376 lines
23 KiB
HTML
376 lines
23 KiB
HTML
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
|
||
<HTML>
|
||
<HEAD>
|
||
<META HTTP-EQUIV="CONTENT-TYPE" CONTENT="text/html; charset=utf-8">
|
||
<TITLE></TITLE>
|
||
<META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="OpenOffice.org 2.3 (Linux)">
|
||
<META NAME="AUTHOR" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CREATED" CONTENT="20080829;16130000">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGED" CONTENT="20090209;11181400">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Julian Smart">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<META NAME="CHANGEDBY" CONTENT="Robert Roebling">
|
||
<STYLE TYPE="text/css">
|
||
<!--
|
||
@page { margin: 2cm }
|
||
P { margin-bottom: 0.21cm }
|
||
H2 { margin-bottom: 0.21cm }
|
||
H2.western { font-family: "Albany AMT", sans-serif; font-size: 14pt; font-style: italic }
|
||
H2.cjk { font-family: "Albany AMT"; font-size: 14pt; font-style: italic }
|
||
H2.ctl { font-family: "Arial Unicode MS"; font-size: 14pt; font-style: italic }
|
||
H3.western { font-family: "Albany", sans-serif }
|
||
H3.cjk { font-family: "HG Mincho Light J" }
|
||
H3.ctl { font-family: "Arial Unicode MS" }
|
||
-->
|
||
</STYLE>
|
||
</HEAD>
|
||
<BODY LANG="de-DE" DIR="LTR">
|
||
<H2 CLASS="western">The Wonderful World of wxWidgets 3.0</H2>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">What is wxWidgets?</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Although it is quite unlikely that you'll read this
|
||
document if you don't know what wxWidgets is, let's just briefly
|
||
mention that wxWidgets is a C++ framework for building rich GUI
|
||
applications from a single source which can then be compiled on
|
||
different operating systems, resulting in a native application on
|
||
each system. wxWidgets uses native controls (or widgets) and other
|
||
native functions wherever possible so that the resulting
|
||
applications will look and feel as native as possible, and they are
|
||
usually not distinguishable from applications written using single
|
||
platform toolkits such as MFC for Windows, GTK+ for Linux or Cocoa
|
||
under OS X. In some areas (such as graphics art or the installer),
|
||
adaptations to the individual platforms have to be made in order to
|
||
achieve perfect integration with that platform.</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>The major operating system for which wxWidgets
|
||
supports are Windows (Windows 95, NT, 2000, XP, Vista) including its
|
||
mobile variants (Windows CE, PocketPC, Windows Mobile), Linux and
|
||
Unix using the GTK+ 2 toolkit (minimum version is GTK+ 2.6, more
|
||
recent features are used when available) and Mac OS X (minimum
|
||
version 10.5 Tiger, both Intel, PPC and the Universal Binaries for
|
||
both are supported). wxWidgets includes many code pieces for
|
||
optimising dialog and general layout for small screens such as those
|
||
of the recent netbooks and mobile phones and tablets.</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>There is varying support for other platforms or
|
||
toolkits such as OS/2, Motif, GTK 1.2 and various mobile
|
||
Linux variants using GTK+ or the Hildon framework and also a version
|
||
for OS X using the Cocoa API and even the iPhone SDK.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">Documentation in Doxygen</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Until wxWidgets 3.0 all
|
||
documentation was written in a customized LaTeX variant created for
|
||
the project years ago. Although there were tools which could parse
|
||
classes automatically and create a documentation skeleton, class
|
||
documentation was troublesome to update and therefore often outdated.
|
||
In order to improve this situation, the entire documentation
|
||
including references and overviews was converted to a customized
|
||
Doxygen format inlined in a special set of headers. Although many
|
||
classes were converted in a single automated step, every class
|
||
documentation had to be corrected by hand making this effort one of
|
||
the biggest in the development cycle leading up wxWidgets 3.0.
