wxPython README --------------- Welcome to the wonderful world of wxPython! Once you have installed the wxPython extension module, you can try it out by going to the [install dir]\wxPython\demo directory and typing: python demo.py There are also some other sample files there for you to play with and learn from. If you selected to install the documentation then point your browser to [install dir]\wxPython\docs\index.htm and you will then be looking at the docs for wxWindows. For the most part you can use the C++ docs as most classes and methods are used identically. Where there are differences they are documented with a "wxPython Note." On Win32 systems the binary self-installer creates a program group on the Start Menu that contains a link to running the demo and a link to the help file. To help you save disk space I'm now using Microsoft's HTML Help format. If your system doesn't know what to do with the help file, you can install the HTML Help Viewer as part of IE 4+, NT Service Pack 4+, or the HTML Workshop at http://msdn.microsoft.com/workshop/author/htmlhelp/download.asp. Getting Help ------------ Since wxPython is a blending of multiple technologies, help comes from multiple sources. See the http://alldunn.com/wxPython for details on various sources of help, but probably the best source is the wxPython-users mail list. You can view the archive or subscribe by going to http://starship.python.net/mailman/listinfo/wxpython-users Or you can send mail directly to the list using this address: wxpython-users@starship.python.net ---------------------------------------------------------------------- What's new in 2.1.4 -------------------- This release is NOT syncronized with a snapshot release of wxGTK or wxMSW. For MSW this isn't much of a problem since you can get the binaries from the web site. For other platforms you'll have to build wxGTK from CVS. (See http://web.ukonline.co.uk/julian.smart/wxwin/cvs.htm) To get the same set of sources from CVS that I used, checkout using the wxPy-2-1-4 tag. Now back to what's new... Much more support for event-less callbacks and add-on modules. Created add-on module with wxOGL classes. Added wxWindow.GetChildren(). Be careful of this. It returns a *copy* of the list of the window's children. While you are using the list if anything changes in the real list (a child is deleted, etc.) then the list you are holding will suddenly have window references to garbage memory and your app will likely crash. But if you are careful it works great! Added a bunch of new and missing methods to wxTreeCrtl. The SortChildren method is now supported, but currently only for the default sort order. Added typemaps for wxSize, wxPoint, wxRealPoint, and wxRect that allow either the actual objects or Python sequence values to be used. For example, the following are equivallent: win = wxWindow(parent, size = wxSize(100, 100)) win = wxWindow(parent, size = (100, 100)) Super-charged the wxHtml module. You can now create your own tag handlers and also have access to the parser and cell classes. There is a tag handler in the library at wxPython.lib.wxpTag that understands the WXP tag and is able to place wxPython windows on HTML pages. See the demo for an example. A bunch of the methods of wxMenuBar were previously ifdef'd out for wxGTK. Added them back in since the methods exist now. Wrapped the wxHtmlHelpController and related classes. Wrapped the C++ versions of wxSizer and firends. The Python-only versions are still in the library, but depreciated. (You will get a warning message if you try to use them, but the warning can be disabled.) The usage of the C++ versions is slightly different, and the functionality of wxBorderSizer is now part of wxBoxSizer. I have added a few methods to wxSizer to try and make the transition as smooth as possible, I combined all Add methods into a single method that handles all cases, added an AddMany method, etc. One step I did not take was to make the default value of flag in the Add method be wxGROW. This would have made it more backward compatible, but less portable to and from wxWin C++ code. Please see the docs and demo for further details. Added wxPyEvent and wxPyCommandEvent classes, derived from wxEvent and wxCommandEvent. Each of them has SetPyData and GetPyData methods that accept or return a single Python object. You can use these classes directly or derive from them to create your own types of event objects that can pass through the wxWindows event system without loosing their Python parts (as long as they are stored with SetPyData.) Stay tuned for more info and examples in future releases. Added wxPython.lib.grids as an example of how to derive a new sizer from the C++ sizers. In this module you will find wxGridSizer and wxFlexGridSizer. wxGridSizer