\helpref{wxTextDropTarget}{wxtextdroptarget},
\helpref{wxFileDropTarget}{wxfiledroptarget}
-Samples: see the dnd sample.
-
-Headers: <wx/dataobj.h>, <wx/dropsrc.h and <wx/droptgt.h> or <wx/dnd.h>
-(note that wxUSE\_DRAG\_AND\_DROP must be defined in setup.h)
+It has to be noted that the API for drag and drop in wxWindows is not
+yet finished which is mostly due to the fact that DnD support under
+GTK 1.0 is very rudimentary and entirely different from the XDnD
+protocoll used by GTK 1.2. This also entails that not all of the documentation
+concerning DnD might be correct and some of the code might get broken
+in the future. The next release of wxWindows will be based on GTK 1.2
+and will hopefully include a much improved DnD support. The general
+design on the wxDropSource side will be the same but especially the
+wxDropTarget is almost certain to change.
+
+Note that wxUSE\_DRAG\_AND\_DROP must be defined in setup.h in order
+to use Drag'n'Drop in wxWindows.
This overview describes wxWindows support for drag and drop and clipboard
operations. Both of these topics are discussed here because, in fact, they're
initialized with the data you wish to drag. For example:
\begin{verbatim}
- wxTextDataObject data("This string will be dragged.");
+ wxDataObject *my_data = new wxTextDataObject data("This string will be dragged.");
\end{verbatim}
-Of course, the data object may contain arbitrary data of any type, but for
-this you should derive your own class from \helpref{wxDataObject}{wxdataobject} overriding all of its pure virtual
-functions.
-
\item{\bf Drag start:} To start dragging process (typically in response to a
mouse click) you must call \helpref{DoDragDrop}{wxdropsourcedodragdrop} function
of wxDropSource object which should be constructed like this:
\begin{verbatim}
- wxDropSource dragSource(data, this);
-
- // or also:
-
- wxDropSource dragSource(this);
- dragSource.SetData(data);
+ wxDropSource dragSource( this );
+ dragSource.SetData( my_data );
\end{verbatim}
\item {\bf Dragging:} The call to DoDragDrop() blocks until the user release the
mouse button (unless you override \helpref{GiveFeedback}{wxdropsourcegivefeedback} function
to do something special). When the mouse moves in a window of a program which understands the
-same drag-and-drop protocol (any program under Windows or any program supporting XDnD protocol
-under X Windows), the corresponding \helpref{wxDropTarget}{wxdroptarget} methods
+same drag-and-drop protocol (any program under Windows or any program supporting GTK 1.0
+DnD protocol under X Windows), the corresponding \helpref{wxDropTarget}{wxdroptarget} methods
are called - see below.
\item {\bf Processing the result:} DoDragDrop() returns an {\it effect code} which