wxWidgets/interface/wx/control.h

161 lines
5.4 KiB
Objective-C

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Name: control.h
// Purpose: interface of wxControl
// Author: wxWidgets team
// RCS-ID: $Id$
// Licence: wxWindows license
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/**
Flags used by wxControl::Ellipsize function.
*/
enum wxEllipsizeFlags
{
/// With this flag when calculating the size of the passed string, mnemonics
/// characters (see wxControl::SetLabel) will be automatically reduced to a
/// single character.
/// This leads to correct calculations only if the string passed to Ellipsize()
/// will be used with wxControl::SetLabel. If you don't want ampersand to
/// be interpreted as mnemonics (e.g. because you use wxControl::SetLabelText)
/// then don't use this flag.
wxELLIPSIZE_PROCESS_MNEMONICS = 1,
/// This flag tells wxControl::Ellipsize to calculate the width of tab
/// characters @c '\\t' as 6 spaces.
wxELLIPSIZE_EXPAND_TAB = 2,
/// The default flags for wxControl::Ellipsize.
wxELLIPSIZE_DEFAULT_FLAGS = wxELLIPSIZE_PROCESS_MNEMONICS|wxELLIPSIZE_EXPAND_TAB
};
/**
The different ellipsization modes supported by the
wxControl::Ellipsize function.
*/
enum wxEllipsizeMode
{
/// Put the ellipsis at the start of the string, if the string needs ellipsization.
wxELLIPSIZE_START,
/// Put the ellipsis in the middle of the string, if the string needs ellipsization.
wxELLIPSIZE_MIDDLE,
/// Put the ellipsis at the end of the string, if the string needs ellipsization.
wxELLIPSIZE_END
};
/**
@class wxControl
This is the base class for a control or "widget".
A control is generally a small window which processes user input and/or
displays one or more item of data.
@library{wxcore}
@category{ctrl}
@see wxValidator
*/
class wxControl : public wxWindow
{
public:
/**
Simulates the effect of the user issuing a command to the item.
@see wxCommandEvent
*/
virtual void Command(wxCommandEvent& event);
/**
Replaces parts of the @a label string with ellipsis, if needed, so
that it doesn't exceed @a maxWidth.
@param label
The string to ellipsize
@param dc
The DC used to retrieve the character widths through the
wxDC::GetPartialTextExtents() function.
@param mode
The ellipsization modes. See ::wxEllipsizeMode.
@param maxWidth
The maximum width of the returned string in pixels.
@param flags
One or more of the ::wxEllipsize
*/
static wxString Ellipsize(const wxString& label, const wxDC& dc,
wxEllipsizeMode mode, int maxWidth,
int flags = wxELLIPSIZE_DEFAULT_FLAGS);
/**
Returns the control's text.
@note The returned string contains mnemonics ("&" characters) if it has
any, use GetLabelText() if they are undesired.
*/
wxString GetLabel() const;
/**
Returns the control's label without mnemonics.
*/
wxString GetLabelText() const;
/**
Returns the given @a label string without mnemonics ("&" characters).
*/
static wxString GetLabelText(const wxString& label);
/**
Removes the mnemonics ("&" characters) from the given string.
*/
static wxString RemoveMnemonics(const wxString& str);
/**
Escape the special mnemonics characters ("&") in the given string.
This function can be helpful if you need to set the controls label to a
user-provided string. If the string contains ampersands, they wouldn't
appear on the display but be used instead to indicate that the
character following the first of them can be used as a control mnemonic.
While this can sometimes be desirable (e.g. to allow the user to
configure mnemonics of the controls), more often you will want to use
this function before passing a user-defined string to SetLabel().
Alternatively, if the label is entirely user-defined, you can just call
SetLabelText() directly -- but this function must be used if the label
is a combination of a part defined by program containing the control
mnemonics and a user-defined part.
@param text
The string such as it should appear on the display.
@return
The same string with the ampersands in it doubled.
*/
static wxString EscapeMnemonics(const wxString& text);
/**
Sets the item's text.
Any "&" characters in the @a label are special and indicate that the
following character is a @e mnemonic for this control and can be used to
activate it from the keyboard (typically by using @e Alt key in
combination with it). To insert a literal ampersand character, you need
to double it, i.e. use use "&&". If this behaviour is undesirable, use
SetLabelText() instead.
*/
void SetLabel(const wxString& label);
/**
Sets the item's text to exactly the given string.
Unlike SetLabel(), this function shows exactly the @a text passed to it
in the control, without interpreting ampersands in it in any way.
Notice that it means that the control can't have any mnemonic defined
for it using this function.
@see EscapeMnemonics()
*/
void SetLabelText(const wxString& text);
};