arrainges its items in a grid in which all the widths and heights are the same. wxFlexgridSizer allows different widths and heights, and you can also specify rows and/or columns that are growable. See the demo for a couple examples for how to use them. Added the wxValidator class, and created a class named wxPyValidator that should be used for the base class of any Python validators. See the demo for an example. Please note that you MUST implement a Clone method in your validator classes because of the way some things work in the underlying C++ library. I did not add wxTextValidator because of some issues of how it transfers data to and from a wxString, which in wxPython is automatically translated to and from Python strings, so there would never be a concrete wxString that would hang around long enough for the validator to do its job. On the other hand, it should be real easy to duplicate the functionality of wxTextValidator in a pure Python class derived from wxPyValidator. I've finally added a feature that has been on my list for close to two years! Ever wondered what that zero is for when you create your app object? Well now you can leave it out or explicitly set it to a true value. This value now controls what is to be done with sys.stdout and sys.stderr. A false value leaves them alone, and a true value sets them to an instance of wxPyOnDemandOutputWindow. (On windows the default is true, on unix platforms the default is false.) This class creates a frame containing a wxTextCtrl as soon as anything is written to sys.stdout or sys.stderr. If you close the window it will come back again the next time something is written. (You can call app.RestoreStdio to turn this off.) If you would rather that the stdio be redirected to a file, you can provide a second parameter to your app object's constructor that is a filename. If you want to use your own class instead of wxPyOnDemandOutputWindow you can either implement RedirectStdio() in you app class or change the value of wxApp.outputWindowClass like this: class MyApp(wxApp): outputWindowClass = MyClass def OnInit(self): frame = MyFrame() self.SetTopWindow(frame) return true Please see the implementation of wxPyOnDemandOutputWindow and wxApp in wx.py for more details. A few words of caution: if you are running your app in a debugger, changing sys.stdout and sys.stderr is likely to really screw things up. Added wxCaret. Unfortunately it's author has still not documented it in the wxWindows docs... Some new 3rd party contributions in wxPython.lib. PyShell, in shell.py is an interesting implementaion of an interactive Python shell in wxWindows. floatbar.py has a class derived from wxTooBar that can sense mouse drags and then reparent itself into another frame. Moving the new frame close to where it came from puts the tool bar back into the original parent. (Unfortunately there is currently a bug in wxGTK's wxFrame.SetToolBar so the FloatBar has some problems...) What's new in 2.1b3 -------------------- This release is syncronized with release 2.1 snapshot 9 of wxWindows. Switched to using SWIG from CVS (see http://swig.cs.uchicago.edu/cvs.html) for some of the new features and such. Also they have encorporated my patches so there is really no reason to stick with the current (very old) release... This version of SWIG gives the following new features: 1. Keyword arguments. You no longer have to specify all the parameters with defaults to a method just to specify a non-default value on the end. You can now do this instead: win = wxWindow(parent, -1, style = mystyle) 2. There is now an an equivalence between Python's None and C++'s NULL. This means that any methods that might return NULL will now return None and you can use none where wxWindows might be expecting NULL. This makes things much more snake-ish. There is a new build system based on a new Python program instead of raw makefiles. Now wxPython builds are virtually the same on MSW or Unix systems. See the end of this file for new build instructions and see distrib/build.py for more details. wxDC.Bilt now includes the useMask parameter, and has been split into two different versions. wxDC.BlitXY is like what was there before and takes raw coordinants and sizes, and the new wxDC.Blit is for the new interface using wxPoints and a wxSize. What's new in 2.1b2 -------------------- Added the missing wxWindow.GetUpdateRegion() method. Made a new change in SWIG (update your patches everybody) that provides a fix for global shadow objects that get an exception in their __del__ when their extension module has already been deleted. It was only a 1 line change in .../SWIG/Modules/pycpp.cxx at about line 496 if you want to do it by hand. It is now possible to run through MainLoop more than once in any one