|
||
Additionally, tools were written to automatically compare the
|
||
signature of the many class methods to the documentation. The result
|
||
is more correct documentation with better formating and built-in
|
||
searching and screenshots of many controls. Since Doxygen is a
|
||
wide-spread format and easy to learn, the new documentation is much
|
||
easier to edit, correct and read. See the <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/index.html">wxWidgets
|
||
on-line documentation</A> to which this document refers to in many
|
||
places.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">C++ features and template support</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">The wxWidgets project
|
||
tries to both move with new developments of the C++ language as well
|
||
as to support older compilers to an extent which does not inhibit
|
||
further development and indeed the usefulness of the entire project.
|
||
Since support for templates used to be limited to a few compilers and
|
||
was often buggy even in them, wxWidgets initially stayed away from
|
||
using templates entirely including the use of the Standard Template
|
||
Library (STL). In the meantime nearly all compilers have gained solid
|
||
template support and therefore wxWidgets is now using templates for
|
||
container classes (such as <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_vector_3_01_t_01_4.html">wxVector<T></A>),
|
||
smart pointers (such as <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_shared_ptr_3_01_t_01_4.html">wxSharedPtr<T></A>),
|
||
weak references (see <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_weak_ref_3_01_t_01_4.html">wxWeakRef<T></A>)
|
||
and many other places where templates are useful. This means that
|
||
very old compilers won't be able to compile wxWidgets anymore or only
|
||
in a degraded way (such as Visual C++ 6.0).</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">Platform features and backwards compatibility</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">In the same way wxWidgets
|
||
tries to both make use of new features of the different operating
|
||
systems and support older systems for as long as possible and as long
|
||
as supporting them does not hinder development for up-to-date
|
||
systems. This is especially true for OS X and GTK+ 2 and it was
|
||
therefore decided that OS X versions older than 10.5 Leopard and GTK+ 2
|
||
version older than 2.6 are no longer supported. The wxWidgets team
|
||
also realized that it could not do everything and that support for a
|
||
cross-platform database API was beyond the scope and focus of the
|
||
project so that its old wxODBC database connectivity classes were
|
||
removed from the project. There are many cross-platform database
|
||
libraries available and many of them are better than the old wxODBC
|
||
and all of them are better maintained.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">Unicode: A Single Build for Everyone</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Until version 3.0 there
|
||
have always been two different versions (or builds) of wxWidgets: one
|
||
with full support for Unicode where each character was represented by
|
||
a wchar_t internally (using two bytes under Windows and four bytes
|
||
almost everywhere else) and another called the „ANSI“ build where
|
||
each character was represented by a single byte. This model was
|
||
chosen following the original Windows API model and at a point of
|
||
time when Unicode support was hardly present anywhere else. In the
|
||
meantime, the Windows world together with projects such as Java have
|
||
chosen UTF-16 as the native representation for Unicode strings
|
||
whereas much of the free software world including GTK+ and parts of
|
||
Mac OS X have chosen UTF-8. It was therefore decided to drastically
|
||
change the implementation of wxWidgets' string class and make it use
|
||
UTF-16 under Windows (mostly as before) but UTF-8 elsewhere (instead
|
||
of wide character strings using wchar_t) so that strings received
|
||
from and sent to Unix and GTK+ library calls would no longer have to
|
||
be converted back and forth between different Unicode representations
|
||
(see <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_string.html">wxString</A>
|
||
and <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/overview_unicode.html">Unicode
|
||
overview</A>). Additionally, the „ANSI“ mode was removed and the
|
||
wxString class as well as some other classes were modified to accept
|
||
and return both Unicode and 8-bit string literals if required. The
|
||
same was done to functions like wxPrintf() etc. Although this change
|
||
will eventually not be seen by the end user of an application written
|
||
using wxWidgets, it is such a fundamental change that it was the
|
||
primary reason to give wxWidgets the new major version number 3.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">New 2D Drawing Code</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Although a 2D drawing API
|
||
has always been part of wxWidgets (using so-called device contexts
|
||
