View Source wxSizer (wx v2.4.2)
Functions for wxSizer class
wxSizer
is the abstract base class used for laying out subwindows in a
window. You cannot use wxSizer
directly; instead, you will have to use one
of the sizer classes derived from it. Currently there are wxBoxSizer
,
wxStaticBoxSizer
, wxGridSizer
, wxFlexGridSizer
, wxWrapSizer
(not
implemented in wx) and wxGridBagSizer
.
The layout algorithm used by sizers in wxWidgets is closely related to layout in other GUI toolkits, such as Java's AWT, the GTK toolkit or the Qt toolkit. It is based upon the idea of the individual subwindows reporting their minimal required size and their ability to get stretched if the size of the parent window has changed.
This will most often mean that the programmer does not set the original size of
a dialog in the beginning, rather the dialog will be assigned a sizer and this
sizer will be queried about the recommended size. The sizer in turn will query
its children, which can be normal windows, empty space or other sizers, so that
a hierarchy of sizers can be constructed. Note that wxSizer
does not derive
from wxWindow
and thus does not interfere with tab ordering and requires
very little resources compared to a real window on screen.
What makes sizers so well fitted for use in wxWidgets is the fact that every control reports its own minimal size and the algorithm can handle differences in font sizes or different window (dialog item) sizes on different platforms without problems. If e.g. the standard font as well as the overall design of Motif widgets requires more space than on Windows, the initial dialog size will automatically be bigger on Motif than on Windows.
Sizers may also be used to control the layout of custom drawn items on the
window. The add/4
, insert/5
, and prepend/4
functions return a pointer to
the newly added wxSizerItem
. Just add empty space of the desired size and
attributes, and then use the wxSizerItem:getRect/1
method to determine where
the drawing operations should take place.
Please notice that sizers, like child windows, are owned by the library and will be deleted by it which implies that they must be allocated on the heap. However if you create a sizer and do not add it to another sizer or window, the library wouldn't be able to delete such an orphan sizer and in this, and only this, case it should be deleted explicitly.
wxSizer flags
The "flag" argument accepted by wxSizerItem
constructors and other
functions, e.g. add/4
, is an OR-combination of the following flags. Two main
behaviours are defined using these flags. One is the border around a window: the
border parameter determines the border width whereas the flags given here
determine which side(s) of the item that the border will be added. The other
flags determine how the sizer item behaves when the space allotted to the sizer
changes, and is somewhat dependent on the specific kind of sizer used.
See: Overview sizer
wxWidgets docs: wxSizer
Summary
Functions
Appends a child to the sizer.
Appends a spacer child to the sizer.
This base function adds non-stretchable space to both the horizontal and vertical orientation of the sizer.
Adds stretchable space to the sizer.
This method is abstract and has to be overwritten by any derived class.
Detaches all children from the sizer.
Detach a item at position index
from the sizer without destroying it.
Tell the sizer to resize the window
so that its client area matches the
sizer's minimal size (ComputeFittingClientSize()
(not implemented in wx) is
called to determine it).
Tell the sizer to resize the virtual size of the window
to match the sizer's
minimal size.
Finds wxSizerItem
which is located in the sizer at position index
.
Finds wxSizerItem
which holds the given window
.
Returns the minimal size of the sizer.
Returns the current position of the sizer.
Returns the current size of the sizer.
Hides the item at position index
.
Hides the child window
.
Insert a child into the sizer before any existing item at index
.
Insert a child into the sizer before any existing item at index
.
Inserts non-stretchable space to the sizer.
Inserts stretchable space to the sizer.
Returns true if the item at index
is shown.
Call this to force layout of the children anew, e.g. after having added a child to or removed a child (window, other sizer or space) from the sizer while keeping the current dimension.
Same as add/4
, but prepends the items to the beginning of the list of items
(windows, subsizers or spaces) owned by this sizer.
Same as add/4
, but prepends the items to the beginning of the list of items
(windows, subsizers or spaces) owned by this sizer.
Prepends non-stretchable space to the sizer.
Prepends stretchable space to the sizer.
See: layout/1
.
Removes a sizer child from the sizer and destroys it.
Detaches the given item at position index
from the sizer and replaces it with
the given wxSizerItem
newitem
.
Detaches the given oldwin
from the sizer and replaces it with the given
newwin
.
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
Call this to give the sizer a minimal size.
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
This method first calls fit/2
and then setSizeHints/2
on the window
passed
to it.
Shows the item at index
.
Show or hide all items managed by the sizer.
Types
-type wxSizer() :: wx:wx_object().
Functions
-spec add(This, Window) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer().
-spec add(This, Width, Height) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(); (This, Window, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags(); (This, Window, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}.
