For native wxGTK implementation default spin control precision is derived
from the precision of the increment value. Fot the sake of consistency the
same should be done in the generic implementation.
Closes#18764.
Define it in wx/defs.h directly instead of conditionally including
wx/windowid.h from there just in order to get this type definition.
This has several advantages:
- wxWindowIDRef is not defined in (maybe) non-GUI code including
wx/defs.h, as it should be the case for this class defined in
core library only.
- wx/windowid.h becomes a normal header, including wx/defs.h as
(almost) all the other ones instead of being exceptional.
- wx/windowid.h doesn't need to be included by wx/utils.h at all
just to get wxWindowID definition.
Closes https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1850
Remove separate checks for dlerror() which don't seem to be needed under
any platform any longer.
No real changes, just slim down configure/CMake a tiny bit.
This function is not used any more since e289eb07e1 (Get rid of
non-POSIX code for loading dynlibs on *nix, 2020-05-13), so don't check
for it and don't defined the corresponding HAVE_SHL_LOAD symbol.
Reduces the amount of #ifdefs scattered all over the code, thereby
simplifying the code.
The function was renamed from Error() to ReportError() to emphasize what
its purpose is.
Error messages logged on *nix are now a bit more verbose, as they are
prefixed with our own description text, which were earlier omitted on
platforms using the dlxxx() API.
This never worked correctly as using operator<<() with wchar_t pointer
just fell back to the overload for void pointers, i.e. printed out the
address of the wide string, which wasn't especially useful, but with
C++20 it doesn't even compile, as this overload is explicitly deleted.
Fix both problems at once by actually doing something useful for it
instead and printing out data in either current encoding or UTF-8 if
converting it to the current encoding failed.
In C++20 the reverse comparison operators are also considered when
searching for the operator to use and a wrong operator was selected for
comparisons between iterator and const_iterator, that would result in an
infinite recursion at run-time.
Fix this, thanks to the nice gcc 10 warning about it, by explicitly
defining the operators for this overload set too instead of relying on
implicit conversions.
Although not all these overloads are necessary, and they are only
necessary in C++20, it seems better to define all of them and always
just to be perfectly explicit and clear, as this code is not exactly
simple to follow.
When determining the entry width in wxSpinCtrlDouble, we need to account
not only for the width of the integer part, but also for the number of
digits that determines the width of the fractional part.
Do it in the overridden version of (now virtual) GtkSetEntryWidth().
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1817Closes#18734.
* fixing compilation of tests that cannot build
bracket code with the corresponding wxUSE… macros
* adding directive for iOS
* adding a switch for skipping the run - not the build of tests
right now I don’t know yet, how to run the test binary in the iOS simulator, but building it is still a good test in itself
* adding skipping of tests
* increasing minimum deployment to get proper c++17 support
* using --disable-sys-libs, restoring other targets
even when the zlib in -isysroot is used, due to deployment on lower iOS versions inflateValidate may not be available and crash. The guards are evaluated using macros from the zlib from the SDK, not from the lowest version supported.
Enable warnings for CMake builds and fix some warnings that this
exposed.
Also add wxUSE_NATIVE_DATAVIEWCTRL option and change default GTK version
to 3 for CMake too.
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1825
We don't have our own dlxxx() implementations under Darwin since 76c5594
(Remove our own dlxxx() functions emulation for OS X <= 10.3.,
2013-10-17).
wxHAVE_DYNLIB_ERROR is reduced to being the same HAVE_DLERROR, so use
the latter one instead.
Closes https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1826
Always set the LB_USETABSTOPS style flag to achieve behaviour more
compatible with other platforms and expand TABs to align them at tab
stops positioned at every 8 characters.
Also add MSW-specific MSWSetTabStops() method allowing to customize tab
stops.
Update the documentation and the sample to demonstrate using TABs.
Closes https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1789
Deleting last grid rows or column in a few event handlers could result
in asserts/crashes in wxGrid code if the event handler also called
event.Skip(), as wxGrid still tried to perform the default action using
the deleted cell, when these events happened in the last row or column.
It's not totally clear whether calling event.Skip() after performing an
action modifying the grid should be allowed at all, but, in doubt, at
least avoid crashing if it does happen, by considering the event as
being handled (and even vetoed) if its handler deleted the cell in which
it was generated.
Closes#18731.
Move the logic determining the return value of SendEvent() into its own
function instead of repeating it twice.
No real changes, this is a pure refactoring.
In addition to the current methods to add/delete one item to the control
we would need a method to replace all existing control items with new ones
at once.
