3765 data in big-endian format.
3766
3767
3768 \membersection{wxFORCE\_LINK\_THIS\_MODULE}\label{wxforcelinkthismodule}
3769
3770 \func{}{wxFORCE\_LINK\_THIS\_MODULE}{moduleName}
3771
3772 This macro can be used in conjunction with the
3773 \helpref{wxFORCE\_LINK\_MODULE}{wxforcelinkmodule} macro to force
3774 the linker to include in its output a specific object file.
3775
3776 In particular, you should use this macro in the source file which you want
3777 to force for inclusion. The \tt{moduleName} needs to be a name not already
3778 in use in other \tt{wxFORCE\_LINK\_THIS\_MODULE} macros, but is not required
3779 to be e.g. the same name of the source file (even if it's a good choice).
3780
3781 \wxheading{Include files}
3782
3783 <wx/link.h>
3784
3785
3786 \membersection{wxFORCE\_LINK\_MODULE}\label{wxforcelinkmodule}
3787
3788 \func{}{wxFORCE\_LINK\_MODULE}{moduleName}
3789
3790 This macro can be used in conjunction with the
3791 \helpref{wxFORCE\_LINK\_THIS\_MODULE}{wxforcelinkthismodule} macro to force
3792 the linker to include in its output a specific object file.
3793
3794 In particular, you should use this macro in a source file which you know
3795 for sure is linked in the output (e.g. the source file containing the "main()"
3796 of your app). The \tt{moduleName} is the name of the module you want to forcefully link
3797 (i.e. the name you used in the relative \helpref{wxFORCE\_LINK\_THIS\_MODULE}{wxforcelinkthismodule} macro.
3798
3799 \wxheading{Include files}
3800
3801 <wx/link.h>
3802
3803
3804 \membersection{wxIMPLEMENT\_APP}\label{wximplementapp}
3805
3806 \func{}{wxIMPLEMENT\_APP}{className}
3807
3808 This is used in the application class implementation file to make the application class
3809 known to wxWidgets for dynamic construction. You use this as:
3810
3811 \begin{verbatim}
3812 wxIMPLEMENT_APP(MyApp)
3813 \end{verbatim}
3814
3815 See also \helpref{wxDECLARE\_APP}{wxdeclareapp}.
3816
3817 \wxheading{Include files}
3818
3819 <wx/app.h>
3820
3821
3822 \section{RTTI functions}\label{rttimacros}
3823
3824 wxWidgets uses its own RTTI ("run-time type identification") system which
3825 predates the current standard C++ RTTI and so is kept for backwards
3826 compatibility reasons but also because it allows some things which the
3827 standard RTTI doesn't directly support (such as creating a class from its
3828 name).
3829
3830 The standard C++ RTTI can be used in the user code without any problems and in
3831 general you shouldn't need to use the functions and the macros in this section
3832 unless you are thinking of modifying or adding any wxWidgets classes.
3833
3834 \wxheading{See also}
3835
3836 \helpref{RTTI overview}{runtimeclassoverview}
3837
3838
3839 \membersection{CLASSINFO}\label{classinfo}
3840
3841 \func{wxClassInfo *}{CLASSINFO}{className}
3842
3843 Returns a pointer to the wxClassInfo object associated with this class.
3844
3845 \wxheading{Include files}
3846
3847 <wx/object.h>
3848
3849
3850 \membersection{DECLARE\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}\label{declareabstractclass}
3851
3852 \func{}{DECLARE\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}{className}
3853
3854 Used inside a class declaration to declare that the class should be
3855 made known to the class hierarchy, but objects of this class cannot be created
3856 dynamically. The same as DECLARE\_CLASS.
3857
3858 Example:
3859
3860 \begin{verbatim}
3861 class wxCommand: public wxObject
3862 {
3863 DECLARE_ABSTRACT_CLASS(wxCommand)
3864
3865 private:
3866 ...
3867 public:
3868 ...
3869 };
3870 \end{verbatim}
3871
3872 \wxheading{Include files}
3873
3874 <wx/object.h>
3875
3876
3877 \membersection{DECLARE\_APP}\label{declareapp}
3878
3879 \func{}{DECLARE\_APP}{className}
3880
3881 This is used in headers to create a forward declaration of the
3882 \helpref{wxGetApp}{wxgetapp} function implemented by
3883 \helpref{IMPLEMENT\_APP}{implementapp}. It creates the declaration
3884 {\tt className\& wxGetApp(void)}.
3885
3886 Example:
3887
3888 \begin{verbatim}
3889 DECLARE_APP(MyApp)
3890 \end{verbatim}
3891
3892 \wxheading{Include files}
3893
3894 <wx/app.h>
3895
3896
3897 \membersection{DECLARE\_CLASS}\label{declareclass}
3898
3899 \func{}{DECLARE\_CLASS}{className}
3900
3901 Used inside a class declaration to declare that the class should be
3902 made known to the class hierarchy, but objects of this class cannot be created
3903 dynamically. The same as DECLARE\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS.
3904
3905 \wxheading{Include files}
3906
3907 <wx/object.h>
3908
3909
3910 \membersection{DECLARE\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}\label{declaredynamicclass}
3911
3912 \func{}{DECLARE\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}{className}
3913
3914 Used inside a class declaration to make the class known to wxWidgets RTTI
3915 system and also declare that the objects of this class should be dynamically
3916 creatable from run-time type information. Notice that this implies that the
3917 class should have a default constructor, if this is not the case consider using
3918 \helpref{DECLARE\_CLASS}{declareclass}.
3919
3920 Example:
3921
3922 \begin{verbatim}
3923 class wxFrame: public wxWindow
3924 {
3925 DECLARE_DYNAMIC_CLASS(wxFrame)
3926
3927 private:
3928 const wxString& frameTitle;
3929 public:
3930 ...
