///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Name: app.h // Purpose: interface of wxApp // Author: wxWidgets team // RCS-ID: $Id$ // Licence: wxWindows license ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** @class wxAppConsole This class is essential for writing console-only or hybrid apps without having to define wxUSE_GUI=0. @todo MORE INFO @library{wxbase} @category{appmanagement} @see @ref overview_app */ class wxAppConsole : public wxEvtHandler { protected: /** Creates the wxAppTraits object when GetTraits() needs it for the first time. @see wxAppTraits */ virtual wxAppTraits* CreateTraits(); public: /** Destructor. */ virtual ~wxAppConsole(); /** Dispatches the next event in the windowing system event queue. Blocks until an event appears if there are none currently (use Pending() if this is not wanted). This can be used for programming event loops, e.g. @code while (app.Pending()) Dispatch(); @endcode @return @false if the event loop should stop and @true otherwise. @see Pending() */ virtual bool Dispatch(); /** Call this to explicitly exit the main message (event) loop. You should normally exit the main loop (and the application) by deleting the top window. */ virtual void ExitMainLoop(); /** This function is called before processing any event and allows the application to preempt the processing of some events. If this method returns -1 the event is processed normally, otherwise either @true or @false should be returned and the event processing stops immediately considering that the event had been already processed (for the former return value) or that it is not going to be processed at all (for the latter one). */ virtual int FilterEvent(wxEvent& event); /** Returns the user-readable application name. The difference between this string and the one returned by GetAppName() is that this one is meant to be shown to the user and so should be used for the window titles, page headers and so on while the other one should be only used internally, e.g. for the file names or configuration file keys. By default, returns the application name as returned by GetAppName() capitalized using wxString::Capitalize(). @since 2.9.0 */ wxString GetAppDisplayName() const; /** Returns the application name. @remarks wxWidgets sets this to a reasonable default before calling OnInit(), but the application can reset it at will. @see GetAppDisplayName() */ wxString GetAppName() const; /** Gets the class name of the application. The class name may be used in a platform specific manner to refer to the application. @see SetClassName() */ wxString GetClassName() const; /** Returns the one and only global application object. Usually wxTheApp is used instead. @see SetInstance() */ static wxAppConsole* GetInstance(); /** Returns a pointer to the wxAppTraits object for the application. If you want to customize the wxAppTraits object, you must override the CreateTraits() function. */ wxAppTraits* GetTraits(); /** Returns the user-readable vendor name. The difference between this string and the one returned by GetVendorName() is that this one is meant to be shown to the user and so should be used for the window titles, page headers and so on while the other one should be only used internally, e.g. for the file names or configuration file keys. By default, returns the same string as GetVendorName(). @since 2.9.0 */ const wxString& GetVendorDisplayName() const; /** Returns the application's vendor name. */ const wxString& GetVendorName() const; /** This function simply invokes the given method @a func of the specified event handler @a handler with the @a event as parameter. It exists solely to allow to catch the C++ exceptions which could be thrown by all event handlers in the application in one place: if you want to do this, override this function in your wxApp-derived class and add try/catch clause(s) to it. */ virtual void HandleEvent(wxEvtHandler* handler, wxEventFunction func, wxEvent& event) const; /** Returns @true if the main event loop is currently running, i.e. if the application is inside OnRun(). This can be useful to test whether events can be dispatched. For example, if this function returns @false, non-blocking sockets cannot be used because the events from them would never be processed. */ static bool IsMainLoopRunning(); /** Called in response of an "open-application" Apple event. Override this to create a new document in your app. @onlyfor{wxmac} */ virtual void MacNewFile(); /** Called in response of an "open-document" Apple event. You need to override this method in order to open a document file after the user double clicked on it or if the document file was dropped on either the running application or the application icon in Finder. @onlyfor{wxmac} */ virtual void MacOpenFile(const wxString& fileName); /** Called in response of a "get-url" Apple event. @onlyfor{wxmac} */ virtual void MacOpenURL(const wxString& url); /** Called in response of a "print-document" Apple event. @onlyfor{wxmac} */ virtual void MacPrintFile(const