# 11/21/2003 - Jeff Grimmett (grimmtooth@softhome.net) # # o Updated for wx namespace # # 11/30/2003 - Jeff Grimmett (grimmtooth@softhome.net) # # o wx.ProgressDialog appears to be broken. No abort button # and it's not possible to dismiss it otherwise. # import wx #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- class TestPanel(wx.Panel): def __init__(self, parent, log): self.log = log wx.Panel.__init__(self, parent, -1) b = wx.Button(self, -1, "Create and Show a ProgressDialog", (50,50)) self.Bind(wx.EVT_BUTTON, self.OnButton, b) def OnButton(self, evt): max = 80 dlg = wx.ProgressDialog("Progress dialog example", "An informative message", maximum = max, parent=self, style = wx.PD_CAN_ABORT | wx.PD_APP_MODAL | wx.PD_ELAPSED_TIME #| wx.PD_ESTIMATED_TIME | wx.PD_REMAINING_TIME ) keepGoing = True count = 0 while keepGoing and count < max: count += 1 wx.MilliSleep(250) if count >= max / 2: (keepGoing, skip) = dlg.Update(count, "Half-time!") else: (keepGoing, skip) = dlg.Update(count) dlg.Destroy() #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- def runTest(frame, nb, log): win = TestPanel(nb, log) return win #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- overview = """\ This class represents a dialog that shows a short message and a progress bar. Optionally, it can display an ABORT button

This dialog indicates the progress of some event that takes a while to accomplish, usually, such as file copy progress, download progress, and so on. The display is completely under control of the program; you must update the dialog from within the program creating it.

When the dialog closes, you must check to see if the user aborted the process or not, and act accordingly -- that is, if the PD_CAN_ABORT style flag is set. If not then you may progress blissfully onward. """ if __name__ == '__main__': import sys,os import run run.main(['', os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])] + sys.argv[1:])