3931 };
3932 \end{verbatim}
3933
3934 \wxheading{Include files}
3935
3936 <wx/object.h>
3937
3938
3939 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}\label{implementabstractclass}
3940
3941 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS}{className, baseClassName}
3942
3943 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of
3944 a class that has run-time type information. The same as IMPLEMENT\_CLASS.
3945
3946 Example:
3947
3948 \begin{verbatim}
3949 IMPLEMENT_ABSTRACT_CLASS(wxCommand, wxObject)
3950
3951 wxCommand::wxCommand(void)
3952 {
3953 ...
3954 }
3955 \end{verbatim}
3956
3957 \wxheading{Include files}
3958
3959 <wx/object.h>
3960
3961
3962 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS2}\label{implementabstractclass2}
3963
3964 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS2}{className, baseClassName1, baseClassName2}
3965
3966 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of
3967 a class that has run-time type information and two base classes. The same as IMPLEMENT\_CLASS2.
3968
3969 \wxheading{Include files}
3970
3971 <wx/object.h>
3972
3973
3974 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_APP}\label{implementapp}
3975
3976 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_APP}{className}
3977
3978 This is used in the application class implementation file to make the application class known to
3979 wxWidgets for dynamic construction. You use this instead of
3980
3981 Old form:
3982
3983 \begin{verbatim}
3984 MyApp myApp;
3985 \end{verbatim}
3986
3987 New form:
3988
3989 \begin{verbatim}
3990 IMPLEMENT_APP(MyApp)
3991 \end{verbatim}
3992
3993 See also \helpref{DECLARE\_APP}{declareapp}.
3994
3995 \wxheading{Include files}
3996
3997 <wx/app.h>
3998
3999
4000 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS}\label{implementclass}
4001
4002 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS}{className, baseClassName}
4003
4004 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of
4005 a class that has run-time type information. The same as IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS.
4006
4007 \wxheading{Include files}
4008
4009 <wx/object.h>
4010
4011
4012 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS2}\label{implementclass2}
4013
4014 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_CLASS2}{className, baseClassName1, baseClassName2}
4015
4016 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of a
4017 class that has run-time type information and two base classes. The
4018 same as IMPLEMENT\_ABSTRACT\_CLASS2.
4019
4020 \wxheading{Include files}
4021
4022 <wx/object.h>
4023
4024
4025 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}\label{implementdynamicclass}
4026
4027 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS}{className, baseClassName}
4028
4029 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of
4030 a class that has run-time type information, and whose instances
4031 can be created dynamically.
4032
4033 Example:
4034
4035 \begin{verbatim}
4036 IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_CLASS(wxFrame, wxWindow)
4037
4038 wxFrame::wxFrame(void)
4039 {
4040 ...
4041 }
4042 \end{verbatim}
4043
4044 \wxheading{Include files}
4045
4046 <wx/object.h>
4047
4048
4049 \membersection{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS2}\label{implementdynamicclass2}
4050
4051 \func{}{IMPLEMENT\_DYNAMIC\_CLASS2}{className, baseClassName1, baseClassName2}
4052
4053 Used in a C++ implementation file to complete the declaration of
4054 a class that has run-time type information, and whose instances
4055 can be created dynamically. Use this for classes derived from two
4056 base classes.
4057
4058 \wxheading{Include files}
4059
4060 <wx/object.h>
4061
4062
4063 \membersection{wxConstCast}\label{wxconstcast}
4064
4065 \func{classname *}{wxConstCast}{ptr, classname}
4066
4067 This macro expands into {\tt const\_cast<classname *>(ptr)} if the compiler
4068 supports {\it const\_cast} or into an old, C-style cast, otherwise.
4069
4070 \wxheading{See also}
4071
4072 \helpref{wx\_const\_cast}{wxconstcastraw}\\
4073 \helpref{wxDynamicCast}{wxdynamiccast}\\
4074 \helpref{wxStaticCast}{wxstaticcast}
4075
4076
4077 \membersection{::wxCreateDynamicObject}\label{wxcreatedynamicobject}
4078
4079 \func{wxObject *}{wxCreateDynamicObject}{\param{const wxString\& }{className}}
4080
4081 Creates and returns an object of the given class, if the class has been
4082 registered with the dynamic class system using DECLARE... and IMPLEMENT... macros.
4083
4084
4085 \membersection{WXDEBUG\_NEW}\label{debugnew}
4086
4087 \func{}{WXDEBUG\_NEW}{arg}
4088
4089 This is defined in debug mode to be call the redefined new operator
4090 with filename and line number arguments. The definition is:
4091
4092 \begin{verbatim}
4093 #define WXDEBUG_NEW new(__FILE__,__LINE__)
4094 \end{verbatim}
4095
4096 In non-debug mode, this is defined as the normal new operator.
4097
4098 \wxheading{Include files}
4099
4100 <wx/object.h>
4101
4102
4103 \membersection{wxDynamicCast}\label{wxdynamiccast}
4104
4105 \func{classname *}{wxDynamicCast}{ptr, classname}
4106
4107 This macro returns the pointer {\it ptr} cast to the type {\it classname *} if
4108 the pointer is of this type (the check is done during the run-time) or
4109 {\tt NULL} otherwise. Usage of this macro is preferred over obsoleted
4110 wxObject::IsKindOf() function.
4111
4112 The {\it ptr} argument may be {\tt NULL}, in which case {\tt NULL} will be
4113 returned.
4114
4115 Example:
4116
4117 \begin{verbatim}
4118 wxWindow *win = wxWindow::FindFocus();
4119 wxTextCtrl *text = wxDynamicCast(win, wxTextCtrl);
4120 if ( text )
4121 {
4122 // a text control has the focus...