such as a window or a bitmap and pens and brushes to draw into them,
|
||
see <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_d_c.html">wxDC</A>,
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_pen.html">wxPen</A>,
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_brush.html">wxBrush</A>),
|
||
it has not changed much since its initial inception and so the code
|
||
was completely reorganized using a single set of frontend classes and
|
||
different backends which will make maintainance much easier without
|
||
having to care for binary backwards compatibility and it also helped
|
||
isolate a number of subtle platform differences. The old drawing API
|
||
is good enough for many tasks and reflects the drawing capabilites of
|
||
the 1990's but it didn't make use of advanced features such as
|
||
transparency, anti-aliasing and free matrix transforms of modern 2D
|
||
graphics systems such as GDI+ on Windows, Cairo on Linux (and
|
||
elsewhere) and CoreGraphics on OS X. Therefore a completely new
|
||
drawing API (the so called graphics contexts, see <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_graphics_context.html">wxGraphicsContext</A>)
|
||
was added to wxWidgets making use of modern drawing engines. This is
|
||
complemented by a bitmap class with alpha channel support and fast
|
||
raw access to the bitmap's internal data representation. Additionally
|
||
the API of all existing GDI class constants was corrected so that
|
||
wxMODERN becomes wxFONTFAMILY_MODERN, wxSOLID becomes
|
||
wxBRUSHSTYLE_SOLID etc. and the reference counting system was
|
||
streamlined and made identical on all platforms.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">Changes to wxBase</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxBase is the name of the non-GUI part of wxWidgets
|
||
libary which provides basic class such as the aforementioned wxString
|
||
class, container classes, as well as classes for threading,
|
||
networking, XML parsing, path and configuration management, logging,
|
||
debugging etc. These functions and classes have been separated into
|
||
their own library both for being able to write non-GUI apps as well
|
||
as to make maintainance easier through reduced interdependence.
|
||
</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Many of the changes to wxString and the container
|
||
classes are located in wxBase, but on top of that support to wxBase
|
||
was added for events loops, timers and sockets for writing
|
||
event-based client or server apps with wxWidgets 3.0. The socket code
|
||
itself has been reorganized removing a lot of duplicated code and
|
||
dropping the previous implementation which was separated into a C and
|
||
a C++ part.</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">New controls and other major GUI additions for
|
||
all ports</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>This document cannot list every bug fix and minor
|
||
change. Rather, this paragraph summarizes the most relevant changes
|
||
to the GUI classes of wxWidgets. Given wxWidgets' nature as a GUI
|
||
library, these changes are also most likely to be visible to the user
|
||
and may thus be the most important changes from a user's perspective
|
||
(although not necessarily from a developer's perspective):
|
||
</P>
|
||
<UL>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxDataViewCtrl and wxDataViewTreeCtrl: this
|
||
control can partially replace both wxListCtrl and wxTreeCtrl (for
|
||
which there only was a native version of Windows and partially for
|
||
OS X) but also extends and combines the classes by being able to
|
||
display a hierarchy and list at the same time and by offering a much
|
||
more flexible way to display and edit data on a per column basis.
|
||
Reimplementing wxTreeCtrl and possibly wxListCtrl in terms of
|
||
wxDataViewCtrl was considered, but this was dropped as certain
|
||
special features are not available on all platforms (or
|
||
differently). See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_data_view_ctrl.html">wxDataViewCtrl</A>,
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_data_view_list_ctrl.html">wxDataViewListCtrl</A>
|
||
and <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_data_view_tree_ctrl.html">wxDataViewTreeCtrl</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>The tabular view of wxGrid has been improved
|
||
including a native header control, which has been separated into a
|
||
new control. See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_grid.html">wxGrid</A>
|
||
and <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_header_ctrl.html">wxHeaderCtrl.</A></P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added wxPropertyGrid which is a big generic
|
||
control used to display lists and hierarchies of name-value pairs.
|
||
Like wxDataViewCtrl, it offers a number of ready-to-use editors for
|
||
editing text, numbers, lists, fonts, file names etc. using in-place
|
||
editing or using pop-up dialog and combo boxes. Development of
|
||
wxPropertyGrid has so far taken place outside of wxWidgets as a
|
||
separate project, but it has not been included in wxWidgets per se.