wxString& fileName); /** Called in response of a "reopen-application" Apple event. @onlyfor{wxmac} */ virtual void MacReopenApp(); /** Called by wxWidgets on creation of the application. Override this if you wish to provide your own (environment-dependent) main loop. @return 0 under X, and the wParam of the WM_QUIT message under Windows. */ virtual int MainLoop(); /** This function is called when an assert failure occurs, i.e. the condition specified in wxASSERT() macro evaluated to @false. It is only called in debug mode (when @c __WXDEBUG__ is defined) as asserts are not left in the release code at all. The base class version shows the default assert failure dialog box proposing to the user to stop the program, continue or ignore all subsequent asserts. @param file the name of the source file where the assert occurred @param line the line number in this file where the assert occurred @param func the name of the function where the assert occurred, may be empty if the compiler doesn't support C99 __FUNCTION__ @param cond the condition of the failed assert in text form @param msg the message specified as argument to wxASSERT_MSG or wxFAIL_MSG, will be @NULL if just wxASSERT or wxFAIL was used */ virtual void OnAssertFailure(const wxChar *file, int line, const wxChar *func, const wxChar *cond, const wxChar *msg); /** Called when command line parsing fails (i.e. an incorrect command line option was specified by the user). The default behaviour is to show the program usage text and abort the program. Return @true to continue normal execution or @false to return @false from OnInit() thus terminating the program. @see OnInitCmdLine() */ virtual bool OnCmdLineError(wxCmdLineParser& parser); /** Called when the help option (@c --help) was specified on the command line. The default behaviour is to show the program usage text and abort the program. Return @true to continue normal execution or @false to return @false from OnInit() thus terminating the program. @see OnInitCmdLine() */ virtual bool OnCmdLineHelp(wxCmdLineParser& parser); /** Called after the command line had been successfully parsed. You may override this method to test for the values of the various parameters which could be set from the command line. Don't forget to call the base class version unless you want to suppress processing of the standard command line options. Return @true to continue normal execution or @false to return @false from OnInit() thus terminating the program. @see OnInitCmdLine() */ virtual bool OnCmdLineParsed(wxCmdLineParser& parser); /** This function is called if an unhandled exception occurs inside the main application event loop. It can return @true to ignore the exception and to continue running the loop or @false to exit the loop and terminate the program. In the latter case it can also use C++ @c throw keyword to rethrow the current exception. The default behaviour of this function is the latter in all ports except under Windows where a dialog is shown to the user which allows him to choose between the different options. You may override this function in your class to do something more appropriate. Finally note that if the exception is rethrown from here, it can be caught in OnUnhandledException(). */ virtual bool OnExceptionInMainLoop(); /** Override this member function for any processing which needs to be done as the application is about to exit. OnExit is called after destroying all application windows and controls, but before wxWidgets cleanup. Note that it is not called at all if OnInit() failed. The return value of this function is currently ignored, return the same value as returned by the base class method if you override it. */ virtual int OnExit(); /** This function may be called if something fatal happens: an unhandled exception under Win32 or a a fatal signal under Unix, for example. However, this will not happen by default: you have to explicitly call wxHandleFatalExceptions() to enable this. Generally speaking, this function should only show a message to the user and return. You may attempt to save unsaved data but this is not guaranteed to work and, in fact, probably won't. @see wxHandleFatalExceptions() */ virtual void OnFatalException(); /** This must be provided by the application, and will usually create the application's main window, optionally calling SetTopWindow(). You may use OnExit() to clean up anything initialized here, provided that the function returns @true. Notice that if you want to to use the command line processing provided by wxWidgets you have to call the base class version in the derived class OnInit(). Return @true to continue processing, @false to exit the application immediately. */ virtual bool OnInit(); /** Called from OnInit() and may be used to initialize the parser with the command line options for this application. The base class versions adds support for a few standard options only. */ virtual void OnInitCmdLine(wxCmdLineParser& parser); /** This virtual function is where the execution of a program written in wxWidgets