\section{Preprocesser symbols defined by wxWidgets}\label{cppconst} Here is the list of preprocessor symbols used in the wxWidgets source grouped by category (and sorted by alphabetical order inside each category). All of these macros except for \texttt{wxUSE\_XXX} variety is defined if the corresponding condition is true and undefined if it isn't, so they should be always tested usin \texttt{#ifdef} and not \texttt{#if}. \subsection{GUI system}\label{guisystemconst} \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_WINDOWS\_\_}{any Windows, yom may also use \_\_WXMSW\_\_} \twocolitem{\_\_WIN16\_\_}{Win16 API (not supported since wxWidgets 2.6)} \twocolitem{\_\_WIN32\_\_}{Win32 API} \twocolitem{\_\_WIN95\_\_}{Windows 95 or NT 4.0 and above system (not NT 3.5x)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXBASE\_\_}{Only wxBase, no GUI features (same as \texttt{wxUSE\_GUI} $== 0$)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXCOCOA\_\_}{OS X using Cocoa API} \twocolitem{\_\_WXWINCE\_\_}{Windows CE} \twocolitem{\_\_WXGTK\_\_}{GTK+} \twocolitem{\_\_WXGTK12\_\_}{GTK+ 1.2 or higher} \twocolitem{\_\_WXGTK20\_\_}{GTK+ 2.0 or higher} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMOTIF\_\_}{Motif} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMOTIF20\_\_}{Motif 2.0 or higher} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMAC\_\_}{Mac OS all targets} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMAC\_CLASSIC\_\_}{MacOS for Classic} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMAC\_CARBON\_\_}{MacOS for Carbon CFM (running under Classic or OSX) or true OS X Mach-O Builds} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMAC\_OSX\_\_}{MacOS X Carbon Mach-O Builds} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMGL\_\_}{SciTech Soft MGL (\_\_WXUNIVERSAL\_\_ will be also defined)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXMSW\_\_}{Any Windows} \twocolitem{\_\_WXOS2\_\_}{Identical to \_\_WXPM\_\_} \twocolitem{\_\_WXOSX\_\_}{Any Mac OS X port (either Carbon or Cocoa)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXPALMOS\_\_}{PalmOS} \twocolitem{\_\_WXPM\_\_}{OS/2 native Presentation Manager} \twocolitem{\_\_WXSTUBS\_\_}{Stubbed version ('template' wxWin implementation)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXXT\_\_}{Xt; mutually exclusive with WX\_MOTIF, not implemented in wxWidgets 2.x} \twocolitem{\_\_WXX11\_\_}{wxX11 (\_\_WXUNIVERSAL\_\_ will be also defined)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXWINE\_\_}{WINE (i.e. WIN32 on Unix)} \twocolitem{\_\_WXUNIVERSAL\_\_}{wxUniversal port, always defined in addition to one of the symbols above so this should be tested first.} \twocolitem{\_\_X\_\_}{any X11-based GUI toolkit except GTK+} \end{twocollist} Mac situation is a bit confusing so a few extra words to explain it: there are 2 wx ports to Mac OS. One of them, wxMac, exists in 2 versions: Classic and Carbon. The Classic version is the only one to work on Mac OS version 8. The Carbon version may be built either as CFM or Mach-O (binary format, like ELF) and the former may run under OS 9 while the latter only runs under OS X. Finally, there is a new Cocoa port which can only be used under OS X. To summarize: \begin{itemize} \item If you want to test for all Mac platforms, classic and OS X, you should test both \texttt{\_\_WXMAC\_\_} and \texttt{\_\_WXCOCOA\_\_} \item If you want to test for any GUI Mac port under OS X, use \texttt{\_\_WXOSX\_\_} \item If you want to test for any port under Mac OS X, including, for example, wxGTK and also wxBase, use \texttt{\_\_DARWIN\_\_} (see below) \end{itemize} Note to implementors: although some of the symbols above don't start with \texttt{\_\_WX} prefix, they really should always use it, so please do start any new symbols with it. \subsection{Operating systems}\label{osconst} \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_APPLE\_\_}{any Mac OS version} \twocolitem{\_\_AIX\_\_}{AIX} \twocolitem{\_\_BSD\_\_}{Any *BSD