X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/b2ff82b9fd350844da14829c136587ba35904c35..fd495ab3ea1282ddb8bb0cd0fb79fc758ae5fcee:/docs/latex/wx/array.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/array.tex b/docs/latex/wx/array.tex index 7f16a2a273..733e548d5d 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/array.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/array.tex @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ wxArrayDouble class is scheduled for the next release of wxWindows). wxSortedArray is a wxArray variant which should be used when searching in the array is a frequently used operation. It requires you to define an additional function for comparing two elements of the array element type and always stores -its items in the sorted order (according to this function). Thus, it's +its items in the sorted order (according to this function). Thus, it is \helpref{Index()}{wxarrayindex} function execution time is $O(log(N))$ instead of $O(N)$ for the usual arrays but the \helpref{Add()}{wxarrayadd} method is slower: it is $O(log(N))$ instead of constant time (neglecting time spent in @@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ example: \begin{verbatim} #include -// we must forward declare the array because it's used inside the class +// we must forward declare the array because it is used inside the class // declaration class MyDirectory; class MyFile; @@ -95,7 +95,9 @@ class MyDirectory ... // now that we have MyDirectory declaration in scope we may finish the -// definition of ArrayOfDirectories +// definition of ArrayOfDirectories -- note that this expands into some C++ +// code and so should only be compiled once (i.e., don't put this in the +// header, but into a source file or you will get linkin errors) #include // this is a magic incantation which must be done! WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY(ArrayOfDirectories); @@ -123,7 +125,7 @@ WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(MyFile *, ArrayOfFiles); \helpref{Container classes overview}{wxcontaineroverview}, \helpref{wxList}{wxlist} -\wxheading{Required headers:} +\wxheading{Include files} for wxArray and wxSortedArray and additionally for wxObjArray. @@ -139,8 +141,10 @@ WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY macros and must be fully declared before you use WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY macro. \helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY}{wxdefinearray}\\ +\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinearray}\\ \helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinesortedarray}\\ -\helpref{WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY}{wxdeclareobjarray}\\ +\helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{wxdefinesortedarray}\\ +\helpref{WX\_DECLARE\_EXPORTED\_OBJARRAY}{wxdeclareobjarray}\\ \helpref{WX\_DEFINE\_OBJARRAY}{wxdefineobjarray} \membersection{Constructors and destructors} @@ -191,13 +195,15 @@ does exactly the same as \helpref{Item()}{wxarrayitem} method. \membersection{Adding items} \helpref{Add}{wxarrayadd}\\ -\helpref{Insert}{wxarrayinsert} +\helpref{Insert}{wxarrayinsert}\\ +\helpref{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{wxappendarray} \membersection{Removing items} \helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray}\\ \helpref{Empty}{wxarrayempty}\\ \helpref{Clear}{wxarrayclear}\\ +\helpref{RemoveAt}{wxarrayremoveat}\\ \helpref{Remove}{wxarrayremove} \membersection{Searching and sorting} @@ -216,8 +222,12 @@ does exactly the same as \helpref{Item()}{wxarrayitem} method. \func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} +\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} + This macro defines a new array class named {\it name} and containing the -elements of type {\it T}. Example: +elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL +under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL. +Example: \begin{verbatim} WX_DEFINE_ARRAY(int, wxArrayInt); @@ -233,25 +243,31 @@ wxArrayLong and wxArrayPtrVoid. \func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} +\func{}{WX\_DEFINE\_SORTED\_EXPORTED\_ARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} + This macro defines a new sorted array class named {\it name} and containing -the elements of type {\it T}. Example: +the elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL +under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL. + +Example: \begin{verbatim} -WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(int, wxArrayInt); +WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(int, wxSortedArrayInt); class MyClass; WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY(MyClass *, wxArrayOfMyClass); \end{verbatim} -You will have to initialize the objects of this class by passing a comparaison +You will have to initialize the objects of this class by passing a comparison function to the array object constructor like this: + \begin{verbatim} int CompareInts(int n1, int n2) { return n1 - n2; } -wxArrayInt