starts. The default implementation just enters the main loop and starts handling the events until it terminates, either because ExitMainLoop() has been explicitly called or because the last frame has been deleted and GetExitOnFrameDelete() flag is @true (this is the default). The return value of this function becomes the exit code of the program, so it should return 0 in case of successful termination. */ virtual int OnRun(); /** This function is called when an unhandled C++ exception occurs inside OnRun() (the exceptions which occur during the program startup and shutdown might not be caught at all). Notice that by now the main event loop has been terminated and the program will exit, if you want to prevent this from happening (i.e. continue running after catching an exception) you need to override OnExceptionInMainLoop(). The default implementation shows information about the exception in debug build but does nothing in the release build. */ virtual void OnUnhandledException(); /** Returns @true if unprocessed events are in the window system event queue. @see Dispatch() */ virtual bool Pending(); /** Set the application name to be used in the user-visible places such as window titles. See GetAppDisplayName() for more about the differences between the display name and name. Notice that if this function is called, the name is used as is, without any capitalization as done by default by GetAppDisplayName(). */ void SetAppDisplayName(const wxString& name); /** Sets the name of the application. This name should be used for file names, configuration file entries and other internal strings. For the user-visible strings, such as the window titles, the application display name set by SetAppDisplayName() is used instead. By default the application name is set to the name of its executable file. @see GetAppName() */ void SetAppName(const wxString& name); /** Sets the class name of the application. This may be used in a platform specific manner to refer to the application. @see GetClassName() */ void SetClassName(const wxString& name); /** Allows external code to modify global ::wxTheApp, but you should really know what you're doing if you call it. @param app Replacement for the global application object. @see GetInstance() */ static void SetInstance(wxAppConsole* app); /** Set the vendor name to be used in the user-visible places. See GetVendorDisplayName() for more about the differences between the display name and name. */ void SetVendorDisplayName(const wxString& name); /** Sets the name of application's vendor. The name will be used in registry access. A default name is set by wxWidgets. @see GetVendorName() */ void SetVendorName(const wxString& name); /** Yields control to pending messages in the windowing system. This can be useful, for example, when a time-consuming process writes to a text window. Without an occasional yield, the text window will not be updated properly, and on systems with cooperative multitasking, such as Windows 3.1 other processes will not respond. Caution should be exercised, however, since yielding may allow the user to perform actions which are not compatible with the current task. Disabling menu items or whole menus during processing can avoid unwanted reentrance of code: see ::wxSafeYield for a better function. Note that Yield() will not flush the message logs. This is intentional as calling Yield() is usually done to quickly update the screen and popping up a message box dialog may be undesirable. If you do wish to flush the log messages immediately (otherwise it will be done during the next idle loop iteration), call wxLog::FlushActive. Calling Yield() recursively is normally an error and an assert failure is raised in debug build if such situation is detected. However if the @a onlyIfNeeded parameter is @true, the method will just silently return @false instead. */ virtual bool Yield(bool onlyIfNeeded = false); /** Number of command line arguments (after environment-specific processing). */ int argc; /** Command line arguments (after environment-specific processing). Under Windows and Linux/Unix, you should parse the command line arguments and check for files to be opened when starting your application. Under OS X, you need to override MacOpenFile() since command line arguments are used differently there. You may use the wxCmdLineParser to parse command line arguments. */ wxChar** argv; }; /** @class wxApp The wxApp class represents the application itself. It is used to: @li set and get application-wide properties; @li implement the windowing system message or event loop; @li initiate application processing via wxApp::OnInit; @li allow default processing of events not handled by other objects in the application. You should use the macro IMPLEMENT_APP(appClass) in your application implementation file to tell wxWidgets how to create an instance of your application class. Use DECLARE_APP(appClass) in a header file if you want the wxGetApp function (which returns a reference to your application object) to be visible