It is often useful to know where is the focus coming from, for example
to determine if was in another window of the same composite control.
Remember the last focus in yet another global variable in wxGTK code to
allow setting wxFocusEvent::m_window correctly when generating
wxEVT_SET_FOCUS events.
The old wxEVT_SEARCHCTRL_{SEARCH,CANCEL}_BTN event names were unwieldy
and misleading because both of these events can be generated without
using the buttons, but by pressing Enter or Esc (the latter currently
works under macOS only, but this could change in the future).
Set background style to indicate that wxSearchButton is painted entirely
by its wxEVT_PAINT handler.
This should eliminate potential flicker under MSW.
This event doesn't make any sense for this control, was never generated
by the native macOS version and couldn't be generated under MSW neither
as it's only supported by the multiline control and not the single-line
version used here, so having this code in wxSearchCtrl just made no
sense at all.
Make it possible to bind to just wxEVT_SEARCHCTRL_SEARCH_BTN under all
platforms: previously, it was also necessary to bind to wxEVT_TEXT_ENTER
when using the generic implementation, as pressing Enter in the text
control didn't generate the dedicated SEARCH event.
It does now, and, to avoid any confusion, the control does not generate
wxEVT_TEXT_ENTER events at all any more. This is not really
incompatible, as wxOSX never generated these events anyhow and the
generic version only did for a couple of days, since the changes of
9816970797 which were, finally, misguided
and so are undone by this commit.
Closes#17911.
There doesn't seem to be any need for painstakingly translating STC font
weight to DWRITE_FONT_WEIGHT when they seem to use exactly the same
numeric values anyhow.
This also fixes compilation when using older SDK versions that don't
define DWRITE_FONT_WEIGHT_SEMI_LIGHT constant, which is relatively
recent (and presence of which can't be easily checked, as it's an enum
element and not a preprocessor constant).
This was broken because wxSearchCtrl inherited the base class version of
ChangeValue() which didn't really work for it due to the poor way in
which wxTextEntry is designed (see #18071).
Closes#16998.
This was useless as wxCompositeWindow, from which the generic
wxSearchCtrl derives, already sets focus to its first child and, since
the last commit, even harmful as it now resulted in calls to SetFocus()
from inside wxEVT_SET_FOCUS handler which is forbidden at least under
MSW.
See #15569.
This is more of a test as the security vulnerability (CVE-2017-9935)
fixed in the upstream doesn't affect our use of the library, but still
update it to check if we can do this as easily as by just merging the
new upstream version into our submodule.
Overlong (and hence invalid) 4-byte encoding was used for this character
instead of the correct 3-byte 0xEF 0xBF 0xBF sequence.
Fix this by using 3 bytes for the code points up to 0xFFFF included,
instead of excluding it as was done before.
Closes#17920.
Check whether wxTextCtrl has focus using Win32 ::GetFocus() instead of
by comparing FindFocus() with "this" pointer, as the latter fails when
wxTextCtrl is part of a composite control, such as wxSearchCtrl.
This is enough to make pressing TAB in wxSearchCtrl correctly go to the
next control instead of just beeping.
Note that we could also use DoFindFocus() here, but this would be
needlessly less efficient as we don't really need to find wxWindow
corresponding to the focused HWND, as that function does. But we can't
use HasFocus() here as it wouldn't work correctly here when the focus is
on another sub-window of a composite control also containing this
wxTextCtrl.
wxSearchCtrl never generated this event, at least under MSW, even though
the code to forward it from wxSearchTextCtrl was present in it, because
it was never generated in the first place without wxTE_PROCESS_ENTER.
Fix this by simply always using this style in wxSearchTextCtrl.
In a twist on the usual theme, the previous commits broke the Unix build
when _using_ PCH because wx/textcompleter.h was only included from
inside "#ifndef WX_PRECOMP" check, but it needs to be always included as
wx/wx.h doesn't include it.
Don't do it only when the text entry is (or becomes again) empty, this
breaks dynamic completers such as the one used in the widgets sample,
which determines its completions depending on the already entered text
(of course, the sample example is not particularly useful, as the
completions are always the same, but it's supposed to show that they
could dynamically depend on the already entered part of the string).
Doing two different things in the same class, using m_isDynamicCompleter
to determine which kind of completion is used, was not very clear, so
create two simple classes each of which does one and one thing only and
create the one we need in wxTextEntry methods.
Note that wxTextAutoCompleteDynamic can assume to always have a valid
wxTextCompleter as otherwise no wxTextAutoCompleteData is needed at all,
which results in more simplifications.
There should be no changes in behaviour.
There should be no need to handle this class specially and it's supposed
to be just an implementation detail, so don't add any dependencies on it
(if it's really important to optimize for this case, the check should be
done for wxTextCompleterSimple and use wxRTTI as wxWidgets still
supports being built without standard C++ RTTI).
This function was now used only once and it's not really useful to have
a trivial wrapper around the corresponding GTK+ function, just use it
directly.
The new function both sets the new model and calls
gtk_entry_completion_complete() instead of always doing first the one
and then the other: if both calls needs to always be done together, it
makes sense to have a function doing both of them.
Use factory function instead of ctor and IsOk() check, as this
simplifies the code using this class: if factory function fails, it can
just return NULL, which is what the caller used to do explicitly after
freeing the new object before.
Also don't assert if there is no associated GtkEntry, AutoComplete() is
supposed to just return false if using it with the given control is not
implemented under the current platform.
This allows to avoid initializing the variables to 0 in all the
overloaded ctors: wxSize default ctor already does it.
It's also more convenient to use GetScaledSize() rather than assigning
m_width and m_height separately, even if the rest of the code is broadly
unchanged.
We can reuse another ctor taking wxWindow* instead. Although this does
require an ugly cast, it's more explicit than just passing 0 which
could, in principle, match both the ctor taking wxWindow* and another
one taking double, and so is still preferable.
This is similar to the previous commit and is done for the same reasons:
screen DC needs to use the same DPI as the screen itself, instead of the
default Cairo 72 DPI.
For wxDC associated with a window, such as wx{Window,Client,Paint}DC,
this method should return the window PPI, not the hard coded 72 DPI of
Cairo graphics context.
This still doesn't work correctly when using multiple monitors with
different DPI settings, but is still a (modest) improvement.
Recent sorting-related changes resulted in calling FindNode(), which
can only be used with the non-"virtual list" models, unconditionally,
after the items values was changed by user, resulting in a crash.
Add the missing IsVirtualList() check and also add a comment explicitly
stating that all code involving wxDataViewTreeNode can only be used
after checking that IsVirtualList() returns false.
Closes#18057.