4123 }
4124 else
4125 {
4126 // no window has the focus or it is not a text control
4127 }
4128 \end{verbatim}
4129
4130 \wxheading{See also}
4131
4132 \helpref{RTTI overview}{runtimeclassoverview}\\
4133 \helpref{wxDynamicCastThis}{wxdynamiccastthis}\\
4134 \helpref{wxConstCast}{wxconstcast}\\
4135 \helpref{wxStaticCast}{wxstaticcast}
4136
4137
4138 \membersection{wxDynamicCastThis}\label{wxdynamiccastthis}
4139
4140 \func{classname *}{wxDynamicCastThis}{classname}
4141
4142 This macro is equivalent to {\tt wxDynamicCast(this, classname)} but the
4143 latter provokes spurious compilation warnings from some compilers (because it
4144 tests whether {\tt this} pointer is non-{\tt NULL} which is always true), so
4145 this macro should be used to avoid them.
4146
4147 \wxheading{See also}
4148
4149 \helpref{wxDynamicCast}{wxdynamiccast}
4150
4151
4152 \membersection{wxStaticCast}\label{wxstaticcast}
4153
4154 \func{classname *}{wxStaticCast}{ptr, classname}
4155
4156 This macro checks that the cast is valid in debug mode (an assert failure will
4157 result if {\tt wxDynamicCast(ptr, classname) == NULL}) and then returns the
4158 result of executing an equivalent of {\tt static\_cast<classname *>(ptr)}.
4159
4160 \wxheading{See also}
4161
4162 \helpref{wx\_static\_cast}{wxstaticcastraw}\\
4163 \helpref{wxDynamicCast}{wxdynamiccast}\\
4164 \helpref{wxConstCast}{wxconstcast}
4165
4166
4167 \membersection{wx\_const\_cast}\label{wxconstcastraw}
4168
4169 \func{T}{wx\_const\_cast}{T, x}
4170
4171 Same as \texttt{const\_cast<T>(x)} if the compiler supports const cast or
4172 \texttt{(T)x} for old compilers. Unlike \helpref{wxConstCast}{wxconstcast},
4173 the cast it to the type \arg{T} and not to \texttt{T *} and also the order of
4174 arguments is the same as for the standard cast.
4175
4176 \wxheading{See also}
4177
4178 \helpref{wx\_reinterpret\_cast}{wxreinterpretcastraw},\\
4179 \helpref{wx\_static\_cast}{wxstaticcastraw}
4180
4181
4182 \membersection{wx\_reinterpret\_cast}\label{wxreinterpretcastraw}
4183
4184 \func{T}{wx\_reinterpret\_cast}{T, x}
4185
4186 Same as \texttt{reinterpret\_cast<T>(x)} if the compiler supports reinterpret cast or
4187 \texttt{(T)x} for old compilers.
4188
4189 \wxheading{See also}
4190
4191 \helpref{wx\_const\_cast}{wxconstcastraw},\\
4192 \helpref{wx\_static\_cast}{wxstaticcastraw}
4193
4194
4195 \membersection{wx\_static\_cast}\label{wxstaticcastraw}
4196
4197 \func{T}{wx\_static\_cast}{T, x}
4198
4199 Same as \texttt{static\_cast<T>(x)} if the compiler supports static cast or
4200 \texttt{(T)x} for old compilers. Unlike \helpref{wxStaticCast}{wxstaticcast},
4201 there are no checks being done and the meaning of the macro arguments is exactly
4202 the same as for the standard static cast, i.e. \arg{T} is the full type name and
4203 star is not appended to it.
4204
4205 \wxheading{See also}
4206
4207 \helpref{wx\_const\_cast}{wxconstcastraw},\\
4208 \helpref{wx\_reinterpret\_cast}{wxreinterpretcastraw},\\
4209 \helpref{wx\_truncate\_cast}{wxtruncatecast}
4210
4211
4212 \membersection{wx\_truncate\_cast}\label{wxtruncatecast}
4213
4214 \func{T}{wx\_truncate\_cast}{T, x}
4215
4216 This case doesn't correspond to any standard cast but exists solely to make
4217 casts which possibly result in a truncation of an integer value more readable.
4218
4219 \wxheading{See also}
4220
4221 \helpref{wx\_static\_cast}{wxstaticcastraw}
4222
4223
4224 \section{Log functions}\label{logfunctions}
4225
4226 These functions provide a variety of logging functions: see \helpref{Log classes overview}{wxlogoverview} for
4227 further information. The functions use (implicitly) the currently active log
4228 target, so their descriptions here may not apply if the log target is not the
4229 standard one (installed by wxWidgets in the beginning of the program).
4230
4231 \wxheading{Include files}
4232
4233 <wx/log.h>
4234
4235
4236 \membersection{::wxDebugMsg}\label{wxdebugmsg}
4237
4238 \func{void}{wxDebugMsg}{\param{const wxString\& }{fmt}, \param{...}{}}
4239
4240 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, replaced by \helpref{Log
4241 functions}{logfunctions} and \helpref{wxLogDebug}{wxlogdebug} in particular.
4242
4243 Display a debugging message; under Windows, this will appear on the
4244 debugger command window, and under Unix, it will be written to standard
4245 error.
4246
4247 The syntax is identical to {\bf printf}: pass a format string and a
4248 variable list of arguments.
4249
4250 {\bf Tip:} under Windows, if your application crashes before the
4251 message appears in the debugging window, put a wxYield call after
4252 each wxDebugMsg call. wxDebugMsg seems to be broken under WIN32s
4253 (at least for Watcom C++): preformat your messages and use OutputDebugString
4254 instead.
4255
4256 \wxheading{Include files}
4257
4258 <wx/utils.h>
4259
4260
4261 \membersection{::wxError}\label{wxerror}
4262
4263 \func{void}{wxError}{\param{const wxString\& }{msg}, \param{const wxString\& }{title = "wxWidgets Internal Error"}}
4264
4265 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, please use \helpref{wxLogError}{wxlogerror}
4266 instead.
