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-wxWindows Book
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-<center>
-<a href="#about">About</a> |
-<a href="#participants">Participants</a> |
-<a href="#publication">Publication</a> |
-<!-- <a href="#suggestions">Suggestions</a> | -->
-<a href="#format">Format</a> |
-<a href="#style">Style guide</a> |
-<a href="#titles">Titles</a> |
-<a href="#contents">Contents</a>
-</center>
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-<p>
-<hr>
-<p>
-
-<H3><a name="about">About the wxWindows book</a></H3>
-
-August 2000: the 'wxBook' project is getting going again,
-with a good response from potential contributors.<P>
-
-Robin Dunn has set up a <a href="http://wxwindows.org/mailman/listinfo/wxbook">wxBook mailing list</a>.<P>
-
-The book will comprise 30 or so chapters dealing with progressively
-more advanced areas of wxWindows; each chapter will be as stand-alone as
-possible. The book will
-not include the API reference, though this could be a
-separate project. The book will be accompanied by a CD-ROM with
-wxWindows and its documentation. It will initially be
-available on-line, and when enough is done we will look for a
-publisher.<P>
-
-There will also be a separate small booklet which can easily be printed
-out and which gives an overview of wxWindows facilities by taking
-the reader through a single worked example. Guillermo Rodriguez
-Garcia has volunteered to write this, and will use his Life!
-demo to illustrate it.<P>
-
-Goals for the book:<P>
-
-<ol>
-<li> to allow users to become accomplished wxWindows developers rapidly;
-<li> to be useful over a longer period than just the first few weeks, since
-there are a lot of complex areas to address and not all features will be
-used up-front in a project;
-<li> to promote wxWindows to a wider audience;
-<li> to make at least some money for the authors.
-</ol>
-
-<P>
-
-Audience: beginners + experienced wxWindows users, but with reasonable C++
-knowledge.<P>
-
-It is suggested that any financial return from the book be allocated on a points system,
-with a predefined number of points for chapters, indexing, editing, proof-reading etc.<P>
-
-<p>
-<hr>
-<p>
-
-<H3><a name="participants">Participants</a></H3>
-
-So far, the following people are interested in taking part in this project:<P>
-
-<ul>
-<li><a href="mailto:julian.smart@ukonline.co.uk">Julian Smart</a> -
-editor and coordinator of the project; introductory chapter, some other
-chapters.
-<li><a href="mailto:guille@iies.es">Guillermo Rodriguez Garcia</a> - Separate tutorial booklet;
-communication classes (wxSocket, wxXXXServer, some protocol stuff); timing and timers.
-<li><a href="mailto:robin@alldunn.com">Robin Dunn</a> - wxPython chapter.
-</i>
-<li><a href="mailto:zeitlin@dptmaths.ens-cachan.fr">Vadim Zeitlin</a> - drag and drop, several other chapters.
-<li><a href="mailto:roebling@uni-freiburg.de">Robert Roebling</a> - not known.
-<li><a href="mailto:slavik2@czn.cz">Vaclav Slavik</a> - wxHTML section.
-<li><a href="mailto:gtasker@fastpicsystems.com">George Tasker</a> - database chapter.
-<li><a href="mailto:moreno@mochima.com">Carlos Moreno</a> - wxImage, wxBitmap.
-<li><a href="mailto:Shiv@pspl.co.in">Shiv Shankar Ramakrishnan</a> - wxWindows advocacy, convincing your manager,
-container classes and strings, comparison with STL
-<li><a href="mailto:markusneifer@my-Deja.com">Markus Neifer</a> - user-defined events.
-
-<!--
-<li><a href="mailto:csomor@advancedconcepts.ch">Stefan Csomor</a>. The sequence of events i.e. which action provokes which event sequence,
-this is implicit for the use on MSW, but very important for other systems; and porting to new platforms
--->
-<!--
-<li><a href="mailto:tomr@scitechsoft.com">Tom Ryan</a>, SciTech Software.