sorted(CompareInts); +wxSortedArrayInt sorted(CompareInts); int CompareMyClassObjects(MyClass *item1, MyClass *item2) { @@ -266,8 +282,13 @@ wxArrayOfMyClass another(CompareMyClassObjects); \func{}{WX\_DECLARE\_OBJARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} +\func{}{WX\_DECLARE\_EXPORTED\_OBJARRAY}{\param{}{T}, \param{}{name}} + This macro declares a new object array class named {\it name} and containing -the elements of type {\it T}. Example: +the elements of type {\it T}. The second form is used when compiling DLL +under Windows and array needs to be visible outside the DLL. + +Example: \begin{verbatim} class MyClass; @@ -308,6 +329,13 @@ public: WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY(wxArrayOfMyClass); \end{verbatim} +\membersection{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}\label{wxappendarray} + +\func{void}{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{\param{wxArray\& }{array}, \param{wxArray\& }{other}} + +This macro may be used to append all elements of the {\it other} array to the +{\it array}. The two arrays must be of the same type. + \membersection{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}\label{wxcleararray} \func{void}{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{\param{wxArray\& }{array}} @@ -327,7 +355,7 @@ Default constructor initializes an empty array object. \func{}{wxSortedArray}{\param{int (*)(T first, T second)}{compareFunction}} There is no default constructor for wxSortedArray classes - you must initialize it -with a function to use for item comparaison. It is a function which is passed +with a function to use for item comparison. It is a function which is passed two arguments of type {\it T} where {\it T} is the array element type and which should return a negative, zero or positive value according to whether the first element passed to it is less than, equal to or greater than the second one. @@ -382,6 +410,9 @@ to the array, however, the array will make a copy of the item and will not take ownership of the original item. Once again, it only makes sense for wxObjArrays because the other array types never take ownership of their elements. +You may also use \helpref{WX\_APPEND\_ARRAY}{wxappendarray} macro to append all +elements of one array to another one. + \membersection{wxArray::Alloc}\label{wxarrayalloc} \func{void}{Alloc}{\param{size\_t }{count}} @@ -410,7 +441,6 @@ it exists only for compatibility. \func{T *}{Detach}{\param{size\_t }{index}} Removes the element from the array, but, unlike, - \helpref{Remove()}{wxarrayremove} doesn't delete it. The function returns the pointer to the removed element. @@ -447,6 +477,12 @@ Linear search is used for the wxArray and wxObjArray classes but binary search in the sorted array is used for wxSortedArray (this is why searchFromEnd parameter doesn't make sense for it). +{\bf NB:} even for wxObjArray classes, the operator==() of the elements in the +array is {\bf not} used by this function. It searches exactly the given +element in the array and so will only succeed if this element had been +previously added to the array, but fail even if another, identical, element is +in the array. + \membersection{wxArray::Insert}\label{wxarrayinsert} \func{void}{Insert}{\param{T }{item}, \param{size\_t }{n}} @@ -491,15 +527,16 @@ the array classes. \membersection{wxArray::Remove}\label{wxarrayremove} -\func{\void}{Remove}{\param{size\_t }{index}} - \func{\void}{Remove}{\param{T }{item}} -Removes the element from the array either by index or by value. When an element -is removed from wxObjArray it is deleted by the array - use +Removes an element from the array by value: the first item of the +array equal to {\it item} is removed, an assert failure will result from an +attempt to remove an item which doesn't exist in the array. + +When an element is removed from wxObjArray it is deleted by the array - use \helpref{Detach()}{wxobjarraydetach} if you don't want this to happen. On the other hand, when an object is removed from a wxArray nothing happens - you -should delete the it manually if required: +should delete it manually if required: \begin{verbatim} T *item = array[n]; @@ -510,6 +547,25 @@ array.Remove(n) See also \helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray} macro which deletes all elements of a wxArray (supposed to contain pointers). +\membersection{wxArray::RemoveAt}\label{wxarrayremoveat} + +\func{\void}{RemoveAt}{\param{size\_t }{index}} + +Removes an element from the array by index. When an element +is removed from wxObjArray it is deleted by the array - use +\helpref{Detach()}{wxobjarraydetach} if you don't want this to happen. On the +other hand, when an object is removed from a wxArray nothing happens - you +should delete it manually if required: + +\begin{verbatim} +T *item = array[n]; +delete item; +array.RemoveAt(n) +\end{verbatim} + +See also \helpref{WX\_CLEAR\_ARRAY}{wxcleararray} macro which deletes all +elements of a wxArray (supposed to contain pointers). + \membersection{wxArray::Shrink}\label{wxarrayshrink} \func{void}{Shrink}{\void}