4267
4268 Displays {\it msg} and continues. This writes to standard error under
4269 Unix, and pops up a message box under Windows. Used for internal
4270 wxWidgets errors. See also \helpref{wxFatalError}{wxfatalerror}.
4271
4272 \wxheading{Include files}
4273
4274 <wx/utils.h>
4275
4276
4277 \membersection{::wxFatalError}\label{wxfatalerror}
4278
4279 \func{void}{wxFatalError}{\param{const wxString\& }{msg}, \param{const wxString\& }{title = "wxWidgets Fatal Error"}}
4280
4281 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, please use
4282 \helpref{wxLogFatalError}{wxlogfatalerror} instead.
4283
4284 Displays {\it msg} and exits. This writes to standard error under Unix,
4285 and pops up a message box under Windows. Used for fatal internal
4286 wxWidgets errors. See also \helpref{wxError}{wxerror}.
4287
4288 \wxheading{Include files}
4289
4290 <wx/utils.h>
4291
4292
4293 \membersection{::wxLogError}\label{wxlogerror}
4294
4295 \func{void}{wxLogError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4296
4297 \func{void}{wxVLogError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4298
4299 The functions to use for error messages, i.e. the messages that must be shown
4300 to the user. The default processing is to pop up a message box to inform the
4301 user about it.
4302
4303
4304 \membersection{::wxLogFatalError}\label{wxlogfatalerror}
4305
4306 \func{void}{wxLogFatalError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4307
4308 \func{void}{wxVLogFatalError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4309
4310 Like \helpref{wxLogError}{wxlogerror}, but also
4311 terminates the program with the exit code 3. Using {\it abort()} standard
4312 function also terminates the program with this exit code.
4313
4314
4315 \membersection{::wxLogWarning}\label{wxlogwarning}
4316
4317 \func{void}{wxLogWarning}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4318
4319 \func{void}{wxVLogWarning}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4320
4321 For warnings - they are also normally shown to the user, but don't interrupt
4322 the program work.
4323
4324
4325 \membersection{::wxLogMessage}\label{wxlogmessage}
4326
4327 \func{void}{wxLogMessage}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4328
4329 \func{void}{wxVLogMessage}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4330
4331 For all normal, informational messages. They also appear in a message box by
4332 default (but it can be changed).
4333
4334 \membersection{::wxLogVerbose}\label{wxlogverbose}
4335
4336 \func{void}{wxLogVerbose}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4337
4338 \func{void}{wxVLogVerbose}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4339
4340 For verbose output. Normally, it is suppressed, but
4341 might be activated if the user wishes to know more details about the program
4342 progress (another, but possibly confusing name for the same function is {\bf wxLogInfo}).
4343
4344
4345 \membersection{::wxLogStatus}\label{wxlogstatus}
4346
4347 \func{void}{wxLogStatus}{\param{wxFrame *}{frame}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4348
4349 \func{void}{wxVLogStatus}{\param{wxFrame *}{frame}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4350
4351 \func{void}{wxLogStatus}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4352
4353 \func{void}{wxVLogStatus}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4354
4355 Messages logged by these functions will appear in the statusbar of the {\it
4356 frame} or of the top level application window by default (i.e. when using
4357 the second version of the functions).
4358
4359 If the target frame doesn't have a statusbar, the message will be lost.
4360
4361
4362 \membersection{::wxLogSysError}\label{wxlogsyserror}
4363
4364 \func{void}{wxLogSysError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4365
4366 \func{void}{wxVLogSysError}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4367
4368 Mostly used by wxWidgets itself, but might be handy for logging errors after
4369 system call (API function) failure. It logs the specified message text as well
4370 as the last system error code ({\it errno} or {\it ::GetLastError()} depending
4371 on the platform) and the corresponding error message. The second form
4372 of this function takes the error code explicitly as the first argument.
4373
4374 \wxheading{See also}
4375
4376 \helpref{wxSysErrorCode}{wxsyserrorcode},
4377 \helpref{wxSysErrorMsg}{wxsyserrormsg}
4378
4379
4380 \membersection{::wxLogDebug}\label{wxlogdebug}
4381
4382 \func{void}{wxLogDebug}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4383
4384 \func{void}{wxVLogDebug}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4385
4386 The right functions for debug output. They only do something in debug
4387 mode (when the preprocessor symbol \_\_WXDEBUG\_\_ is defined) and expand to
4388 nothing in release mode (otherwise).
4389
4390
4391 \membersection{::wxLogTrace}\label{wxlogtrace}
4392
4393 \func{void}{wxLogTrace}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4394
4395 \func{void}{wxVLogTrace}{\param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4396
4397 \func{void}{wxLogTrace}{\param{const char *}{mask}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4398
4399 \func{void}{wxVLogTrace}{\param{const char *}{mask}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4400
4401 \func{void}{wxLogTrace}{\param{wxTraceMask}{ mask}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{...}{}}
4402
4403 \func{void}{wxVLogTrace}{\param{wxTraceMask}{ mask}, \param{const char *}{formatString}, \param{va\_list }{argPtr}}
4404
4405 As {\bf wxLogDebug}, trace functions only do something in debug build and
4406 expand to nothing in the release one. The reason for making
4407 it a separate function from it is that usually there are a lot of trace
4408 messages, so it might make sense to separate them from other debug messages.
4409
4410 The trace messages also usually can be separated into different categories and
4411 the second and third versions of this function only log the message if the
4412 {\it mask} which it has is currently enabled in \helpref{wxLog}{wxlog}. This
4413 allows to selectively trace only some operations and not others by changing
4414 the value of the trace mask (possible during the run-time).
4415
4416 For the second function (taking a string mask), the message is logged only if
4417 the mask has been previously enabled by the call to
4418 \helpref{AddTraceMask}{wxlogaddtracemask} or by setting
4419 \helpref{{\tt WXTRACE} environment variable}{envvars}.
