X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/04bf08b7e26f35a177b46948789505c316b2df28..a75124d0da255513e83d2e62f963dd849829466b:/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex index 3060285bee..d034bb0156 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex @@ -3,6 +3,7 @@ Classes: \helpref{wxColourDialog}{wxcolourdialog}, \helpref{wxFontDialog}{wxfontdialog}, \rtfsp\helpref{wxPrintDialog}{wxprintdialog}, \helpref{wxFileDialog}{wxfiledialog},\rtfsp \helpref{wxDirDialog}{wxdirdialog}, \helpref{wxTextEntryDialog}{wxtextentrydialog},\rtfsp +\helpref{wxPasswordEntryDialog}{wxpasswordentrydialog},\rtfsp \helpref{wxMessageDialog}{wxmessagedialog}, \helpref{wxSingleChoiceDialog}{wxsinglechoicedialog},\rtfsp \helpref{wxMultiChoiceDialog}{wxmultichoicedialog} @@ -11,7 +12,7 @@ They are all `modal', grabbing the flow of control until the user dismisses the to make them easy to use within an application. Some dialogs have both platform-dependent and platform-independent implementations, -so that if underlying windowing systems that do not provide the required functionality, +so that if underlying windowing systems do not provide the required functionality, the generic classes and functions can stand in. For example, under MS Windows, wxColourDialog uses the standard colour selector. There is also an equivalent called wxGenericColourDialog for other platforms, and a macro defines wxColourDialog to be the same as wxGenericColourDialog @@ -92,7 +93,7 @@ Under Windows, the native font selector common dialog is used. This presents a dialog box with controls for font name, point size, style, weight, underlining, strikeout and text foreground colour. A sample of the font is shown on a white area of the dialog box. Note that -in the translation from full MS Windows fonts to wxWindows font +in the translation from full MS Windows fonts to wxWidgets font conventions, strikeout is ignored and a font family (such as Swiss or Modern) is deduced from the actual font name (such as Arial or Courier). @@ -141,14 +142,15 @@ an excerpt from this example. Classes: \helpref{wxFileDialog}{wxfiledialog} -Pops up a file selector box. In Windows, this is the common file selector -dialog. In X, this is a file selector box with somewhat less functionality. -The path and filename are distinct elements of a full file pathname. +Pops up a file selector box. In Windows and GTK2.4+, this is the common +file selector dialog. In X, this is a file selector box with somewhat less +functionality. The path and filename are distinct elements of a full file pathname. If path is ``", the current directory will be used. If filename is ``", no default filename will be supplied. The wildcard determines what files are displayed in the file selector, and file extension supplies a type -extension for the required filename. Flags may be a combination of wxOPEN, -wxSAVE, wxOVERWRITE\_PROMPT, wxHIDE\_READONLY, wxFILE\_MUST\_EXIST or 0. +extension for the required filename. Flags may be a combination of wxFD\_OPEN, +wxFD\_SAVE, wxFD\_OVERWRITE\_PROMPT, wxFD\_HIDE\_READONLY, wxFD\_FILE\_MUST\_EXIST, +wxFD\_MULTIPLE, wxFD\_CHANGE\_DIR or 0. Both the X and Windows versions implement a wildcard filter. Typing a filename containing wildcards (*, ?) in the filename text item, and @@ -178,6 +180,13 @@ Classes: \helpref{wxTextEntryDialog}{wxtextentrydialog} This is a dialog with a text entry field. The value that the user entered is obtained using \helpref{wxTextEntryDialog::GetValue}{wxtextentrydialoggetvalue}. +\subsection{wxPasswordEntryDialog overview}\label{wxpasswordentrydialogoverview} + +Classes: \helpref{wxPasswordEntryDialog}{wxpasswordentrydialog} + +This is a dialog with a password entry field. The value that the user +entered is obtained using \helpref{wxTextEntryDialog::GetValue}{wxtextentrydialoggetvalue}. + \subsection{wxMessageDialog overview}\label{wxmessagedialogoverview} Classes: \helpref{wxMessageDialog}{wxmessagedialog}