--->
-<!--
-<li><a href="mailto:karsten@phy.hw.ac.uk">Karsten Ballueder</a>. Short tutorials on some useful
-GNU tools, like autoconf/configure/make, programming
-strategies, etc.
--->
-<!--
-<li><a href="mailto:mheck@www.surveyorcorp.com">Matt Heck</a>, SurveyorCorp Inc.
-<i>
-<ol>
- <li>a case study of how and why we've used wxWindows at Surveyor Corp., and
- how it's worked out so far;
- <li>an appendix something similar about how to use wxLIVID for video capture and display;
- <li>proofreading
-</ol>
--->
-</ul>
-
-<P>
-Others welcome! Please contact <a href="mailto:julian.smart@ukonline.co.uk">Julian Smart</a>
-if you would like to contribute.
-
-<p>
-<hr>
-<p>
-
-<H3><a name="publication">Publication</a></H3>
-
-We will investigate publishers, especially O'Reilly. We will have to get together
-several sample chapters to convince a publisher that the many-author approach will
-work.<P>
-
-<!--
-Tom Ryan originally wrote:<P>
-
-<PRE>
-Hi Guys,
-
-I just wanted to let you know that I have spoken with officials here
-at California State University, Chico and they are potentially
-interested in publishing a book on wxWindows! A wxWindows
-book would give wxWindows a great deal of exposure.
-
-These discussions came out of the fact that CSUC wanted to
-switch from MFC to wxWindows in their GUI programming classes,
-but there was not a book available for students to work with.
-
-I was thinking that the first edition could be primarily the reference
-documentation combined with a basic wxTutorial and examples. In
-this case, it would be fairly straightforward to get something out
-initially and then we could take it from there.
-</PRE>
-
-<p>
-
-<a href="mailto:benles@powernet.net">Ben Allfree</a> has also expressed an interest
-in publishing a wxWindows book, and distributing it via Amazon. Ben was thinking
-in terms of a quickie job using the existing reference manual.<P>
-
-Another publishing name to think of is O'Reilly. They would probably give us a lot
-of guidance for style, formatting, etc.<P>
-
-<a href="mailto:Roald.Ribe@winlink.no">Roald Ribe</a> writes:
-"<a href="http://www.bruceeckel.com/javabook.html" target=_new>Thinking in Java</a>
-is published both as a PDF for internet (by the author) and in print by Prentice Hall."<P>
-
--->
-
-<P>
-<hr>
-<P>
-
-<!--
-
-<H3><a name="suggestions">Suggestions and comments</a></H3>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Chapter on converting from MFC. (Julian Smart)
-<li>A chapter on why some inconsistencies are almost always going to show up in a
-multiplatform toolkit, how to avoid them, how to deal with when you have
-no choice, and (if wxBook explains the internals or philosophy of
-wxWindows at all) how wxWindows attempts to minimize the number we
-encounter. (Matt Heck)
-<li>Creating the shortest possible path to writing "Hello World" from scratch in wxWindows. (Matt Heck)
-<li>How will royalties for subsequent editions be shared out? (Tom Ryan)
-<li>"My personal feeling is that this project will wind up being developed
-by a small team, led by an editor that will wind up doing about half
-of the total amount of work." (Tom Ryan)
-</ul>
-
-<P>
-<hr>
-<P>
--->
-
-<H3><a name="format">File format</a></H3>
-
-Possible formats:
-
-<ul>
-<li>Word
-<li><a href="http://www.abisource.com" target=_top>Abiword</a>: possibly not developed enough yet, but
-it can output Latex which would make conversion to Tex2RTF format quite simple
-<li>Latex: favoured format so far. The LyX near-WYSIWYG word processor (Unix only) can output Latex.
-See also <a href="http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~minten/NTTeXing/NTTeXing.html" target=_top>NTTex</a>
-which uses EMACS as an editor. For an introduction to Latex, see <a href="ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/info/lshort" target=_top>here</a>.
-A free TeX for Windows: see <a href="http://www.miktex.org/" target=_top>MikTex</a>. More TeX info: <a href="http://www.tug.org/" target=_top>TUG</a>.