Appends a child to the sizer.
wxSizer
itself is an abstract class, but the parameters are equivalent in
the derived classes that you will instantiate to use it so they are described
here:
-spec add(This, Width, Height, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}; (This, Width, Height, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags().
Appends a spacer child to the sizer.
-spec addSpacer(This, Size) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Size :: integer().
This base function adds non-stretchable space to both the horizontal and vertical orientation of the sizer.
More readable way of calling:
See: addSpacer/2
-spec addStretchSpacer(This) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer().
-spec addStretchSpacer(This, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Option :: {prop, integer()}.
Adds stretchable space to the sizer.
More readable way of calling:
This method is abstract and has to be overwritten by any derived class.
Here, the sizer will do the actual calculation of its children's minimal sizes.
-spec clear(This) -> ok when This :: wxSizer().
Detaches all children from the sizer.
If delete_windows
is true then child windows will also be deleted.
Notice that child sizers are always deleted, as a general consequence of the principle that sizers own their sizer children, but don't own their window children (because they are already owned by their parent windows).
-spec detach(This, Window) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer().
Detach a item at position index
from the sizer without destroying it.
This method does not cause any layout or resizing to take place, call layout/1
to update the layout "on screen" after detaching a child from the sizer. Returns
true if the child item was found and detached, false otherwise.
See: remove/2
-spec fit(This, Window) -> {W :: integer(), H :: integer()} when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow().
Tell the sizer to resize the window
so that its client area matches the
sizer's minimal size (ComputeFittingClientSize()
(not implemented in wx) is
called to determine it).
This is commonly done in the constructor of the window itself, see sample in the
description of wxBoxSizer
.
Return: The new window size.
See: ComputeFittingClientSize()
(not implemented in wx),
ComputeFittingWindowSize()
(not implemented in wx)
-spec fitInside(This, Window) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow().
Tell the sizer to resize the virtual size of the window
to match the sizer's
minimal size.
This will not alter the on screen size of the window, but may cause the addition/removal/alteration of scrollbars required to view the virtual area in windows which manage it.
See: wxScrolledWindow:setScrollbars/6
, setVirtualSizeHints/2
-spec getChildren(This) -> [wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem()] when This :: wxSizer().
-spec getItem(This, Window) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer().
Finds wxSizerItem
which is located in the sizer at position index
.
Use parameter recursive
to search in subsizers too. Returns pointer to item or
NULL.
-spec getItem(This, Window, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {recursive, boolean()}.
Finds wxSizerItem
which holds the given window
.
Use parameter recursive
to search in subsizers too. Returns pointer to item or
NULL.
Returns the minimal size of the sizer.
This is either the combined minimal size of all the children and their borders
or the minimal size set by setMinSize/3
, depending on which is bigger. Note
that the returned value is client size, not window size. In particular, if you
use the value to set toplevel window's minimal or actual size, use
wxWindow::SetMinClientSize()
(not implemented in wx) or
wxWindow:setClientSize/3
, not wxWindow:setMinSize/2
or wxWindow:setSize/6
.
Returns the current position of the sizer.
Returns the current size of the sizer.
-spec hide(This, Window) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer().
Hides the item at position index
.
To make a sizer item disappear, use hide/3
followed by layout/1
.
Use parameter recursive
to hide elements found in subsizers. Returns true if
the child item was found, false otherwise.
-spec hide(This, Window, [Option]) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {recursive, boolean()}.
Hides the child window
.
To make a sizer item disappear, use hide/3
followed by layout/1
.
Use parameter recursive
to hide elements found in subsizers. Returns true if
the child item was found, false otherwise.
-spec insert(This, Index, Item) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Item :: wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem().
-spec insert(This, Index, Width, Height) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(); (This, Index, Window, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags(); (This, Index, Window, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}.
Insert a child into the sizer before any existing item at index
.
See add/4
for the meaning of the other parameters.
-spec insert(This, Index, Width, Height, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}; (This, Index, Width, Height, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags().
Insert a child into the sizer before any existing item at index
.
See add/4
for the meaning of the other parameters.
-spec insertSpacer(This, Index, Size) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Size :: integer().
Inserts non-stretchable space to the sizer.
More readable way of calling wxSizer::Insert(index, size, size).
-spec insertStretchSpacer(This, Index) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer().
-spec insertStretchSpacer(This, Index, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Option :: {prop, integer()}.
Inserts stretchable space to the sizer.
More readable way of calling wxSizer::Insert(0, 0, prop).
-spec isShown(This, Window) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer().
Returns true if the item at index
is shown.
See: hide/3
, show/3
, wxSizerItem:isShown/1
-spec layout(This) -> ok when This :: wxSizer().
Call this to force layout of the children anew, e.g. after having added a child to or removed a child (window, other sizer or space) from the sizer while keeping the current dimension.
