X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/42bcb12b405f19915ed009f6aa323d0e48cd89f6..a9249b2eb2a40d8c71f828669045c4ddaa8dc5ff:/docs/latex/wx/tevent.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tevent.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tevent.tex index bc3b3607fb..ed4760d0fc 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tevent.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tevent.tex @@ -70,8 +70,9 @@ protected: \subsection{How events are processed}\label{eventprocessing} -When an event is received from the windowing system, wxWindows calls \helpref{wxEvtHandler::ProcessEvent}{wxevthandlerprocessevent} on -the first event handler object belonging to the window generating the event. +When an event is received from the windowing system, wxWindows calls +\helpref{wxEvtHandler::ProcessEvent}{wxevthandlerprocessevent} on the first +event handler object belonging to the window generating the event. It may be noted that wxWindows' event processing system implements something very close to virtual methods in normal C++, i.e. it is possible to alter @@ -140,6 +141,23 @@ hierarchy from child to parent until an event handler is found that doesn't call event.Skip(). Events not derived from wxCommandEvent are sent only to the window they occurred in and then stop. +Finally, there is another additional complication (which, in fact, simplifies +life of wxWindows programmers significantly): when propagating the command +events upwards to the parent window, the event propagation stops when it +reaches the parent dialog, if any. This means that you don't risk to get +unexpected events from the dialog controls (which might be left unprocessed by +the dialog itself because it doesn't care about them) when a modal dialog is +popped up. The events do propagate beyond the frames, however. The rationale +for this choice is that there are only a few frames in a typical application +and their parent-child relation are well understood by the programmer while it +may be very difficult, if not impossible, to track down all the dialogs which +may be popped up in a complex program (remember that some are created +automatically by wxWindows). If you need to specify a different behaviour for +some reason, you can use +\helpref{SetExtraStyle(wxWS\_EX\_BLOCK\_EVENTS)}{wxwindowsetextrastyle} +explicitly to prevent the events from being propagated beyond the given window +or unset this flag for the dialogs which have it on by default. + Typically events that deal with a window as a window (size, motion, paint, mouse, keyboard, etc.) are sent only to the window. Events that have a higher level of meaning and/or are generated by the window @@ -329,8 +347,8 @@ called via \helpref{wxWindow::Close}{wxwindowclose}.} file drop events.} \twocolitem{\helpref{wxEraseEvent}{wxeraseevent}}{The EVT\_ERASE\_BACKGROUND macro is used to handle window erase requests.} \twocolitem{\helpref{wxFocusEvent}{wxfocusevent}}{The EVT\_SET\_FOCUS and EVT\_KILL\_FOCUS macros are used to handle keyboard focus events.} -\twocolitem{\helpref{wxKeyEvent}{wxkeyevent}}{EVT\_CHAR and EVT\_CHAR\_HOOK macros handle keyboard -input for any window.} +\twocolitem{\helpref{wxKeyEvent}{wxkeyevent}}{EVT\_CHAR, EVT\_KEY\_DOWN and +EVT\_KEY\_UP macros handle keyboard input for any window.} \twocolitem{\helpref{wxIdleEvent}{wxidleevent}}{The EVT\_IDLE macro handle application idle events (to process background tasks, for example).} \twocolitem{\helpref{wxInitDialogEvent}{wxinitdialogevent}}{The EVT\_INIT\_DIALOG macro is used