member function in a derived class will not have any effect. These member
functions take an event argument, and the class of event differs according to
the type of event and the class of the originating window. For size events,
- wxSizeEvent is used. For menu commands and most control commands
+ wxSizeEvent is used. For menu commands and most control commands
(such as button presses), wxCommandEvent is used. When controls get more
- complicated, then specific event classes are used, such as wxTreeEvent for
+ complicated, then specific event classes are used, such as wxTreeEvent for
events from wxTreeCtrl windows.
As well as the event table in the implementation file, there must also be a
@li If the object is a wxWindow, @b ProcessEvent is recursively called on the window's
wxValidator. If this returns @true, the function exits.
@li @b SearchEventTable is called for this event handler. If this fails, the base
- class table is tried, and so on until no more tables exist or an appropriate
+ class table is tried, and so on until no more tables exist or an appropriate
function was found, in which case the function exits.
- @li The search is applied down the entire chain of event handlers (usually the chain has
+ @li The search is applied down the entire chain of event handlers (usually the chain has
a length of one). If this succeeds, the function exits.
@li If the object is a wxWindow and the event is set to set to propagate (in the library only
wxCommandEvent based events are set to propagate), @b ProcessEvent is recursively applied
While generically wxEvents can be generated both by user
actions (e.g. resize of a wxWindow) and by calls to functions
- (e.g. wxWindow::SetSize), wxWidgets controls normally send wxCommandEvent-derived
+ (e.g. wxWindow::SetSize), wxWidgets controls normally send wxCommandEvent-derived
events only for the user-generated events. The only @b exceptions to this rule are:
@li wxNotebook::AddPage: No event-free alternatives
@li wxNotebook::AdvanceSelection: No event-free alternatives
@li wxNotebook::DeletePage: No event-free alternatives
- @li wxNotebook::SetSelection: Use wxNotebook::ChangeSelection instead, as
+ @li wxNotebook::SetSelection: Use wxNotebook::ChangeSelection instead, as
wxNotebook::SetSelection is deprecated
@li wxTreeCtrl::Delete: No event-free alternatives
@li wxTreeCtrl::DeleteAllItems: No event-free alternatives
In fact, you don't have to derive a new class from a window class
if you don't want to. You can derive a new class from wxEvtHandler instead,
- defining the appropriate event table, and then call wxWindow::SetEventHandler
+ defining the appropriate event table, and then call wxWindow::SetEventHandler
(or, preferably, wxWindow::PushEventHandler) to make this
event handler the object that responds to events. This way, you can avoid
a lot of class derivation, and use instances of the same event handler class (but different
will never conflict with the user-specified identifiers which must be always
positive.
- The following standard identifiers are supplied. You can use wxID_HIGHEST to
- determine the number above which it is safe to define your own identifiers. Or,
- you can use identifiers below wxID_LOWEST.
-
- @code
- #define wxID_ANY -1
-
- #define wxID_LOWEST 4999
-
- #define wxID_OPEN 5000
- #define wxID_CLOSE 5001
- #define wxID_NEW 5002
- #define wxID_SAVE 5003
- #define wxID_SAVEAS 5004
- #define wxID_REVERT 5005
- #define wxID_EXIT 5006
- #define wxID_UNDO 5007
- #define wxID_REDO 5008
- #define wxID_HELP 5009
- #define wxID_PRINT 5010
- #define wxID_PRINT_SETUP 5011
- #define wxID_PREVIEW 5012
- #define wxID_ABOUT 5013
- #define wxID_HELP_CONTENTS 5014
- #define wxID_HELP_COMMANDS 5015
- #define wxID_HELP_PROCEDURES 5016
- #define wxID_HELP_CONTEXT 5017
-
- #define wxID_CUT 5030
- #define wxID_COPY 5031
- #define wxID_PASTE 5032
- #define wxID_CLEAR 5033
- #define wxID_FIND 5034
- #define wxID_DUPLICATE 5035
- #define wxID_SELECTALL 5036
- #define wxID_DELETE 5037
- #define wxID_REPLACE 5038
- #define wxID_REPLACE_ALL 5039
- #define wxID_PROPERTIES 5040
-
- #define wxID_VIEW_DETAILS 5041
- #define wxID_VIEW_LARGEICONS 5042
- #define wxID_VIEW_SMALLICONS 5043
- #define wxID_VIEW_LIST 5044
- #define wxID_VIEW_SORTDATE 5045
- #define wxID_VIEW_SORTNAME 5046
- #define wxID_VIEW_SORTSIZE 5047
- #define wxID_VIEW_SORTTYPE 5048
-
- #define wxID_FILE1 5050
- #define wxID_FILE2 5051
- #define wxID_FILE3 5052
- #define wxID_FILE4 5053
- #define wxID_FILE5 5054
- #define wxID_FILE6 5055
- #define wxID_FILE7 5056
- #define wxID_FILE8 5057
- #define wxID_FILE9 5058
-
- #define wxID_OK 5100
- #define wxID_CANCEL 5101
- #define wxID_APPLY 5102
- #define wxID_YES 5103
- #define wxID_NO 5104
- #define wxID_STATIC 5105
-
- #define wxID_HIGHEST 5999
- @endcode
-
+ See @ref page_stdevtid for the list of standard identifiers availabel.
+ You can use wxID_HIGHEST to determine the number above which it is safe to
+ define your own identifiers. Or, you can use identifiers below wxID_LOWEST.
+ Finally, you can allocate identifiers dynamically using wxNewId() function to.
+ If you use wxNewId() consistently in your application, you can be sure that
+ the your identifiers don't conflict accidentally.
@section overview_eventhandling_custom Custom event summary
@row2col{EVT_CUSTOM_RANGE(event\, id1\, id2\, func),
The same as EVT_CUSTOM, but responds to a range of window identifiers.}
@row2col{EVT_COMMAND(id\, event\, func),
- The same as EVT_CUSTOM, but expects a member function with a
+ The same as EVT_CUSTOM, but expects a member function with a
wxCommandEvent argument.}
@row2col{EVT_COMMAND_RANGE(id1\, id2\, event\, func),
The same as EVT_CUSTOM_RANGE, but