-spec prepend(This, Item) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Item :: wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem().
-spec prepend(This, Width, Height) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(); (This, Window, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags(); (This, Window, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}.
Same as add/4
, but prepends the items to the beginning of the list of items
(windows, subsizers or spaces) owned by this sizer.
-spec prepend(This, Width, Height, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Option :: {proportion, integer()} | {flag, integer()} | {border, integer()} | {userData, wx:wx_object()}; (This, Width, Height, Flags) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(), Flags :: wxSizerFlags:wxSizerFlags().
Same as add/4
, but prepends the items to the beginning of the list of items
(windows, subsizers or spaces) owned by this sizer.
-spec prependSpacer(This, Size) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Size :: integer().
Prepends non-stretchable space to the sizer.
More readable way of calling wxSizer::Prepend(size, size, 0).
-spec prependStretchSpacer(This) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer().
-spec prependStretchSpacer(This, [Option]) -> wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem() when This :: wxSizer(), Option :: {prop, integer()}.
Prepends stretchable space to the sizer.
More readable way of calling wxSizer::Prepend(0, 0, prop).
-spec recalcSizes(This) -> ok when This :: wxSizer().
See: layout/1
.
-spec remove(This, Index) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(); (This, Sizer) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Sizer :: wxSizer().
Removes a sizer child from the sizer and destroys it.
Note: This method does not cause any layout or resizing to take place, call
layout/1
to update the layout "on screen" after removing a child from the
sizer.
Return: true if the child item was found and removed, false otherwise.
-spec replace(This, Oldwin, Newwin) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Oldwin :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Newwin :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index, Newitem) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Newitem :: wxSizerItem:wxSizerItem().
Detaches the given item at position index
from the sizer and replaces it with
the given wxSizerItem
newitem
.
The detached child is deleted only
if it is a sizer or a spacer (but not if it
is a wxWindow
because windows are owned by their parent window, not the
sizer).
This method does not cause any layout or resizing to take place, call layout/1
to update the layout "on screen" after replacing a child from the sizer.
Returns true if the child item was found and removed, false otherwise.
-spec replace(This, Oldwin, Newwin, [Option]) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Oldwin :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Newwin :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {recursive, boolean()}.
Detaches the given oldwin
from the sizer and replaces it with the given
newwin
.
The detached child window is not
deleted (because windows are owned by their
parent window, not the sizer).
Use parameter recursive
to search the given element recursively in subsizers.
This method does not cause any layout or resizing to take place, call layout/1
to update the layout "on screen" after replacing a child from the sizer.
Returns true if the child item was found and removed, false otherwise.
-spec setDimension(This, Pos, Size) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Pos :: {X :: integer(), Y :: integer()}, Size :: {W :: integer(), H :: integer()}.
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
-spec setDimension(This, X, Y, Width, Height) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), X :: integer(), Y :: integer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer().
Call this to force the sizer to take the given dimension and thus force the
items owned by the sizer to resize themselves according to the rules defined by
the parameter in the add/4
and prepend/4
methods.
-spec setItemMinSize(This, Window, Width, Height) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer(); (This, Index, Width, Height) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer().
-spec setMinSize(This, Size) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Size :: {W :: integer(), H :: integer()}.
Call this to give the sizer a minimal size.
Normally, the sizer will calculate its minimal size based purely on how much
space its children need. After calling this method getMinSize/1
will return
either the minimal size as requested by its children or the minimal size set
here, depending on which is bigger.
-spec setMinSize(This, Width, Height) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Width :: integer(), Height :: integer().
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
-spec setSizeHints(This, Window) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow().
This method first calls fit/2
and then setSizeHints/2
on the window
passed
to it.
This only makes sense when window
is actually a wxTopLevelWindow
such as a
wxFrame
or a wxDialog
, since SetSizeHints only has any effect in these
classes. It does nothing in normal windows or controls.
This method is implicitly used by wxWindow:setSizerAndFit/3
which is commonly
invoked in the constructor of a toplevel window itself (see the sample in the
description of wxBoxSizer
) if the toplevel window is resizable.
-spec setVirtualSizeHints(This, Window) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow().
See: fitInside/2
.
-spec show(This, Window) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(); (This, Index) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(); (This, Show) -> ok when This :: wxSizer(), Show :: boolean().
-spec show(This, Window, [Option]) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Window :: wxWindow:wxWindow() | wxSizer:wxSizer(), Option :: {show, boolean()} | {recursive, boolean()}; (This, Index, [Option]) -> boolean() when This :: wxSizer(), Index :: integer(), Option :: {show, boolean()}.
Shows the item at index
.
To make a sizer item disappear or reappear, use show/3
followed by layout/1
.
Returns true if the child item was found, false otherwise.
Show or hide all items managed by the sizer.