4420 The predefined string trace masks
4421 used by wxWidgets are:
4422
4423 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
4424 \item wxTRACE\_MemAlloc: trace memory allocation (new/delete)
4425 \item wxTRACE\_Messages: trace window messages/X callbacks
4426 \item wxTRACE\_ResAlloc: trace GDI resource allocation
4427 \item wxTRACE\_RefCount: trace various ref counting operations
4428 \item wxTRACE\_OleCalls: trace OLE method calls (Win32 only)
4429 \end{itemize}
4430
4431 {\bf Caveats:} since both the mask and the format string are strings,
4432 this might lead to function signature confusion in some cases:
4433 if you intend to call the format string only version of wxLogTrace,
4434 then add a \%s format string parameter and then supply a second string parameter for that \%s, the string mask version of wxLogTrace will erroneously get called instead, since you are supplying two string parameters to the function.
4435 In this case you'll unfortunately have to avoid having two leading
4436 string parameters, e.g. by adding a bogus integer (with its \%d format string).
4437
4438 The third version of the function only logs the message if all the bits
4439 corresponding to the {\it mask} are set in the wxLog trace mask which can be
4440 set by \helpref{SetTraceMask}{wxlogsettracemask}. This version is less
4441 flexible than the previous one because it doesn't allow defining the user
4442 trace masks easily - this is why it is deprecated in favour of using string
4443 trace masks.
4444
4445 \begin{itemize}\itemsep=0pt
4446 \item wxTraceMemAlloc: trace memory allocation (new/delete)
4447 \item wxTraceMessages: trace window messages/X callbacks
4448 \item wxTraceResAlloc: trace GDI resource allocation
4449 \item wxTraceRefCount: trace various ref counting operations
4450 \item wxTraceOleCalls: trace OLE method calls (Win32 only)
4451 \end{itemize}
4452
4453
4454 \membersection{::wxSafeShowMessage}\label{wxsafeshowmessage}
4455
4456 \func{void}{wxSafeShowMessage}{\param{const wxString\& }{title}, \param{const wxString\& }{text}}
4457
4458 This function shows a message to the user in a safe way and should be safe to
4459 call even before the application has been initialized or if it is currently in
4460 some other strange state (for example, about to crash). Under Windows this
4461 function shows a message box using a native dialog instead of
4462 \helpref{wxMessageBox}{wxmessagebox} (which might be unsafe to call), elsewhere
4463 it simply prints the message to the standard output using the title as prefix.
4464
4465 \wxheading{Parameters}
4466
4467 \docparam{title}{The title of the message box shown to the user or the prefix
4468 of the message string}
4469
4470 \docparam{text}{The text to show to the user}
4471
4472 \wxheading{See also}
4473
4474 \helpref{wxLogFatalError}{wxlogfatalerror}
4475
4476 \wxheading{Include files}
4477
4478 <wx/log.h>
4479
4480
4481 \membersection{::wxSysErrorCode}\label{wxsyserrorcode}
4482
4483 \func{unsigned long}{wxSysErrorCode}{\void}
4484
4485 Returns the error code from the last system call. This function uses
4486 {\tt errno} on Unix platforms and {\tt GetLastError} under Win32.
4487
4488 \wxheading{See also}
4489
4490 \helpref{wxSysErrorMsg}{wxsyserrormsg},
4491 \helpref{wxLogSysError}{wxlogsyserror}
4492
4493
4494 \membersection{::wxSysErrorMsg}\label{wxsyserrormsg}
4495
4496 \func{const wxChar *}{wxSysErrorMsg}{\param{unsigned long }{errCode = 0}}
4497
4498 Returns the error message corresponding to the given system error code. If
4499 {\it errCode} is $0$ (default), the last error code (as returned by
4500 \helpref{wxSysErrorCode}{wxsyserrorcode}) is used.
4501
4502 \wxheading{See also}
4503
4504 \helpref{wxSysErrorCode}{wxsyserrorcode},
4505 \helpref{wxLogSysError}{wxlogsyserror}
4506
4507
4508 \membersection{WXTRACE}\label{trace}
4509
4510 \wxheading{Include files}
4511
4512 <wx/object.h>
4513
4514 \func{}{WXTRACE}{formatString, ...}
4515
4516 {\bf NB:} This macro is now obsolete, replaced by \helpref{Log functions}{logfunctions}.
4517
4518 Calls wxTrace with printf-style variable argument syntax. Output
4519 is directed to the current output stream (see \helpref{wxDebugContext}{wxdebugcontextoverview}).
4520
4521 \wxheading{Include files}
4522
4523 <wx/memory.h>
4524
4525
4526 \membersection{WXTRACELEVEL}\label{tracelevel}
4527
4528 \func{}{WXTRACELEVEL}{level, formatString, ...}
4529
4530 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, replaced by \helpref{Log functions}{logfunctions}.
4531
4532 Calls wxTraceLevel with printf-style variable argument syntax. Output
4533 is directed to the current output stream (see \helpref{wxDebugContext}{wxdebugcontextoverview}).
4534 The first argument should be the level at which this information is appropriate.
4535 It will only be output if the level returned by wxDebugContext::GetLevel is equal to or greater than
4536 this value.
4537
4538 \wxheading{Include files}
4539
4540 <wx/memory.h>
4541
4542
4543 \membersection{::wxTrace}\label{wxtrace}
4544
4545 \func{void}{wxTrace}{\param{const wxString\& }{fmt}, \param{...}{}}
4546
4547 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, replaced by \helpref{Log functions}{logfunctions}.
4548
4549 Takes printf-style variable argument syntax. Output
4550 is directed to the current output stream (see \helpref{wxDebugContext}{wxdebugcontextoverview}).