|
||
See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_property_grid.html">wxPropertyGrid</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxHyperlinkCtrl added, implemented natively
|
||
under GTK+ and in a generic way on other platforms. It can be used
|
||
to represent a hypertext link, for example to the homepage of the
|
||
developer or company. See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_hyperlink_ctrl.html">wxHyperlinkCtrl</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxFileCtrl for constructing fully customized
|
||
file dialogs. Complementary to this, the possibility to add custom
|
||
control to wxFileDialog has been added. See <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_file_ctrl.html">wxFileCtrl</A>
|
||
and <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_file_dialog.html">wxFileDialog</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Several enhancements to wxRichTextCtrl
|
||
including support for super- and subscript and many speed-ups. See
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_rich_text_ctrl.html">wxRichTextCtrl</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>The possibility to display state icons has been
|
||
added to wxTreeCtrl. This can also be used to implement check-box
|
||
like behaviour. See <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_tree_ctrl.html">wxTreeCtrl</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxCalendarCtrl has been rewritten using native
|
||
code under MSW and GTK+ and enhanced in many ways (for example
|
||
displaying week numbers). See <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_calendar_ctrl.html">wxCalendarCtrl</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Implemented support for auto-completion for
|
||
wxTextCtrl and wxComboBox.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added wxAUIToolBar to the set of wxAUI classes,
|
||
which is better integrated and more flexible than the standard
|
||
wxToolBar.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Reimplemented wxBitmapComboBox using native
|
||
code under MSW and GTK+. See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_bitmap_combo_box.html">wxBitmapComboBox</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added wxBitmapToggleButton on all platforms.
|
||
See also <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_bitmap_toggle_button.html">wxBitmapToggleButton</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added support for ellipsization on all
|
||
platforms and for mark-up formatting under GTK+ to wxStaticText. See
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_static_text.html">wxStaticText</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Rewritten the selection event emission logic of
|
||
wxListBox on all platforms to more exactly match each other when
|
||
selecting and deselecting certain items.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Implemented wxCollapsiblePane natively for GTK
|
||
and OS X. See <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_collapsible_pane.html">wxCollapsiblePane</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added a new sizer which can wrap across
|
||
multiple lines. See <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_wrap_sizer.html">wxWrapSizer</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added multi-sample and anti-aliasing support
|
||
to the OpenGL canvas and separated wxGLCanvas and wxGLContext. See
|
||
<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_g_l_canvas.html">wxGLCanvas</A>.</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Added wxNativeContainerWindow in order to
|
||
construct a wxTopLevelWindow from a native window handle (MSW and
|
||
GTK+).</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>The <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_v_scrolled_window.html">wxVScrolledWindow</A>
|
||
class has been completely rewritten to accommodate the addition of
|
||
the new horizontal scrolling variants (<A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_h_scrolled_window.html">wxHScrolledWindow</A>
|
||
and <A HREF="https://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/classwx_h_v_scrolled_window.html">wxHVScrolledWindow</A>)
|
||
while still providing complete backwards compatibility for
|
||
wxVScrolledWindow.</P>
|
||
</UL>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">wxMac specific changes (now called wxOSX)</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>One important change of the wxMac port is that the
|
||
port is not called wxMac anymore. Instead, the more appropriate term
|
||
wxOSX should be used as the operating system is called OS X nowadays
|
||
and – more importantly – wxWidgets now has partial support for
|
||
iPhone and iPod, and these are devices are clearly not Macs. Apart
|
||
from the name change – wxMac has undergone the most fundamental
|
||
changes of the three main ports, even if some of the changes were
|
||
mostly reorganizing code instead of writing new code. The code has
|
||
been reorganized into common code (common to Carbon, Cocoa, and Cocoa
|
||
Touch) including both general wrapping or front-end classes for much
|
||
of the GUI code as well as a wrapper for the so called CoreFoundation
|
||
classes of OS X, which are responsible on all OS X variants for
|
||
string manipulation, font support, graphics and other basic
|
||
functionality and toolkit dependent code for the Carbon, Cocoa, and
|
||
Cocoa Touch API. wxOSX/Carbon is the core of what used to be wxMac
|
||
and is now deprecated in favour of wxOSX/Cocoa. Existing applications
|
||
are encouraged to switch to wxOSX/Cocoa as Carbon is a deprecated OS X
|
||
feature, not available for 64-bit GUI applications, and not available for
|
||
iOS devices at all.</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>As part of the restructuring, all remaining drawing
|
||
code using the old QuickDraw API has been removed (it was only an
|
||
option before) and drawing now always takes place using CoreGraphics.
