wxruby 1.9.1-i686-linux → 1.9.2-i686-linux
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- data/LICENSE +53 -0
- data/README +299 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/app.rb +15 -1
- data/lib/wx/classes/bitmap.rb +2 -2
- data/lib/wx/classes/checklistbox.rb +30 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/clientdc.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/wx/classes/commandevent.rb +7 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/controlwithitems.rb +10 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/evthandler.rb +63 -7
- data/lib/wx/classes/listctrl.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/menu.rb +62 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/menuitem.rb +7 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/paintdc.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/wx/classes/timer.rb +2 -2
- data/lib/wx/classes/treectrl.rb +18 -0
- data/lib/wx/classes/window.rb +11 -4
- data/lib/wx/keyword_ctors.rb +1 -15
- data/lib/wx/keyword_defs.rb +68 -58
- data/lib/wx/version.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/wxruby2.so +0 -0
- data/samples/bigdemo/wxScrolledWindow.rbw +8 -3
- data/samples/calendar/calendar.rb +1 -1
- data/samples/caret/caret.rb +29 -39
- data/samples/etc/threaded.rb +81 -0
- data/samples/etc/wizard.rb +22 -24
- data/samples/html/html.rb +25 -12
- data/samples/listbook/listbook.rb +65 -67
- data/samples/minimal/minimal.rb +38 -36
- data/samples/minimal/mondrian.ico +0 -0
- data/samples/minimal/nothing.rb +5 -30
- data/samples/treectrl/treectrl.rb +197 -226
- metadata +26 -16
- data/samples/minimal/text.rb +0 -35
data/LICENSE
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wxRuby2
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Copyright (c) 2004-2007 wxRuby Development Team
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
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in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
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to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
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copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
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furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
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all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
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IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
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AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
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LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
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OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
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SOFTWARE.
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============================================================================
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THE FOLLOWING IS NOT PART OF THE LICENSE, NOR IS IT LEGAL ADVICE!
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wxRuby and wxWidgets
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--------------------
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Normally, wxRuby is distributed with a binary copy of wxWidgets. If you
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distribute the wxRuby gem, you are bound to the requirements of the
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copy of wxWidgets within. Fortunately, those requirements do not impose
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any serious restrictions.
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wxWidgets License Summary (from the wxWidgets README)
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-----------------------------------------------------
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In summary, the licence is LGPL plus a clause allowing unrestricted
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distribution of application binaries. To answer a FAQ, you don't have to
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distribute any source if you wish to write commercial applications using
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wxWidgets.
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Required Credits and Attribution
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--------------------------------
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Generally, neither wxWidgets nor wxRuby require attribution, beyond
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retaining existing copyright notices. However, if you build your own
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custom wxWidgets library, there may be portions that require specific
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attributions or credits, such as TIFF or JPEG support. See the wxWidgets
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README and license files for details.
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data/README
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README for wxruby2
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Version 1.9.x
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This is wxruby2, the second generation of wxRuby, a library
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that allows Ruby programs to use the wxWidgets GUI toolkit.
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It is released under a permissive MIT-style license
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(see the LICENSE file for details).
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This version is a beta release, in preparation for a stable release of
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wxruby version 2.0.
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------------------------FAQ---------------------------
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- What platforms and operating systems are supported in wxRuby2?
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Currently the following are fully supported:
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Windows NT/2000/XP/Vista (i686)
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OS X 10.3+ (i686 and PowerPc)
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Linux (i686 + AMD-64)
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It is unlikely that support for old Windows OS's (3.1, 95, 98, ME)
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will be added to wxRuby2 in the near future, as these operating
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systems have very limited support for Unicode.
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- Why would I choose wxruby over FXRuby, Ruby/GTK, or one of the other
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GUI toolkits? Isn't wxruby arriving "too late"?
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There are several great GUI toolkits available for Ruby, but we
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like wxruby better because it has a combination of features that no
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other toolkit has:
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- Cross-platform (MSWindows, Mac OS X, Linux)
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- Native widgets when possible
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- Provides a wide selection of widgets
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- Simple license that is compatible with proprietary and Free Software
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- Mature foundation (wxWidgets has been around for over 10 years)
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The really big feature is native widgets. The only other cross-platform
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toolkits that use native widgets are either limited (Tk) or expensive if
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you want to develop proprietary software (Qt). We are not saying that
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those toolkits are bad! Just that wxruby offers a unique set of
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features.
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- Why are native widgets important or helpful?
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For one thing, it means that end-users do not have to adjust to a
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"foreign" interface. It also ensures maximum compatibility with
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"assistive technology" such as screen readers for blind users.