4551
4552 \wxheading{Include files}
4553
4554 <wx/memory.h>
4555
4556
4557 \membersection{::wxTraceLevel}\label{wxtracelevel}
4558
4559 \func{void}{wxTraceLevel}{\param{int}{ level}, \param{const wxString\& }{fmt}, \param{...}{}}
4560
4561 {\bf NB:} This function is now obsolete, replaced by \helpref{Log functions}{logfunctions}.
4562
4563 Takes printf-style variable argument syntax. Output
4564 is directed to the current output stream (see \helpref{wxDebugContext}{wxdebugcontextoverview}).
4565 The first argument should be the level at which this information is appropriate.
4566 It will only be output if the level returned by wxDebugContext::GetLevel is equal to or greater than
4567 this value.
4568
4569 \wxheading{Include files}
4570
4571 <wx/memory.h>
4572
4573
4574
4575 \section{Time functions}\label{timefunctions}
4576
4577 The functions in this section deal with getting the current time and sleeping
4578 for the specified time interval.
4579
4580
4581 \membersection{::wxGetLocalTime}\label{wxgetlocaltime}
4582
4583 \func{long}{wxGetLocalTime}{\void}
4584
4585 Returns the number of seconds since local time 00:00:00 Jan 1st 1970.
4586
4587 \wxheading{See also}
4588
4589 \helpref{wxDateTime::Now}{wxdatetimenow}
4590
4591 \wxheading{Include files}
4592
4593 <wx/stopwatch.h>
4594
4595
4596 \membersection{::wxGetLocalTimeMillis}\label{wxgetlocaltimemillis}
4597
4598 \func{wxLongLong}{wxGetLocalTimeMillis}{\void}
4599
4600 Returns the number of milliseconds since local time 00:00:00 Jan 1st 1970.
4601
4602 \wxheading{See also}
4603
4604 \helpref{wxDateTime::Now}{wxdatetimenow},\\
4605 \helpref{wxLongLong}{wxlonglong}
4606
4607 \wxheading{Include files}
4608
4609 <wx/stopwatch.h>
4610
4611
4612 \membersection{::wxGetUTCTime}\label{wxgetutctime}
4613
4614 \func{long}{wxGetUTCTime}{\void}
4615
4616 Returns the number of seconds since GMT 00:00:00 Jan 1st 1970.
4617
4618 \wxheading{See also}
4619
4620 \helpref{wxDateTime::Now}{wxdatetimenow}
4621
4622 \wxheading{Include files}
4623
4624 <wx/stopwatch.h>
4625
4626
4627 \membersection{::wxMicroSleep}\label{wxmicrosleep}
4628
4629 \func{void}{wxMicroSleep}{\param{unsigned long}{ microseconds}}
4630
4631 Sleeps for the specified number of microseconds. The microsecond resolution may
4632 not, in fact, be available on all platforms (currently only Unix platforms with
4633 nanosleep(2) may provide it) in which case this is the same as
4634 \helpref{wxMilliSleep}{wxmillisleep}(\arg{microseconds}$/1000$).
4635
4636 \wxheading{Include files}
4637
4638 <wx/utils.h>
4639
4640
4641 \membersection{::wxMilliSleep}\label{wxmillisleep}
4642
4643 \func{void}{wxMilliSleep}{\param{unsigned long}{ milliseconds}}
4644
4645 Sleeps for the specified number of milliseconds. Notice that usage of this
4646 function is encouraged instead of calling usleep(3) directly because the
4647 standard usleep() function is not MT safe.
4648
4649 \wxheading{Include files}
4650
4651 <wx/utils.h>
4652
4653
4654 \membersection{::wxNow}\label{wxnow}
4655
4656 \func{wxString}{wxNow}{\void}
4657
4658 Returns a string representing the current date and time.
4659
4660 \wxheading{Include files}
4661
4662 <wx/utils.h>
4663
4664
4665 \membersection{::wxSleep}\label{wxsleep}
4666
4667 \func{void}{wxSleep}{\param{int}{ secs}}
4668
4669 Sleeps for the specified number of seconds.
4670
4671 \wxheading{Include files}
4672
4673 <wx/utils.h>
4674
4675
4676 \membersection{::wxUsleep}\label{wxusleep}
4677
4678 \func{void}{wxUsleep}{\param{unsigned long}{ milliseconds}}
4679
4680 This function is deprecated because its name is misleading: notice that the
4681 argument is in milliseconds, not microseconds. Please use either
4682 \helpref{wxMilliSleep}{wxmillisleep} or \helpref{wxMicroSleep}{wxmicrosleep}
4683 depending on the resolution you need.
4684
4685
4686
4687 \section{Debugging macros and functions}\label{debugmacros}
4688
4689 Useful macros and functions for error checking and defensive programming.
4690 wxWidgets defines three families of the assert-like macros:
4691 the wxASSERT and wxFAIL macros only do anything if \_\_WXDEBUG\_\_ is defined
4692 (in other words, in the debug build) but disappear completely in the release
4693 build. On the other hand, the wxCHECK macros stay event in release builds but a
4694 check failure doesn't generate any user-visible effects then. Finally, the
4695 compile time assertions don't happen during the run-time but result in the
4696 compilation error messages if the condition they check fail.
4697
4698 \wxheading{Include files}
4699
4700 <wx/debug.h>
4701
4702
4703 \membersection{::wxOnAssert}\label{wxonassert}
4704
4705 \func{void}{wxOnAssert}{\param{const char *}{fileName}, \param{int}{ lineNumber}, \param{const char *}{func}, \param{const char *}{cond}, \param{const char *}{msg = NULL}}
4706
4707 This function is called whenever one of debugging macros fails (i.e. condition
4708 is false in an assertion). It is only defined in the debug mode, in release
4709 builds the \helpref{wxCHECK}{wxcheck} failures don't result in anything.