process. The cleanup that used to happen as MainLoop completed (and prevented it from running again) has been delayed until the wxc module is being unloaded by Python. I fixed a bunch of stuff in the C++ version of wxGrid so it wouldn't make wxPython look bad. wxWindow.PopupMenu() now takes a wxPoint instead of x,y. Added wxWindow.PopupMenuXY to be consistent with some other methods. Added wxGrid.SetEditInPlace and wxGrid.GetEditInPlace. You can now provide your own app.MainLoop method. See wxPython/demo/demoMainLoop.py for an example and some explaination. Got the in-place-edit for the wxTreeCtrl fixed and added some demo code to show how to use it. Put the wxIcon constructor back in for GTK as it now has one that matches MSW's. Added wxGrid.GetCells Added wxSystemSettings static methods as functions with names like wxSystemSettings_GetSystemColour. Removed wxPyMenu since using menu callbacks have been depreciated in wxWindows. Use wxMenu and events instead. Added alternate wxBitmap constructor (for MSW only) as wxBitmapFromData(data, type, width, height, depth = 1) Added a helper function named wxPyTypeCast that can convert shadow objects of one type into shadow objects of another type. (Like doing a down-cast.) See the implementation in wx.py for some docs. Fixed wxImage GetData and SetData to properly use String objects for data transfer. Added access methods to wxGridEvent. New Makefile/Setup files supporting multiple dynamic extension modules for unix systems. Fixes for the wxGLCanvas demo to work around a strange bug in gtk. SWIG support routines now compiled separately instead of being bundled in wx.cpp. What's new in 2.1b1 -------------------- Fixed wxComboBox.SetSelection so that it actually sets the selected item. (Actually just removed it from wxPython and let it default to wxChoice.SetSelection which was already doing the right thing.) Added the Printing Framework. Switched back to using the wxWindows DLL for the pre-built Win32 version. The problem was needing to reinitialize static class info data after loading each extension module. Lots of little tweaks and additions to reflect changes to various wxWindows classes. Fixed a bug with attaching objects to tree items. Actually was a symptom of a larger problem with not obtaining the interpreter lock when doing any Py_DECREFs. wxSizer and friends. Sizers are layout tools that manage a colection of windows and sizers. Different types of sizers apply different types of layout algorithms. You saw it here first! These classes are not even in the wxWindows C++ library yet! What's new in 2.0b9 ------------------- Bug fix for ListCtrl in test4.py (Was a missing file... DSM!) Bug fix for occassional GPF on Win32 systems upon termination of a wxPython application. Added wxListBox.GetSelections returning selections as a Tuple. Added a wxTreeItemData that is able to hold any Python object and be associated with items in a wxTreeCtrl. Added test pytree.py to show this feature off. Added wxSafeYield function. OpenGL Canvas can be optionally compiled in to wxPython. Awesome new Demo Framework for showing off wxPython and for learning how it all works. The pre-built Win32 version is no longer distributing the wxWindows DLL. It is statically linked with the wxWindows library instead. Added a couple missing items from the docs. Added wxImage, wxImageHandler, wxPNGHandler, wxJPEGHandler, wxGIFHandler and wxBMPHandler. Added new methods to wxTextCtrl. Fixed some problems with how SWIG was wrapping some wxTreeCtrl methods. What's new in 2.0b8 ------------------- Support for using Python threads in wxPython apps. Several missing methods from various classes. Various bug fixes. What's new in 2.0b7 ------------------- Added DLG_PNT and DLG_SZE convienience methods to wxWindow class. Added missing constructor and other methods for wxMenuItem. What's new in 2.0b6 ------------------- Just a quickie update to fix the self-installer to be compatible with Python 1.5.2b2's Registry settings. What's new in 2.0b5 ------------------- Well obviously the numbering scheme has changed. I did this to reflect the fact that this truly is the second major revision of wxPython, (well the third actually if you count the one I did for wxWindows 1.68 and then threw away...) and also that it is associated with the 2.0 version of wxWindows. I have finally started documenting wxPython. There are several pages in the wxWindows documentation tree specifically about wxPython, and I have added notes within the class references about where and how wxPython diverges from wxWindows. Added wxWindow_FromHWND(hWnd) for wxMSW to construct a wxWindow from a window handle. If you can get the window handle into the python code, it should just work... More news on this later. Added