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It also allows apps to respect any themes the user may have chosen
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through their operating system. No matter how hard a toolkit may try
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to emulate a particular UI, there will always be differences in the
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look or behavior.
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- How does wxruby2 relate to wxruby (and the wxruby 0.6.0 release)?
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wxruby2 is the "next generation" of wxruby. It is being developed
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by the same wxruby team, and is intended to replace the older
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code base. wxruby2 is built using SWIG, a powerful tool that makes
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it much easier to create and maintain wrappers around C/C++ libraries.
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- Why should I use wxruby2 instead of wxruby?
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First, because development on the original wxruby codebase has stopped.
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Everyone is working on wxruby2, so it will continue to improve. Beyond
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that, wxruby2 has these advantages over wxruby 0.6.0:
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- Available as binary gems for MSWindows, OS X, and Linux (GTK)
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- Support for more classes, and more methods within classes
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- Unicode support
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- Vastly improved support for OS X
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- Looks much better under Linux because it uses GTK+2
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- Simpler and more permissive license
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- Wraps wxWidgets 2.8.3 instead of the older 2.4 series
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- Is wxruby2 ready for "production" use?
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Yes, pretty much. This is a beta release, and there may be some bugs
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in some methods, or memory leaks. This release includes all the
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classes and features that are proposed for inclusion in wxruby 2.0.
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It is considerably more stable and fully-featured than the old 0.6.0
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release, which was never really stable enough for heavy-duty
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production use.
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- Does wxruby2 support the Xxx class?
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See the "Documentation" section of the README file, or check the
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wxruby web site: http://wxruby.org
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- How are the wxruby 0.6.0 and wxruby2 licenses different?
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wxruby 0.6.0 was released under the wxWindows license, which is a
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modified LGPL. It is a good, fair license, allowing use in both Free
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Software and proprietary applications. However, it is long and complex,
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and is more appropriate for compiled code. wxruby2 is available under a
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*very* simple MIT-style license, which allows just about any use with
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very few restrictions.
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- I am getting an error trying to compile wxruby2
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Please double-check the requirements. You may be using the wrong
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version of SWIG, wxWidgets, or some other tool. Double-check the
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instructions on the wxRuby wiki (http://wxruby.rubyforge.org/)
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If you need help, please ask your question on the wxruby mailing list
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(see the link at http://wxruby.org).
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- I am getting an error trying to run any wxruby2 application, such as
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the samples that are included in the gem.
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If you are using Linux, be sure you have configured your system to
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have RUBYOPT=-rubygems. This can be done in .bashrc or /etc/environment,
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depending on your distribution and preferences. [More details to follow].
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- Why aren't the wx network, file, date, database and other non-GUI
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classes supported?
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Because Ruby has its own versions of each of them, providing
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cross-platform abstractions of these functions with familiar syntax
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and methods. We assume you are writing your application in Ruby, so it
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makes sense to keep as much code as possible in Ruby. We have only
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wrapped the wx classes that are necessary to write GUI code.
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There may be some advantages to porting the Wx network classes into
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ruby, if they work better with multi-(native)-threaded code. This is
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currently under evaluation.
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- Why has it taken so long for wxruby2 to be released?
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Nobody is getting paid to develop wxruby, so each of the wxruby developers
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are limited in the amount of time they can dedicate to the project. We are
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always looking for more volunteers to help code, test, document, manage
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the bug list, handle publicity, or do other necessary chores.
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Wrapping wx is a big project that requires a wide variety of skills. As of
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August 2006, the wxRuby project has about 30,000 lines of code, including
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ruby, C++, and SWIG scripts. If we weren't using SWIG it would be far bigger.
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For more details, see the project home page:
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http://wxruby.org/
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------------------------USING WXRUBY---------------------------
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INSTALLING:
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wxRuby is available as binary gems for MS Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux
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with GTK+ 2. Unless you wish to work on wxRuby itself, we strongly
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recommend installing the gem rather than building from source.
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REQUIREMENTS TO CREATE AND RUN WXRUBY APPS:
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- Ruby 1.8
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- MS Windows NT/2000/XP/Vista, Mac OS X 10.3+, or Linux with GTK+ 2,
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SAMPLES:
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There is a samples/ directory containing many small sample wxRuby apps
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that demonstrate how to use various classes. A few samples do not work
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across all platforms at this time.
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The bigdemo sample is fairly comprehensive, but not all of the
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sections work on all platforms.