4710
4711 To override the default behaviour in the debug builds which is to show the user
4712 a dialog asking whether he wants to abort the program, continue or continue
4713 ignoring any subsequent assert failures, you may override
4714 \helpref{wxApp::OnAssertFailure}{wxapponassertfailure} which is called by this function if
4715 the global application object exists.
4716
4717
4718 \membersection{wxASSERT}\label{wxassert}
4719
4720 \func{}{wxASSERT}{\param{}{condition}}
4721
4722 Assert macro. An error message will be generated if the condition is false in
4723 debug mode, but nothing will be done in the release build.
4724
4725 Please note that the condition in wxASSERT() should have no side effects
4726 because it will not be executed in release mode at all.
4727
4728 \wxheading{See also}
4729
4730 \helpref{wxASSERT\_MSG}{wxassertmsg},\\
4731 \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}{wxcompiletimeassert}
4732
4733
4734 \membersection{wxASSERT\_MIN\_BITSIZE}\label{wxassertminbitsize}
4735
4736 \func{}{wxASSERT\_MIN\_BITSIZE}{\param{}{type}, \param{}{size}}
4737
4738 This macro results in a
4739 \helpref{compile time assertion failure}{wxcompiletimeassert} if the size
4740 of the given type {\it type} is less than {\it size} bits.
4741
4742 You may use it like this, for example:
4743
4744 \begin{verbatim}
4745 // we rely on the int being able to hold values up to 2^32
4746 wxASSERT_MIN_BITSIZE(int, 32);
4747
4748 // can't work with the platforms using UTF-8 for wchar_t
4749 wxASSERT_MIN_BITSIZE(wchar_t, 16);
4750 \end{verbatim}
4751
4752
4753 \membersection{wxASSERT\_MSG}\label{wxassertmsg}
4754
4755 \func{}{wxASSERT\_MSG}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{msg}}
4756
4757 Assert macro with message. An error message will be generated if the condition is false.
4758
4759 \wxheading{See also}
4760
4761 \helpref{wxASSERT}{wxassert},\\
4762 \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}{wxcompiletimeassert}
4763
4764
4765 \membersection{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}\label{wxcompiletimeassert}
4766
4767 \func{}{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{msg}}
4768
4769 Using {\tt wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT} results in a compilation error if the
4770 specified {\it condition} is false. The compiler error message should include
4771 the {\it msg} identifier - please note that it must be a valid C++ identifier
4772 and not a string unlike in the other cases.
4773
4774 This macro is mostly useful for testing the expressions involving the
4775 {\tt sizeof} operator as they can't be tested by the preprocessor but it is
4776 sometimes desirable to test them at the compile time.
4777
4778 Note that this macro internally declares a struct whose name it tries to make
4779 unique by using the {\tt \_\_LINE\_\_} in it but it may still not work if you
4780 use it on the same line in two different source files. In this case you may
4781 either change the line in which either of them appears on or use the
4782 \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT2}{wxcompiletimeassert2} macro.
4783
4784 Also note that Microsoft Visual C++ has a bug which results in compiler errors
4785 if you use this macro with `Program Database For Edit And Continue'
4786 (\texttt{/ZI}) option, so you shouldn't use it (`Program Database'
4787 (\texttt{/Zi}) is ok though) for the code making use of this macro.
4788
4789 \wxheading{See also}
4790
4791 \helpref{wxASSERT\_MSG}{wxassertmsg},\\
4792 \helpref{wxASSERT\_MIN\_BITSIZE}{wxassertminbitsize}
4793
4794
4795 \membersection{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT2}\label{wxcompiletimeassert2}
4796
4797 \func{}{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{msg}, \param{}{name}}
4798
4799 This macro is identical to \helpref{wxCOMPILE\_TIME\_ASSERT2}{wxcompiletimeassert2}
4800 except that it allows you to specify a unique {\it name} for the struct
4801 internally defined by this macro to avoid getting the compilation errors
4802 described \helpref{above}{wxcompiletimeassert}.
4803
4804
4805 \membersection{wxFAIL}\label{wxfail}
4806
4807 \func{}{wxFAIL}{\void}
4808
4809 Will always generate an assert error if this code is reached (in debug mode).
4810
4811 See also: \helpref{wxFAIL\_MSG}{wxfailmsg}
4812
4813
4814 \membersection{wxFAIL\_MSG}\label{wxfailmsg}
4815
4816 \func{}{wxFAIL\_MSG}{\param{}{msg}}
4817
4818 Will always generate an assert error with specified message if this code is reached (in debug mode).
4819
4820 This macro is useful for marking unreachable" code areas, for example
4821 it may be used in the "default:" branch of a switch statement if all possible
4822 cases are processed above.
4823
4824 \wxheading{See also}
4825
4826 \helpref{wxFAIL}{wxfail}
4827
4828
4829 \membersection{wxCHECK}\label{wxcheck}
4830
4831 \func{}{wxCHECK}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{retValue}}
4832
4833 Checks that the condition is true, returns with the given return value if not (FAILs in debug mode).
4834 This check is done even in release mode.
4835
4836
4837 \membersection{wxCHECK\_MSG}\label{wxcheckmsg}
4838
4839 \func{}{wxCHECK\_MSG}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{retValue}, \param{}{msg}}
4840
4841 Checks that the condition is true, returns with the given return value if not (FAILs in debug mode).
4842 This check is done even in release mode.
4843
4844 This macro may be only used in non-void functions, see also
4845 \helpref{wxCHECK\_RET}{wxcheckret}.
4846
4847
4848 \membersection{wxCHECK\_RET}\label{wxcheckret}
4849
4850 \func{}{wxCHECK\_RET}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{msg}}
4851
4852 Checks that the condition is true, and returns if not (FAILs with given error
4853 message in debug mode). This check is done even in release mode.
4854
4855 This macro should be used in void functions instead of
4856 \helpref{wxCHECK\_MSG}{wxcheckmsg}.
