Prepare for using liblzma in wxWidgets code by adding the necessary
option and updating the configure check for it (which had been already
present due to libtiff possible dependency on liblzma).
No real changes yet.
Make it possible to call wxStandardPaths::MakeConfigFileName() without
explicitly specifying the convention to use, to make it conform to the
documentation (previously this only worked when calling the
wxStandardPathsBase version of the method).
Closes#18106.
ProcessPendingEvents() was never called when using MFC event loop,
meaning that queued events were never processed, so that using
CallAfter() didn't work.
Fix this and also ensure that these events are processed soon enough by
also implementing WakeUpIdle() for such applications, as wxWakeUpIdle()
didn't do anything neither for them.
Remove various definitions and symbol declarations from
numerous files using msw/uxtheme.h to a single file.
When possible vssym32.h is included from the Windows SDK.
For older SDKs tmschema.h is included and missing symbols
are defined in msw/uxtheme.h.
This undocumented "private" class was used for various windows UxTheme
functions which are available since WinXP. As wxWidgets 3.1 is XP+ it
does not make sense anymore to load the theme functions dynamically.
Reset m_pMainWnd in wxMFCApp::ExitInstance() to avoid crash when
deleting it again in OnMainWindowDestroyed() that could happen if
ExitInstance() was called not because the main window was closed (normal
case) but because wxApp::ExitMainLoop() was called, as it happens when
an unhandled exception is thrown.
Use __ms_u_long instead of just u_long with Cygwin to avoid mismatch
between (64 bit) Cygwin long and (still 32 bit, even in 64 bit build)
Windows API long.
Since the switch to using an event object for idle handling wakeup,
WM_NULLs are not being sent any longer, so wxIdleWakeUpModule didn't do
anything, resulting in pending event dispatching being paused while our
event loop was not running, as it happened, for example, while the
window was resized.
See #17579.
This reverts commit ebb3a791b9,
effectively reapplying 6c40531fb7 once
again.
This breaks wake up when not running our own event loop once again
(see #17579), but this will be fixed in the next commit.
We need to explicitly generate this event from the char hook handler as
we don't get the normal WM_CHAR for it, it is apparently intercepted by
the window proc installed by the auto-completing code, so check if
wxTE_PROCESS_ENTER is used for the text entry and call a special new
MSWProcessSpecialKey() method to do the right thing if it is.
Similarly, handle Tab presses correctly if wxTE_PROCESS_TAB is used.
Closes#12613.
Inherit from wxCompositeWindowSettersOnly<> to make sure all the usual
setters, such as SetForegroundColour() and SetFont(), called on
wxStaticBox are propagated to the label window too.
However also prevent SetBackgroundColour() from being propagated
unnecessarily -- because the checkbox already inherits the parent
background colour by default in wxMSW anyhow -- and still override
SetFont() to adjust the label window position after the font change,
otherwise it could be truncated after increasing the font size, for
example.
Because of these issues, wxCompositeWindowSettersOnly is not ideally
suited for its use here, but on balance it still seems to be better to
use it rather than reimplement parts of its functionality here.
When using two-step creation, as when loading from resources, for
example, it can be convenient to create wxMFCWnd as part of the (parent)
wxWindow object, but only attach it to the real HWND later, once it
becomes available.
This avoids using m_pMainWnd after its HWND becomes invalid, as this
resulted in assert failures from CWnd::WalkPreTranslateTree() called
with this HWND as its hWndStop argument from PreTranslateMessage() which
was used to pre-translate a WM_NULL message the application sometimes
received while closing down.
Still use the active event loop if there is one, just in case it
customizes messages pre-processing, but fall back on the standard
pre-processing code even if there is no active wx event loop and we're
only running the MFC one, as without doing this there are just too many
things that don't work (e.g. menu accelerators didn't work at all in
mixed wx/MFC applications previously).
When porting an existing MFC codebase to wxWidgets, it may be useful to
continue using the existing CWinApp-derived application class, so allow
deriving wxMFCApp from it instead of always deriving it from CWinApp
itself.
This can be used in order to use normal Unicode build of wxWidgets with
an application that needs to use ANSI versions of Win32 functions, e.g.
because it doesn't compile with UNICODE defined.
Allow reusing this functionality from outside the library, it can he
useful if an MFC window needs to be embedded into a wx application (or
vice versa).
Also use a better wxEntryStart() overload as a side effect, this should,
in particular, fix the problem with command line arguments processing in
mixed MFC/wx applications pointed out in a comment in the sample
previously.