This is more correct as saving the current width of the last column
would prevent the user from shrinking it under the last automatically
set size, i.e. the UI behaviour would change after restarting the
program, which shouldn't be the case.
Doing this required making WXGetManuallySetWidth(), which previously
existed in the generic version only, available in all ports, so do it
and also rename it to WXGetSpecifiedWidth() in the process, as this
seems a somewhat better name (it doesn't have to be manually specified,
i.e. it could also be done by the program itself or even implicitly by
wxPersistentDataViewCtrl).
Don't make this function public, at least for now, because it's not
clear how could it be useful and it might still need to be changed to
behave differently in the other ports.
This fix for disallowing shrinking the last column to nothing instead of
showing horizontal scrollbar when it became smaller than its minimum
size was wrong and is not necessary any more after the correct fix in
the previous commit.
This effectively reverts 0c90ea40c3 (Don't auto-resize wxDataViewCtrl
columns below their initial size, 2019-10-03).
See #18343.
Columns without any explicitly specified width still shouldn't be shrunk
down to 0 size by UpdateColumnSizes(), so handle them as if they were
created using wxDVC_DEFAULT_WIDTH instead -- which is what their actual
width is/would be.
This is a better fix than the one in 0c90ea40c3 (Don't auto-resize
wxDataViewCtrl columns below their initial size, 2019-10-03) and that
commit can be reverted now, as will be done soon.
See #18343.
Unfortunately the fix of the previous commit broke the build because of
the existence of non-GUI functions using GUI-only wxWindowID class.
This will need to be fixed in a better way later, but for now add the
required header back.
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1815
This #include was mistakenly added by e8b8b0288f (Make wxNewId() and
others return/take wxWindowID rather than int, 2019-12-18) and broke
compilation of the code including wx/utils.h as the first header,
because wx/windowid.h can't be included directly and must be only
included from wx/defs.h.
Fix this by just removing it, including any other header is enough to
pull this one in anyhow, via wx/defs.h.
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1682
Closes https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1815
These methods do the same thing, so it seems better to use the same name
for them.
This is not really a backwards-incompatible change, as these methods
were just added in the parent commit, so nobody is using them yet.
Completely overhauled selection handling in wxGrid.
Make various ways of extending selection (using Shift-arrow keys,
Ctrl-Shift-arrows, Shift-click etc) work as expected from the user point
of view instead of producing various bizarre results. Also improve
row/column header click selection as well as Ctrl/Shift-Space handling.
Internally, store selection as just a vector of blocks, independently of
the selection mode, and provide a simple API for iterating over it which
remains usable even with selections containing millions of cells (as
long as they're still composed of only a few blocks, which is the case
in practice).
Add more tests and add display of the current selection to the sample.
See https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets/pull/1772
Unselected current cell should always be considered as the current
selection block to extend, as it doesn't make sense to extend any other
block (perhaps selected on another side of the grid) when pressing
Shift-arrow.
This scenario could be achieved by selecting a block and Ctrl-clicking a
cell (either inside or outside the selection) twice and then extending
it using Shift-arrow keys. Previously, this behaved in a strange way,
combining the corner of the selected block with the target of the
movement, whereas now this just starts selecting a new block from the
current cell as expected.
Also make Page Up/Down themselves work consistently with the other
cursor movement keys and clear current selection if they move the
cursor.
Even though DoMoveCursorByPage() is simpler than DoMoveCursorByBlock(),
still factor out AdvanceByPage() for consistency with AdvanceByBlock()
and because it still makes the code more clear.
Extending the selection with Ctrl-arrows is different from all the other
cases, as we need to combine both the selection anchor and the current
cell coordinates when doing it.
This means that we can't reuse the same PrepareForSelectionExpansion()
helper for this case, so this function is not useful finally and this
commit removes it entirely. It also replaces GetCurrentBlockCornerRow()
and GetCurrentBlockCornerCol() functions with GetExtensionAnchor() which
combines both of them.
Finally, it adds wxGridDirectionOperations::TryToAdvance() helper to
avoid repeating the IsAtBoundary() check which was previously part of
PrepareForSelectionExpansion() in multiple places.
And because the "extending" and normal parts of DoMoveCursorByBlock()
are so different now, it also factors out AdvanceByBlock() helper which
can be used to keep these parts well separate from each other instead of
intermixing them together.
With all these preparatory changes, it's finally possible to implement
the "extending selection by block" logic relatively easily, with the
bulk of this branch actually taken by comments explaining why do we have
to do what we do.
Add unit tests verifying that the functions used by Shift-Ctrl-arrow
work as expected.