-<li>XML: hard to read/write
-<li>SGML: ditto
-<li>DocBook: don't have any information about this, but <a href="http://www.LinuxNinja.com/linux-admin/" target=_top>Linux Admin Made Easy</a>
-uses it.
-<li><a href="http://www.zope.org//Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/StructuredTextNG" target=_top>Structured text</a> -
-plain text with indentation and other elements to provide structure. The tools seem under-developed and there
-doesn't seem to be a simple way of getting them without using the CVS Zope archive.
-<li>troff - favoured by O'Reilly
-</ul>
-
-<P>
-<hr>
-<P>
-
-<H3><a name="style">Style guide</a></H3>
-
-We should write a style and formatting guide.<P>
-
-<P>
-<hr>
-<P>
-
-<H3><a name="titles">Book Titles</a></H3>
-
-It would be good to include certain buzzwords such as Linux and open source, to get
-a publisher's (and the potential reader's) attention. The trick is to do that and
-not narrow the scope unduly.<P>
-
-Suggestions for the main book:<P>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Multiplatform GUI development with wxWindows
-<li>wxWindows: an open source multiplatform toolkit
-<li>wxWindows: GUI development for Linux and other platforms
-</ul>
-
-<P>
-Other book titles that a publisher might be interested (but would be distinct projects):<P>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Writing GTK+ Application Using wxWindows
-<li>Migrating MFC Apps to Linux Using wxWindows
-</ul>
-
-<P>
-<hr>
-<P>
-
-<H3><a name="contents">Contents</a></H3>
-
-The following is open to discussion.<P>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Chapter 01: Introduction to wxWindows: history, advocacy, future developments
-<li>Chapter 02: Installing wxWindows (and what tools to use)
-<li>Chapter 03: C++ and wxWindows. Summarises the sorts of constructs used/not used, plus wxString class,
-some conventions. Vadim suggests putting it in 1st chapter but I think it deserves a chapter of its own.
-<li>Chapter 04: Getting started: Hello World. Introduces app class, frames, menus, status bar, message box
-<li>Chapter 05: Basic event handling
-<li>Chapter 06: Frames and menubars. The components of a frame, menubars.
-<li>Chapter 07: Toolbars and status bars
-<li>Chapter 08: Basic controls
-<li>Chapter 09: Common dialogs
-<li>Chapter 10: Custom dialogs and resources (XML + WXR)
-<li>Chapter 11: Drawing on device contexts
-<li>Chapter 12: Handling input (mouse, keyboard, joystick)
-<li>Chapter 14: Sizers
-<li>Chapter 15: Images and bitmaps
-<li>Chapter 16: Clipboard and drag and drop
-<li>Chapter 17: Advanced controls (list,tree,notebook,splitter,wxWizard,wxCalCtrl...)
-<li>Chapter 18: Document/view classes
-<li>Chapter 19: Scrolling
-<li>Chapter 20: MDI
-<li>Chapter 21: Printing
-<li>Chapter 22: Providing help in your applications
-<li>Chapter 23: Strings and internationalization
-<li>Chapter 24: Collection and container classes
-<li>Chapter 25: Memory management and debugging (including wxLog)
-<li>Chapter 26: Run-time class information
-<li>Chapter 27: Advanced event handling (user-defined events, ...)
-<li>Chapter 28: Communication classes, including wxSocket
-<li>Chapter 29: Database classes
-<li>Chapter 30: File and stream classes
-<li>Chapter 31: Configuration classes
-<li>Chapter 32: Time, timers and idle processing
-<li>Chapter 33: Writing multithreading applications
-<li>Chapter 34: Perfecting your UI (Adapting to system settings, accelerators, ...)
-<li>Chapter 35: Platform-specific programming (metafiles, OLE automation, taskbar, ...)
-<li>Chapter 36: Using wxHTML
-<li>Chapter 37: Using wxPython
-<li>Chapter 38: wxBase?
-<li>Appendix: Comparison with other toolkits: MFC, Qt etc.
-</ul>
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