|
||
Likewise, all code using Carbon functions no longer present in OS X
|
||
10.4 and 10.5 has been removed to clean-up the code greatly. This is turn
|
||
means, as mentioned above, that applications will require a minimum
|
||
of OS X 10.5 in order to run.</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Apart from these large changes, these additional
|
||
features can be noted:</P>
|
||
<UL>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Better support for IconRef</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>A fix for duplicate menu entries in non-English
|
||
locales</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>Accelerators allowed to be used for buttons</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY>wxLocale::GetInfo() implemented using CFLocale</P>
|
||
</UL>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">wxGTK specific changes</H3>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">The task of the GTK+ port
|
||
of wxWidgets is to keep up with the development of the GTK+ library
|
||
since it has the habit of adding new controls or new APIs if the
|
||
existing code is too limited and cannot be fixed in a backward
|
||
compatible way. The main problem of this approach is that
|
||
applications written using wxGTK should work with relatively old
|
||
versions of GTK+ but should also make use of recent features. In some
|
||
cases, supporting an old version of GTK+ hinders development so we
|
||
decided to declare GTK+ 2.6 the minimum toolkit version that is
|
||
supported. As an example, this made it possible to always use the
|
||
GTK+ file dialog instead of the old generic file dialog which had to
|
||
be used when GTK+ didn't have a usable file dialog.
|
||
</P>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Other parts of wxGTK that
|
||
were rewritten or which underwent a major update include, but are not
|
||
limited to:</P>
|
||
<UL>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">wxToolbar now uses
|
||
the „new“ GTK+ toolbar API</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">wxChoice now uses
|
||
GtkComboBox instead of the deprecated GtkOptionMenu</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">wxComboBox now
|
||
always uses GtkComboBox instead of the deprecated GtkCombo class</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">URL dragging using
|
||
the „text/x-moz-url“ in wxURLDataObject</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Added a completely
|
||
new printing backend using with dialogs GtkPrint and Cairo</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Rewritten idle event
|
||
generation code</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Tab traversal is now
|
||
done natively by GTK+ instead of by wxWidgets</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Rewrote layout of
|
||
wxFrame's menubar, toolbar, client window and statusbar using a
|
||
GtkVBox instead of our own calculation</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Correctly
|
||
implemented SetSize() and GetSize() for toplevel windows in spite of
|
||
the dreaded problems with window decorations belonging to the Window
|
||
Manager and not the window itself</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Added an
|
||
asynchronous API to wxClipboard to avoid having to call wxYield()
|
||
from within it (which causes reentrance problems).</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Some support for
|
||
Hildon control from the Maemo platform used for Nokia tablets</P>
|
||
<LI><P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Rewritten the
|
||
wxTaskBarIconIcon class using GtkStatusIcon if available.</P>
|
||
</UL>
|
||
<P ALIGN=JUSTIFY STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm"><BR>
|
||
</P>
|
||
<H3 CLASS="western">wxMSW specific changes</H3>
|
||
<P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">wxMSW is the most mature platform,
|
||
mostly because it is used most often and thus has the biggest user,
|
||
tester and developer base, but also because the underlying Windows
|
||
system has been more successful at preserving backwards
|
||
compatibility. Therefore, the list of wxMSW-specific changes is
|
||
smaller and the changes usually minor details when compared to the
|
||
changes of the other two main ports:</P>
|
||
<UL>
|
||
<LI><P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Implemented more native looking
|
||
wxCheckListBox and add ability to store client data in it</P>
|
||
<LI><P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Allow longer tooltips</P>
|
||
<LI><P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Support for multiline labels in
|
||
wxCheckBox and wxToggleButton</P>
|
||
<LI><P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">More precise print preview</P>
|
||
<LI><P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm">Show resize gripper in resizable
|
||
dialogs</P>
|
||
</UL>
|
||
<P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm"><BR>
|
||
</P>
|
||
<P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm"><BR>
|
||
</P>
|
||
<P STYLE="margin-bottom: 0cm"><BR>
|
||
</P>
|
||
</BODY>
|
||
</HTML>
|