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WRITING YOUR OWN WXRUBY APP:
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To use wxruby-swig in your app, use:
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require 'wx'
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samples/minimal.rb can be used as a template for creating your
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own wxruby application.
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DOCUMENTATION:
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- wxRuby-specific API documentation can be found here:
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http://wxruby.org/doc/
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(Note: This documentation is auto-generated from the C++ wxWidgets API
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docs. There are some broken links, some sample code in C++, and some
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sections which do not apply to ruby. The documentation is continually
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being improved.)
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- The latest version of the documentation can be downloaded from the
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wxRuby 'Files' section on Rubyforge.
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http://www.rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=35
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- Tables summarizing which wx classes are and are not supported can
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be found here:
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http://wxruby.org/wiki/wiki.pl?ClassesSupportedByCategory
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- Most wxWidgets and wxPython tutorials and references can also be used, if
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you remember that wxRuby uses ruby_style_naming for methods and variables
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instead of MixedCase as used by wxWidgets.
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API DIFFERENCES FROM WXWIDGETS:
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- In many cases, wxRuby follows the lead of wxPython (or in some cases,
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wxPerl), adjusting certain method calls when the C++ style doesn't fit
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dynamic languages.
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- Since initialize is reserved in ruby, use SplitterWindow#init instead.
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- Many wx classes have not been wrapped because native ruby classes work
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as well or better. These include wxDateTime, wxString, networking
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classes, database classes.
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- log_message and log_status take a single string parameter,
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rather than a format string followed by additional values
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to be inserted. Use Ruby's sprintf if required.
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- ScreenDC extends DC on all platforms, unlike in C++ wx.
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This means that you cannot override any virtual methods that were
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defined in PaintDC or WindowDC in a ruby subclass of ScreenDC.
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[Need to verify if this is still true]
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- BusyCursor can be used in a Ruby block to ensure the original cursor
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is always restored.
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----------------------COMPILING WXRUBY--------------------------
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REQUIREMENTS TO COMPILE/BUILD WXRUBY ITSELF
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- rake
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- SWIG, version 1.3.31. SWIG 1.3.29 or later may work; earlier version
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definitely won't
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- wxWidgets 2.8.x SDK. See further information on the wxruby website for
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recommended compile-time options for wxWidgets.
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OBTAINING THE SOURCE:
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Source code is hosted in Subversion at rubyforge.org. See the links on
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the wxruby web site (http://wxruby.org). Check out the wxruby2
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Subversion module (not the old wxruby module).
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BUILDING:
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From the top-level directory (typically wxruby2/),
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just start the rake build with the command:
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rake
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There is no ./configure step, nor do you need to run ruby extconf.rb.
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INSTALLING THE LIBRARY:
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You can install the library using:
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rake install
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Note that on some systems you may need to be "root" to do this.
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To manually install, copy all the files in the lib/ subdirectory
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to somewhere on your ruby library path, such as a ruby extensions
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directory.
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PORTING TO OTHER PLATFORMS
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Platform-dependent rakefiles are used to set up compiler-specific
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settings. The following platforms are currently fully supported:
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Mac OSX (gcc): rakemacosx.rb
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MS Windows (VC++): rakemswin.rb
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Linux (GTK2 + gcc): rakelinux.rb
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For other platforms, you may need to edit the appropriate
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platform-dependent rake file if your system is not yet supported, or if
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it is unusual. These files are found in the rake subdirectory:
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MS Windows BC++: rakebccwin.rb
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MS Windows MingGW: rakemingw.rb
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MS Windows Cygwin: rakecygwin.rb
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NetBSD: rakenetbsd.rb
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When editing a platform-dependent rakefile, you might
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merely need to set one or more of the following variables:
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$extra_cppflags
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$extra_ldflags
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$extra_objs
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$extra_libs
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CREDITS
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Kevin Smith set up the wxruby2 project using SWIG and did much of the
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work that still forms the core of the library in its present form. Over
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the years dozens of volunteers have contributed invaluable patches and
|
292
|
+
new functionality. The list is too long to give here, but their
|
293
|
+
contributions are recorded in the wxruby mailing list archives.
