X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/3c7789014106c9269b0f4ecc1a3071b14f351d3f..38c349189a580ed624e89fb9cc1065f46860092f:/include/wx/setup_inc.h diff --git a/include/wx/setup_inc.h b/include/wx/setup_inc.h index 640362e5dc..7f591cbadc 100644 --- a/include/wx/setup_inc.h +++ b/include/wx/setup_inc.h @@ -43,17 +43,6 @@ // Recommended setting: 0 (please update your code) #define WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_8 1 -// Use the 2.8-compatible events and Connect(): this is set to 0 by default as -// the new events bring significant benefits in compile-time safety and -// flexibility but can be disabled to somewhat reduce the compilation time and, -// especially, to still allow building if the compiler template support is too -// bad to compile the new code. -// -// Default is 0 for all compilers except VC6 currently. -// -// Recommended setting: 0 (please upgrade your compiler instead of changing it) -#define wxEVENTS_COMPATIBILITY_2_8 0 - // MSW-only: Set to 0 for accurate dialog units, else 1 for old behaviour when // default system font is used for wxWindow::GetCharWidth/Height() instead of // the current font. @@ -67,6 +56,50 @@ // debugging settings // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +// wxDEBUG_LEVEL will be defined as 1 in wx/debug.h so normally there is no +// need to define it here. You may do it for two reasons: either completely +// disable/compile out the asserts in release version (then do it inside #ifdef +// NDEBUG) or, on the contrary, enable more asserts, including the usually +// disabled ones, in the debug build (then do it inside #ifndef NDEBUG) +// +// #ifdef NDEBUG +// #define wxDEBUG_LEVEL 0 +// #else +// #define wxDEBUG_LEVEL 2 +// #endif + +// wxHandleFatalExceptions() may be used to catch the program faults at run +// time and, instead of terminating the program with a usual GPF message box, +// call the user-defined wxApp::OnFatalException() function. If you set +// wxUSE_ON_FATAL_EXCEPTION to 0, wxHandleFatalExceptions() will not work. +// +// This setting is for Win32 only and can only be enabled if your compiler +// supports Win32 structured exception handling (currently only VC++ does) +// +// Default is 1 +// +// Recommended setting: 1 if your compiler supports it. +#define wxUSE_ON_FATAL_EXCEPTION 1 + +// Set this to 1 to be able to generate a human-readable (unlike +// machine-readable minidump created by wxCrashReport::Generate()) stack back +// trace when your program crashes using wxStackWalker +// +// Default is 1 if supported by the compiler. +// +// Recommended setting: 1, set to 0 if your programs never crash +#define wxUSE_STACKWALKER 1 + +// Set this to 1 to compile in wxDebugReport class which allows you to create +// and optionally upload to your web site a debug report consisting of back +// trace of the crash (if wxUSE_STACKWALKER == 1) and other information. +// +// Default is 1 if supported by the compiler. +// +// Recommended setting: 1, it is compiled into a separate library so there +// is no overhead if you don't use it +#define wxUSE_DEBUGREPORT 1 + // Generic comment about debugging settings: they are very useful if you don't // use any other memory leak detection tools such as Purify/BoundsChecker, but // are probably redundant otherwise. Also, Visual C++ CRT has the same features @@ -74,10 +107,13 @@ // may prefer to use it instead of built in memory debugging code because it is // faster and more fool proof. // -// Using VC++ CRT memory debugging is enabled by default in debug mode -// (__WXDEBUG__) if wxUSE_GLOBAL_MEMORY_OPERATORS is *not* enabled (i.e. is 0) +// Using VC++ CRT memory debugging is enabled by default in debug build (_DEBUG +// is defined) if wxUSE_GLOBAL_MEMORY_OPERATORS is *not* enabled (i.e. is 0) // and if __NO_VC_CRTDBG__ is not defined. +// The rest of the options in this section are obsolete and not supported, +// enable them at your own risk. + // If 1, enables wxDebugContext, for writing error messages to file, etc. If // __WXDEBUG__ is not defined, will still use the normal memory operators. // @@ -118,37 +154,6 @@ // Recommended setting: 0 #define wxUSE_DEBUG_NEW_ALWAYS 0 -// wxHandleFatalExceptions() may be used to catch the program faults at run -// time and, instead of terminating the program with a usual GPF message box, -// call the user-defined wxApp::OnFatalException() function. If you set -// wxUSE_ON_FATAL_EXCEPTION to 0, wxHandleFatalExceptions() will not work. -// -// This setting is for Win32 only and can only be enabled if your compiler -// supports Win32 structured exception handling (currently only VC++ does) -// -// Default is 1 -// -// Recommended setting: 1 if your compiler supports it. -#define wxUSE_ON_FATAL_EXCEPTION 1 - -// Set this to 1 to be able to generate a human-readable (unlike -// machine-readable minidump created by wxCrashReport::Generate()) stack back -// trace when your program crashes using wxStackWalker -// -// Default is 1 if supported by the compiler. -// -// Recommended setting: 1, set to 0 if your programs never crash -#define wxUSE_STACKWALKER 1 - -// Set this to 1 to compile in wxDebugReport class which allows you to create -// and optionally upload to your web site a debug report consisting of back -// trace of the crash (if wxUSE_STACKWALKER == 1) and other information. -// -// Default is 1 if supported by the compiler. -// -// Recommended setting: 1, it is compiled into a separate library so there -// is no overhead if you don't use it -#define wxUSE_DEBUGREPORT 1 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Unicode support @@ -561,6 +566,14 @@ // possible in which case setting this to 0 can gain up to 100KB. #define wxUSE_VARIANT 1 +// Support for wxAny class, the successor for wxVariant. +// +// Default is 1. +// +// Recommended setting: 1 unless you want to reduce the library size by a small amount, +// or your compiler cannot for some reason cope with complexity of templates used. +#define wxUSE_ANY 1 + // Support for regular expression matching via wxRegEx class: enable this to // use POSIX regular expressions in your code. You need to compile regex // library from src/regex to use it under Windows. @@ -584,14 +597,6 @@ // Recommended setting: 1 #define wxUSE_MEDIACTRL 1 -// Use GStreamer for Unix. -// -// Default is 0 as this requires a lot of dependencies which might not be -// available. -// -// Recommended setting: 1 (wxMediaCtrl won't work by default without it) -#define wxUSE_GSTREAMER 0 - // Use wxWidget's XRC XML-based resource system. Recommended. // // Default is 1 @@ -614,6 +619,13 @@ // Recommended setting: 1 #define wxUSE_AUI 1 +// Use wxWidget's Ribbon classes for interfaces +// +// Default is 1 +// +// Recommended setting: 1 +#define wxUSE_RIBBON 1 + // Use wxPropertyGrid. // // Default is 1 @@ -883,6 +895,14 @@ // enumerated above, then this class is mostly useless too) #define wxUSE_IMAGLIST 1 +// Use wxInfoBar class. +// +// Default is 1. +// +// Recommended setting: 1 (but can be disabled without problems as nothing +// depends on it) +#define wxUSE_INFOBAR 1 + // Use wxMenu, wxMenuBar, wxMenuItem. // // Default is 1. @@ -1085,14 +1105,16 @@ // Setting wxUSE_GLCANVAS to 1 enables OpenGL support. You need to have OpenGL // headers and libraries to be able to compile the library with wxUSE_GLCANVAS -// set to 1. Note that for some compilers (notably Microsoft Visual C++) you -// will need to manually add opengl32.lib and glu32.lib to the list of -// libraries linked with your program if you use OpenGL. +// set to 1 and, under Windows, also to add opengl32.lib and glu32.lib to the +// list of libraries used to link your application (although this is done +// implicitly for Microsoft Visual C++ users). // -// Default is 0. +// Default is 1 unless the compiler is known to ship without the necessary +// headers (Digital Mars) or the platform doesn't support OpenGL (Windows CE). // -// Recommended setting: 1 if you intend to use OpenGL, 0 otherwise -#define wxUSE_GLCANVAS 0 +// Recommended setting: 1 if you intend to use OpenGL, can be safely set to 0 +// otherwise. +#define wxUSE_GLCANVAS 1 // wxRichTextCtrl allows editing of styled text. //