Do not use 'RADIO_SIZE 20' as the fixed width of the radio button, but use the actual width as returned by wxRendererNative.
wxRendererNative has no GetRadioButtonSize, so for now use GetCheckBoxSize. It returns the same sizes.
Also add a half character width to account for the space between the button and the label.
There is no need to add extra width to the label of the static box.
Closes#18010.
Add wxMSWWinStyleUpdater and wxMSWWinExStyleUpdater helper classes which
allow writing code changing GWL_STYLE and GWL_EXSTYLE bits,
respectively, in a shorter and more clear way.
There should be no real changes in behaviour.
Replace the hack with resizing the control to the minimal possible size
while it's frozen with just disabling its scrollbars in the frozen
state. This should also fix the original problem (of scrollbar jumping
around wildly as the items are added), but without different problems
due to the control being resized unexpectedly.
Unfortunately we don't have a reproducer for the original problem, which
the commits 6754c300cf ("Freeze wxTreeCtrl
in wxMSW by hiding it") and 4e1e8dc51b
("Change wxMSW wxTreeCtrl::DoFreeze() to not hide the tree any more" --
but resize it instead) tried to fix, so it's difficult to be sure that
it really doesn't exist any more, but it does seem like it ought to be
as the comment added back then spoke of the problem with scrollbar
updating and this really shouldn't happen if scrollbars are completely
disabled.
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/375
It seems that MinGW-w32 started distributing GDI+ headers since this
version and MinGW-w64 might have supported them for even longer, but
it's difficult to test for the MinGW distribution used in this header,
as it is included before wx/msw/gccpriv.h which defines
__MINGW32_TOOLCHAIN__ and __MINGW64_TOOLCHAIN__ symbols and changing
this is tricky due to relative order of defining UNICODE and
wxUSE_UNICODE and including MinGW headers, which can only be included
once UNICODE is set properly.
But while the fully correct solution is difficult, just checking for the
compiler version should solve the problem in 99.99% of the cases in
practice as there should be vanishingly few people using MinGW-w64 with
gcc < 4.8 currently, so this simple solution is good enough.
Closes#17973.
Handle this feature as all the other ones and provide a configure switch
and a setup.h option to disable it if necessary, as it may be desirable
to do it, especially under Linux, to avoid extra dependency on pangoft2
if this functionality is unnecessary.
Don't request touch event generation for all windows by default, this
has an inherent overhead and is not needed for 99% of the application
windows, so require calling EnableTouchEvents() explicitly to do it
instead.
Note that this requires properly initializing gesture recognizers in
wxOSX now that they're not always allocated, otherwise releasing them
when destroying the window would crash.
Don't repeat the same code for initializing events in several different
functions but put it in a helper InitGestureEvent() function and just
call it from the event-specific handlers.
When column resizing is finished, after HDN_ENDTRACK notification there is
also sent one (and last) HDN_ITEMCHANGING notification. We have to skip it
to prevent from sending EVT_HEADER_RESIZING after EVT_HEADER_END_RESIZE
because EVT_HEADER_END_RESIZE should be really the last one event
in the sequence of resizing events (like it's assumed in wxGrid).
Closes#16390.
Solve the same problem as was recently with hiding, instead of
overriding, Resume() in the native MSW wxProgressDialog class for all
the other methods which were also affected by it.
DoGetPosition() was done in 1ef1f8fda6,
implement DoGetSize() too now in order to give a chance Centre() (which
needs both position and size to work).
See #17768.
No real changes, just prepare for implementing DoGetSize() in this class
by extracting the common part between the existing DoGetPosition() and
it in a new function.
Do this for compatibility with wxGenericProgressDialog, which always did
this and can't really do otherwise as it needs to react to the clicks on
its buttons, and also because not doing it results in the other
application windows being marked as "not responding" by MSW, which looks
bad.
Closes#17768.
Acquire the lock in wxProgressDialog::DoNativeBeforeUpdate() itself
instead of relying on the caller to do it.
This is just a refactoring in preparation for further changes.
It needs to be overridden in the native MSW wxProgressDialog
implementation, but was only hidden by the function with the same name
in the derived class, making it impossible to call the right function
via the base class pointer, for example.
This method is supposed to adjust the dialog size to its contents and
while the dialog increases automatically when using native
implementation under MSW, it doesn't shrink back on its own and so it's
still useful to allow Fit() to do it.
Update the sample to test Fit() too.
wxFont::AddPrivateFont() can now be used to load a font from a file for the
applications private use. Update the font sample to show this.
Closes#13568.