4857
4858
4859 \membersection{wxCHECK2}\label{wxcheck2}
4860
4861 \func{}{wxCHECK2}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{operation}}
4862
4863 Checks that the condition is true and \helpref{wxFAIL}{wxfail} and execute
4864 {\it operation} if it is not. This is a generalisation of
4865 \helpref{wxCHECK}{wxcheck} and may be used when something else than just
4866 returning from the function must be done when the {\it condition} is false.
4867
4868 This check is done even in release mode.
4869
4870
4871 \membersection{wxCHECK2\_MSG}\label{wxcheck2msg}
4872
4873 \func{}{wxCHECK2}{\param{}{condition}, \param{}{operation}, \param{}{msg}}
4874
4875 This is the same as \helpref{wxCHECK2}{wxcheck2}, but
4876 \helpref{wxFAIL\_MSG}{wxfailmsg} with the specified {\it msg} is called
4877 instead of wxFAIL() if the {\it condition} is false.
4878
4879
4880 \membersection{::wxTrap}\label{wxtrap}
4881
4882 \func{void}{wxTrap}{\void}
4883
4884 In debug mode (when {\tt \_\_WXDEBUG\_\_} is defined) this function generates a
4885 debugger exception meaning that the control is passed to the debugger if one is
4886 attached to the process. Otherwise the program just terminates abnormally.
4887
4888 In release mode this function does nothing.
4889
4890 \wxheading{Include files}
4891
4892 <wx/debug.h>
4893
4894
4895
4896 \membersection{::wxIsDebuggerRunning}\label{wxisdebuggerrunning}
4897
4898 \func{bool}{wxIsDebuggerRunning}{\void}
4899
4900 Returns \true if the program is running under debugger, \false otherwise.
4901
4902 Please note that this function is currently only implemented for Win32 and Mac
4903 builds using CodeWarrior and always returns \false elsewhere.
4904
4905
4906
4907
4908 \section{Environment access functions}\label{environfunctions}
4909
4910 The functions in this section allow to access (get) or change value of
4911 environment variables in a portable way. They are currently implemented under
4912 Win32 and POSIX-like systems (Unix).
4913
4914 % TODO add some stuff about env var inheriting but not propagating upwards (VZ)
4915
4916 \wxheading{Include files}
4917
4918 <wx/utils.h>
4919
4920
4921 \membersection{wxGetenv}\label{wxgetenvmacro}
4922
4923 \func{wxChar *}{wxGetEnv}{\param{const wxString\&}{ var}}
4924
4925 This is a macro defined as {\tt getenv()} or its wide char version in Unicode
4926 mode.
4927
4928 Note that under Win32 it may not return correct value for the variables set
4929 with \helpref{wxSetEnv}{wxsetenv}, use \helpref{wxGetEnv}{wxgetenv} function
4930 instead.
4931
4932
4933 \membersection{wxGetEnv}\label{wxgetenv}
4934
4935 \func{bool}{wxGetEnv}{\param{const wxString\&}{ var}, \param{wxString *}{value}}
4936
4937 Returns the current value of the environment variable {\it var} in {\it value}.
4938 {\it value} may be {\tt NULL} if you just want to know if the variable exists
4939 and are not interested in its value.
4940
4941 Returns \true if the variable exists, \false otherwise.
4942
4943
4944 \membersection{wxSetEnv}\label{wxsetenv}
4945
4946 \func{bool}{wxSetEnv}{\param{const wxString\&}{ var}, \param{const wxString\& }{value}}
4947
4948 Sets the value of the environment variable {\it var} (adding it if necessary)
4949 to {\it value}.
4950
4951 Returns \true on success.
4952
4953 \wxheading{See also}
4954
4955 \helpref{wxUnsetEnv}{wxunsetenv}
4956
4957
4958 \membersection{wxUnsetEnv}\label{wxunsetenv}
4959
4960 \func{bool}{wxUnsetEnv}{\param{const wxString\&}{ var}}
4961
4962 Removes the variable {\it var} from the environment.
4963 \helpref{wxGetEnv}{wxgetenv} will return {\tt NULL} after the call to this
4964 function.
4965
4966 Returns \true on success.
4967
4968 \wxheading{See also}
4969
4970 \helpref{wxSetEnv}{wxsetenv}
4971
4972
4973 \section{Atomic operations}\label{atomicoperations}
4974
4975 When using multi-threaded applications, it is often required to access or
4976 modify memory which is shared between threads. Atomic integer and pointer
4977 operations are an efficient way to handle this issue (another, less efficient,
4978 way is to use a \helpref{mutex}{wxmutex} or \helpref{critical
4979 section}{wxcriticalsection}). A native implementation exists for Windows,
4980 Linux, Solaris and Mac OS X, for other OS, a
4981 \helpref{wxCriticalSection}{wxcriticalsection} is used to protect the data.
4982
4983 One particular application is reference counting (used by so-called smart
4984 pointers).
4985
4986 You should define your variable with the type wxAtomicInt in order to apply
4987 atomic operations to it.
4988
4989 \wxheading{Include files}
4990
4991 <wx/atomic.h>
4992
4993 \membersection{::wxAtomicInc}\label{wxatomicinc}
4994
4995 \func{void}{wxAtomicInc}{\param{wxAtomicInt\& }{value}}
4996
4997 This function increments \arg{value} in an atomic manner.
4998
4999
5000 \membersection{::wxAtomicDec}\label{wxatomicdec}
5001
5002 \func{wxInt32}{wxAtomicDec}{\param{wxAtomicInt\& }{value}}
5003
5004 This function decrements \arg{value} in an atomic manner.
5005
5006 Returns 0 if \arg{value} is 0 after decrementation or any non-zero value (not
5007 necessarily equal to the value of the variable) otherwise.
5008
5009