wxImageList, wxToolTip. Re-enabled wxConfig.DeleteAll() since it is reportedly fixed for the wxRegConfig class. As usual, some bug fixes, tweaks, etc. What's new in 0.5.3 ------------------- Added wxSashWindow, wxSashEvent, wxLayoutAlgorithm, etc. Various cleanup, tweaks, minor additions, etc. to maintain compatibility with the current wxWindows. What's new in 0.5.0 ------------------- Changed the import semantics from "from wxPython import *" to "from wxPython.wx import *" This is for people who are worried about namespace pollution, they can use "from wxPython import wx" and then prefix all the wxPython identifiers with "wx." Added wxTaskbarIcon for wxMSW. Made the events work for wxGrid. Added wxConfig. Added wxMiniFrame for wxGTK. Changed many of the args and return values that were pointers to gdi objects to references to reflect changes in the wxWindows API. Other assorted fixes and additions. What's new in 0.4.2 ------------------- wxPython on wxGTK works!!! Both dynamic and static on Linux and static on Solaris have been tested. Many thanks go to Harm for his astute detective work on tracking down a nasty DECREF bug. Okay so I have to confess that it was just a DSM (Dumb Stupid Mistake) on my part but it was nasty none the less because the behavior was so different on different platforms. The dynamicly loaded module on Solaris is still segfaulting, so it must have been a different issue all along... What's New in 0.4 ----------------- 1. Worked on wxGTK compatibility. It is partially working. On a Solaris/Sparc box wxPython is working but only when it is statically linked with the Python interpreter. When built as a dyamically loaded extension module, things start acting weirdly and it soon seg-faults. And on Linux both the statically linked and the dynamically linked version segfault shortly after starting up. 2. Added Toolbar, StatusBar and SplitterWindow classes. 3. Varioius bug fixes, enhancements, etc. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Build Instructions ------------------ I used SWIG (http://www.swig.org) to create the source code for the extension module. This enabled me to only have to deal with a small amount of code and only have to bother with the exceptional issues. SWIG takes care of the rest and generates all the repetative code for me. You don't need SWIG to build the extension module as all the generated C++ code is included under the src directory. I added a few minor features to SWIG to control some of the code generation. If you want to play around with this you will need to get a recent version of SWIG from their CVS or from a daily build. See http://www.swig.org/ for details. wxPython is organized as a Python package. This means that the directory containing the results of the build process should be a subdirectory of a directory on the PYTHONPATH. (And preferably should be named wxPython.) You can control where the build process will dump wxPython by setting the TARGETDIR variable for the build utility, (see below.) 1. Build wxWindows as described in its BuildCVS.txt file. For *nix systems I run configure with these flags: --with-gtk --with-libjpeg --without-odbc --enable-unicode=no --enable-threads=yes --enable-socket=yes --enable-static=no --enable-shared=yes --disable-std_iostreams You can use whatever flags you want, but I know these work. For Win32 systems I use Visual C++ 6.0, but 5.0 should work. The build utility currently does not support any other win32 compilers. 2. At this point you may want to make an alias or symlink, script, batch file, whatever on the PATH that invokes $(WXWIN)/utils/wxPython/distrib/build.py to help simplify matters somewhat. For example, on my win32 system I have a file named build.bat in a directory on the PATH that contains: python $(WXWIN)/utils/wxPython/distrib/build.py %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 3. Change into the $(WXWIN)/utils/wxPython/src directory. 4. Type "build -b" to build wxPython and "build -i" to install it. The build.py script actually generates a Makefile based on what it finds on your system and information found in the build.cfg file. If you have troubles building or you want it built or installed in a different way, take a look at the docstring in build.py. You may be able to override configuration options in a file named build.local. 5. To build and install the add-on modules, change to the appropriate directory under $(WXWIN)/utils/wxPython/modules and run the build utility again. 6. Change to the $(WXWIN)/utils/wxPython/demo directory. 7. Try executing the demo program. For example: python demo.py To run it without requiring a console on win32, you can use the pythonw.exe version of Python either from the command line or from a shortcut. ---------------- Robin Dunn robin@alldunn.com