const wxArrayLong& GetSubcontrols() const { return m_subControls; }
+ // default handling of WM_CTLCOLORxxx: this is public so that wxWindow
+ // could call it
+ virtual WXHBRUSH MSWControlColor(WXHDC pDC, WXHWND hWnd);
+
protected:
// choose the default border for this window
virtual wxBorder GetDefaultBorder() const;
// default style for the control include WS_TABSTOP if it AcceptsFocus()
virtual WXDWORD MSWGetStyle(long style, WXDWORD *exstyle) const;
- // default handling of WM_CTLCOLORxxx
- virtual WXHBRUSH MSWControlColor(WXHDC pDC);
-
// call this from the derived class MSWControlColor() if you want to show
// the control greyed out (and opaque)
WXHBRUSH MSWControlColorDisabled(WXHDC pDC);
- // call this from the derived class MSWControlColor() if you want to always
- // paint the background (as all opaque controls do)
- WXHBRUSH MSWControlColorSolid(WXHDC pDC)
- {
- return DoMSWControlColor(pDC, GetBackgroundColour());
- }
-
// common part of the 3 functions above: pass wxNullColour to use the
// appropriate background colour (meaning ours or our parents) or a fixed
// one
- virtual WXHBRUSH DoMSWControlColor(WXHDC pDC, wxColour colBg);
-
- // another WM_CTLCOLOR-related function: override this to return the brush
- // which should be used to paint the control background by default
- //
- // for most controls, the default behaviour of returning 0 and letting the
- // system do it is correct, but for some -- e.g. checkboxes -- we actually
- // have to return transparent brush from here to prevent the system from
- // overwriting background with solid colour
- virtual WXHBRUSH MSWGetDefaultBgBrush() { return 0; }
+ virtual WXHBRUSH DoMSWControlColor(WXHDC pDC, wxColour colBg, WXHWND hWnd);
// this is a helper for the derived class GetClassDefaultAttributes()
// implementation: it returns the right colours for the classes which