system} \twocolitem{\_\_CYGWIN\_\_}{Cygwin: Unix on Win32} \twocolitem{\_\_DARWIN\_\_}{Mac OS X using the BSD Unix C library (as opposed to using the Metrowerks MSL C/C++ library)} \twocolitem{\_\_DATA\_GENERAL\_\_}{DG-UX} \twocolitem{\_\_DOS\_GENERAL\_\_}{DOS (used with wxMGL only)} \twocolitem{\_\_FREEBSD\_\_}{FreeBSD} \twocolitem{\_\_HPUX\_\_}{HP-UX (Unix)} \twocolitem{\_\_GNU\_\_}{GNU Hurd} \twocolitem{\_\_LINUX\_\_}{Linux} \twocolitem{\_\_MACH\_\_}{Mach-O Architecture (Mac OS X only builds)} \twocolitem{\_\_OSF\_\_}{OSF/1} \twocolitem{\_\_PALMOS\_\_}{PalmOS} \twocolitem{\_\_SGI\_\_}{IRIX} \twocolitem{\_\_SOLARIS\_\_}{Solaris} \twocolitem{\_\_SUN\_\_}{Any Sun} \twocolitem{\_\_SUNOS\_\_}{Sun OS} \twocolitem{\_\_SVR4\_\_}{SystemV R4} \twocolitem{\_\_SYSV\_\_}{SystemV generic} \twocolitem{\_\_ULTRIX\_\_}{Ultrix} \twocolitem{\_\_UNIX\_\_}{any Unix} \twocolitem{\_\_UNIX\_LIKE\_\_}{Unix, BeOS or VMS} \twocolitem{\_\_VMS\_\_}{VMS} \twocolitem{\_\_WINDOWS\_\_}{any Windows} \end{twocollist} \subsection{Hardware architectures (CPU)}\label{cpuconst} Note that not all of these symbols are always defined, it depends on the compiler used. \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_ALPHA\_\_}{DEC Alpha architecture} \twocolitem{\_\_INTEL\_\_}{Intel i386 or compatible} \twocolitem{\_\_IA64\_\_}{Intel 64 bit architecture} \twocolitem{\_\_POWERPC\_\_}{Motorola Power PC} \end{twocollist} \subsection{Hardware type}\label{hardwareconst} Combination of these symbols with GUI symbols describes real hardware (like \_\_PDA\_\_ $&&$ \_\_WXWINCE\_\_ $==$ PocketPC devices). \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_SMARTPHONE\_\_}{Mobile devices with dialog capability through phone buttons and small display} \twocolitem{\_\_PDA\_\_}{Personal digital assistant usually with touch screen and middle sized screen} \twocolitem{\_\_HANDHELD\_\_}{Small enough but powerful computer} \end{twocollist} \subsection{Compilers}\label{compilerconst} \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_BORLANDC\_\_}{Borland C++. The value of the macro corresponds to the compiler version: $500$ is $5.0$.} \twocolitem{\_\_DJGPP\_\_}{DJGPP} \twocolitem{\_\_DIGITALMARS\_\_}{Digital Mars} \twocolitem{\_\_GNUG\_\_}{Gnu C++ on any platform, see also \helpref{wxCHECK\_GCC\_VERSION}{wxcheckgccversion}} \twocolitem{\_\_GNUWIN32\_\_}{Gnu-Win32 compiler, see also \helpref{wxCHECK\_W32API\_VERSION}{wxcheckw32apiversion}} \twocolitem{\_\_MINGW32\_\_}{MinGW} \twocolitem{\_\_MWERKS\_\_}{CodeWarrior MetroWerks compiler} \twocolitem{\_\_SUNCC\_\_}{Sun CC} \twocolitem{\_\_SYMANTECC\_\_}{Symantec C++} \twocolitem{\_\_VISAGECPP\_\_}{IBM Visual Age (OS/2)} \twocolitem{\_\_VISUALC\_\_}{Microsoft Visual C++. The value of this macro corresponds to the compiler version: $1020$ for $4.2$ (the first supported version), $1100$ for $5.0$, $1200$ for $6.0$ and so on} \twocolitem{\_\_XLC\_\_}{AIX compiler} \twocolitem{\_\_WATCOMC\_\_}{Watcom C++. The value of this macro corresponds to the compiler version, $1100$ is $11.0$ and $1200$ is OpenWatcom.} \twocolitem{\_WIN32\_WCE}{Windows CE version} \end{twocollist} \subsection{Miscellaneous}\label{miscellaneousconst} \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_WXWINDOWS\_\_}{always defined in wxWidgets applications, see also \helpref{wxCHECK\_VERSION}{wxcheckversion}} \twocolitem{\_\_WXDEBUG\_\_}{defined in debug mode, undefined in release mode} \twocolitem{wxUSE\_XXX}{if defined as $1$, feature XXX is active (the symbols of this form are always defined, use \#if and not \#ifdef to test for them)} \twocolitem{wxUSE\_GUI}{this particular feature test macro is defined to $1$ when compiling or using the library with the GUI features activated, if it is defined as $0$, only wxBase is available.} \twocolitem{wxUSE\_BASE}{only used by wxWidgets internally (defined as $1$ when building wxBase code, either as a standalone library or as part of the monolithic wxWidgets library, defined as $0$ when building GUI library only)} \end{twocollist}