|
294
|
+
|
295
|
+
-----------------------------------------------------------
|
296
|
+
|
297
|
+
LEAD MAINTAINER:
|
298
|
+
Alex Fenton
|
299
|
+
alex at pressure dot to
|
data/lib/wx/classes/app.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,13 +1,27 @@
|
|
1
1
|
# Copyright 2004-2006 by Kevin Smith
|
2
2
|
# released under the MIT-style wxruby2 license
|
3
3
|
|
4
|
+
# Controller class which creates and manages all windows.
|
4
5
|
class Wx::App
|
6
|
+
# Convenience class method to create simple apps. Starts an
|
7
|
+
# application main_loop, setting up initial windows etc as specified
|
8
|
+
# in the passed block.
|
9
|
+
# block
|
10
|
+
def self.run(&block)
|
11
|
+
app_klass = Class.new(self)
|
12
|
+
app_klass.class_eval do
|
13
|
+
define_method(:on_init, &block)
|
14
|
+
end
|
15
|
+
the_app = app_klass.new
|
16
|
+
the_app.main_loop
|
17
|
+
end
|
18
|
+
|
5
19
|
# This method handles failed assertions from within the WxWidgets C++
|
6
20
|
# code. These messages are only generated by a DEBUG build of
|
7
21
|
# WxRuby. Such messages usually indicate that the API is being used
|
8
22
|
# incorrectly; the file/line reference points to the place in the
|
9
23
|
# WxWidgets source code where the assertion was made.
|
10
|
-
|
24
|
+
define_method(:on_assert_failure) do | file, line, condition, message |
|
11
25
|
warn "Wx WARNING: #{message} (#{file}:#{line})"
|
12
26
|
end
|
13
27
|
|
data/lib/wx/classes/bitmap.rb
CHANGED
@@ -15,9 +15,9 @@ class Wx::Bitmap
|
|
15
15
|
# Accepts a block, which will be passed a device context which can be
|
16
16
|
# used to draw upon the Bitmap
|
17
17
|
def draw
|
18
|
-
dc = MemoryDC.new
|
18
|
+
dc = Wx::MemoryDC.new
|
19
19
|
dc.select_object(self)
|
20
20
|
yield dc
|
21
|
-
dc.select_object( NULL_BITMAP )
|
21
|
+
dc.select_object( Wx::NULL_BITMAP )
|
22
22
|
end
|
23
23
|
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# Display a listbox with a checkbox for each item
|
2
|
+
class Wx::CheckListBox < Wx::ListBox
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
# According to the wxWidgets documentation: "wxCheckListBox uses
|
5
|
+
# client data in its implementation, and therefore this is not
|
6
|
+
# available to the application."
|
7
|
+
#
|
8
|
+
# So, rather than crashing, raise an Exception if this is attempted
|
9
|
+
def append(*args)
|
10
|
+
if args.length == 2
|
11
|
+
Kernel.raise "Cannot use item data with Wx::CheckListBox"
|
12
|
+
else
|
13
|
+
super
|
14
|
+
end
|
15
|
+
end
|
16
|
+
|
17
|
+
# As above
|
18
|
+
def insert(*args)
|
19
|
+
if args.length == 3
|
20
|
+
Kernel.raise "Cannot use item data with Wx::CheckListBox"
|
21
|
+
else
|
22
|
+
super
|
23
|
+
end
|
24
|
+
end
|
25
|
+
|
26
|
+
# As above
|
27
|
+
def set_item_data(index, data)
|
28
|
+
Kernel.raise "Cannot use item data with Wx::CheckListBox"
|
29
|
+
end
|
30
|
+
end
|
data/lib/wx/classes/clientdc.rb
CHANGED
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ class Wx::ClientDC
|
|
5
5
|
# always be used via Window#paint, which takes a block receiving the
|
6
6
|
# DC. This ensures that the DC is cleaned up at the correct time,
|
7
7
|
# avoiding errors and segfaults on exit.
|
8
|
-
|
8
|
+
define_method(:initialize) do | *args |
|
9
9
|
Kernel.raise RuntimeError,
|
10
10
|
"Do not instantiate ClientDC directly; use Window#paint",
|
11
11
|
caller[1..-1]
|
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# Class representing interactions with controls such as ListBox
|
2
|
+
class Wx::CommandEvent
|
3
|
+
# get_int and get_selection are already synonyms, but neither name
|
4
|
+
# accurately describes what the method does as the event may be a
|
5
|
+
# (de)selection or a check in a CheckListBox
|
6
|
+
alias :get_index :get_int
|
7
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# Superclass of a variety of controls that display lists of items (eg
|
2
|
+
# Choice, ListBox, CheckListBox)
|
3
|
+
class Wx::ControlWithItems
|
4
|
+
# Make these ruby enumerables so find, find_all, map etc are available
|
5
|
+
include Enumerable
|
6
|
+
# Passes each valid item index into the passed block
|
7
|
+
def each
|
8
|
+
0.upto(count - 1) { | i | yield i }
|
9
|
+
end
|
10
|
+
end
|