to other files. @library{wxbase} @category{appmanagement} @see @ref overview_app */ class wxApp : public wxAppConsole { public: /** Constructor. Called implicitly with a definition of a wxApp object. */ wxApp(); /** Destructor. Will be called implicitly on program exit if the wxApp object is created on the stack. */ virtual ~wxApp(); /** Returns @true if the application will exit when the top-level frame is deleted. @see SetExitOnFrameDelete() */ bool GetExitOnFrameDelete() const; /** Returns @true if the application will use the best visual on systems that support different visuals, @false otherwise. @see SetUseBestVisual() */ bool GetUseBestVisual() const; /** Returns a pointer to the top window. @remarks If the top window hasn't been set using SetTopWindow(), this function will find the first top-level window (frame or dialog) and return that. @see SetTopWindow() */ virtual wxWindow* GetTopWindow() const; /** Returns @true if the application is active, i.e. if one of its windows is currently in the foreground. If this function returns @false and you need to attract users attention to the application, you may use wxTopLevelWindow::RequestUserAttention to do it. */ virtual bool IsActive() const; /** Windows-only function for processing a message. This function is called from the main message loop, checking for windows that may wish to process it. The function returns @true if the message was processed, @false otherwise. If you use wxWidgets with another class library with its own message loop, you should make sure that this function is called to allow wxWidgets to receive messages. For example, to allow co-existence with the Microsoft Foundation Classes, override the PreTranslateMessage function: @code // Provide wxWidgets message loop compatibility BOOL CTheApp::PreTranslateMessage(MSG *msg) { if (wxTheApp && wxTheApp->ProcessMessage((WXMSW *)msg)) return true; else return CWinApp::PreTranslateMessage(msg); } @endcode @onlyfor{wxmsw} */ bool ProcessMessage(WXMSG* msg); /** Sends idle events to a window and its children. Please note that this function is internal to wxWidgets and shouldn't be used by user code. @remarks These functions poll the top-level windows, and their children, for idle event processing. If @true is returned, more OnIdle processing is requested by one or more window. @see wxIdleEvent */ virtual bool SendIdleEvents(wxWindow* win, wxIdleEvent& event); /** Allows the programmer to specify whether the application will exit when the top-level frame is deleted. @param flag If @true (the default), the application will exit when the top-level frame is deleted. If @false, the application will continue to run. @see GetExitOnFrameDelete(), @ref overview_app_shutdown */ void SetExitOnFrameDelete(bool flag); /** Allows external code to modify global ::wxTheApp, but you should really know what you're doing if you call it. @param app Replacement for the global application object. @see GetInstance() */ static void SetInstance(wxAppConsole* app); /** Allows runtime switching of the UI environment theme. Currently implemented for wxGTK2-only. Return @true if theme was successfully changed. @param theme The name of the new theme or an absolute path to a gtkrc-theme-file */ virtual bool SetNativeTheme(const wxString& theme); /** Sets the 'top' window. You can call this from within OnInit() to let wxWidgets know which is the main window. You don't have to set the top window; it is only a convenience so that (for example) certain dialogs without parents can use a specific window as the top window. If no top window is specified by the application, wxWidgets just uses the first frame or dialog in its top-level window list, when it needs to use the top window. @param window The new top window. @see GetTopWindow(), OnInit() */ void SetTopWindow(wxWindow* window); /** Allows the programmer to specify whether the application will use the best visual on systems that support several visual on the same display. This is typically the case under Solaris and IRIX, where the default visual is only 8-bit whereas certain applications are supposed to run in TrueColour mode. Note that this function has to be called in the constructor of the wxApp instance and won't have any effect when called later on. This function currently only has effect under GTK. @param flag If @true, the app will use the best visual. @param forceTrueColour If @true then the application will try to force using a TrueColour visual and abort the app if none is found. */ void SetUseBestVisual(bool flag, bool forceTrueColour = false); }; // ============================================================================ // Global functions/macros // ============================================================================ /** @ingroup group_funcmacro_rtti */ //@{ /** This is used in headers to create a forward declaration of the wxGetApp() function implemented by IMPLEMENT_APP(). It creates the declaration className& wxGetApp(). @header{wx/app.h} Example: @code DECLARE_APP(MyApp) @endcode */ #define DECLARE_APP( className ) /** This is used in the application class implementation file to make the application class known to wxWidgets for dynamic construction. @header{wx/app.h} Example: @code IMPLEMENT_APP(MyApp) @endcode @see DECLARE_APP(). */ #define IMPLEMENT_APP( className ) //@} /** The global pointer to the singleton wxApp object. @see wxApp::GetInstance() */ wxApp *wxTheApp; /** @ingroup group_funcmacro_appinitterm */ //@{ /** This function doesn't exist in wxWidgets but it is created by using the IMPLEMENT_APP() macro. Thus, before using it anywhere but in the same module where this macro is used, you must make it available using DECLARE_APP(). The advantage of using this function compared to directly using the global ::wxTheApp pointer is that the latter is of type wxApp* and so wouldn't allow you to access the functions specific to your application class but not present in wxApp while wxGetApp() returns the object of the right type. @header{wx/app.h} */ wxAppDerivedClass& wxGetApp(); /** If @a doIt is @true, the fatal exceptions (also known as general protection faults under Windows or segmentation violations in the Unix world) will be caught and passed to wxApp::OnFatalException. By default, i.e. before this function is called, they will be handled in the normal way which usually just means that the application will be terminated. Calling wxHandleFatalExceptions() with @a doIt equal to @false will restore this default behaviour. Notice that this function is only available if @c wxUSE_ON_FATAL_EXCEPTION is 1 and under Windows platform this requires a compiler with support for SEH (structured exception handling) which currently means only Microsoft Visual C++ or a recent Borland C++ version. @header{wx/app.h} */ bool wxHandleFatalExceptions(bool doIt = true); /** This function is used in wxBase only and only if you don't create wxApp object at all. In this case you must call it from your @c main() function before calling any other wxWidgets functions. If the function returns @false the initialization could not be performed, in this case the library cannot be used and wxUninitialize() shouldn't be called neither. This function may be called several times but wxUninitialize() must be called for each successful call to this function. @header{wx/app.h} */ bool wxInitialize(); /** This function is for use in console (wxBase) programs only. It must be called once for each previous successful call to wxInitialize(). @header{wx/app.h} */ void wxUninitialize(); /** This function wakes up the (internal and platform dependent) idle system, i.e. it will force the system to send an idle event even if the system currently @e is idle and thus would not send any idle event until after some other event would get sent. This is also useful for sending events between two threads and is used by the corresponding functions wxPostEvent() and wxEvtHandler::AddPendingEvent(). @header{wx/app.h} */ void wxWakeUpIdle(); /** Calls wxApp::Yield. @deprecated This function is kept only for backwards compatibility. Please use the wxApp::Yield method instead in any new code. @header{wx/app.h} */ bool wxYield(); /** This function is similar to wxYield, except that it disables the user input to all program windows before calling wxYield and re-enables it again afterwards. If @a win is not @NULL, this window will remain enabled, allowing the implementation of some limited user interaction. Returns the result of the call to ::wxYield. @header{wx/app.h} */ bool wxSafeYield(wxWindow* win = NULL, bool onlyIfNeeded = false); /** This function initializes wxWidgets in a platform-dependent way. Use this if you are not using the default wxWidgets entry code (e.g. main or WinMain). For example, you can initialize wxWidgets from an Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFC) application using this function. @note This overload of wxEntry is available under all platforms. @see wxEntryStart() @header{wx/app.h} */ int wxEntry(int& argc, wxChar** argv); /** See wxEntry(int&,wxChar**) for more info about this function. Notice that under Windows CE platform, and only there, the type of @a pCmdLine is @c wchar_t *, otherwise it is @c char *, even in Unicode build. @remarks To clean up wxWidgets, call wxApp::OnExit followed by the static function wxApp::CleanUp. For example, if exiting from an MFC application that also uses wxWidgets: @code int CTheApp::ExitInstance() { // OnExit isn't called by CleanUp so must be called explicitly. wxTheApp->OnExit(); wxApp::CleanUp(); return CWinApp::ExitInstance(); } @endcode @header{wx/app.h} */ int wxEntry(HINSTANCE hInstance, HINSTANCE hPrevInstance = NULL, char* pCmdLine = NULL, int nCmdShow = SW_SHOWNORMAL); //@} /** @ingroup group_funcmacro_procctrl */ //@{ /** Exits application after calling wxApp::OnExit. Should only be used in an emergency: normally the top-level frame should be deleted (after deleting all other frames) to terminate the application. See wxCloseEvent and wxApp. @header{wx/app.h} */ void wxExit(); //@}