\section{wxMSW port}\label{wxmswport} wxMSW is a port of wxWidgets for the Windows platforms including Windows 95, 98, ME, 2000, NT, XP in ANSI and Unicode mode (for Windows 95 through the MSLU extension library). wxMSW ensures native look and feel for XP as well when using wxWidgets version 2.3.3 or higher. wxMSW can be compile with a great variety of compilers including MS VC++, Borland 5.5, MinGW32, Cygwin and Watcom as well as cross-compilation with a Linux hosted MinGW32 tool chain. For further information, please see the files in docs/msw in the distribution. \subsection{wxWinCE}\label{wxwince} wxWinCE is the name given to wxMSW when compiled on Windows CE devices; most of wxMSW is common to Win32 and Windows CE but there are some simplifications, enhancements, and differences in behaviour. For installation instructions, see docs/msw/wince in the distribution. The rest of this section documents issues you need to be aware of when programming for Windows CE devices. \subsubsection{General issues for wxWinCE programming} Mobile applications generally have fewer features and simpler user interfaces. Simply omit whole sizers, static lines and controls in your dialogs, and use comboboxes instead of listboxes where appropriate. You also need to reduce the amount of spacing used by sizers, for which you can use a macro such as this: \begin{verbatim} #if defined(__WXWINCE__) #define wxLARGESMALL(large,small) small #else #define wxLARGESMALL(large,small) large #endif // Usage topsizer->Add( CreateTextSizer( message ), 0, wxALL, wxLARGESMALL(10,0) ); \end{verbatim} There is only ever one instance of a Windows CE application running, and wxWidgets will take care of showing the current instance and shutting down the second instance if necessary. You can test the return value of wxSystemSettings::GetScreenType() for a qualitative assessment of what kind of display is available, or use wxGetDisplaySize() if you need more information. You can also use wxGetOsVersion to test for a version of Windows CE at run-time (see the next section). However, because different builds are currently required to target different kinds of device, these values are hard-wired according to the build, and you cannot dynamically adapt the same executable for different major Windows CE platforms. This would require a different approach to the way wxWidgets adapts its behaviour (such as for menubars) to suit the style of device. See the "Life!" example (demos/life) for an example of an application that has been tailored for PocketPC and Smartphone use. \subsubsection{Testing for WinCE SDKs} Use these preprocessor symbols to test for the different types of device or SDK: \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{\_\_SMARTPHONE\_\_}{Generic mobile devices with phone buttons and a small display} \twocolitem{\_\_PDA\_\_}{Generic mobile devices with no phone} \twocolitem{\_\_HANDHELDPC\_\_}{Generic mobile device with a keyboard} \twocolitem{\_\_WXWINCE\_\_}{Microsoft-powered Windows CE devices, whether PocketPC, Smartphone or Standard SDK} \twocolitem{WIN32\_PLATFORM\_WFSP}{Microsoft-powered smartphone} \twocolitem{\_\_POCKETPC\_\_}{Microsoft-powered PocketPC devices with touch-screen} \twocolitem{\_\_WINCE\_STANDARDSDK\_\_}{Microsoft-powered Windows CE devices, for generic Windows CE applications} \twocolitem{\_\_WINCE\_NET\_\_}{Microsoft-powered Windows CE .NET devices (\_WIN32\_WCE is 400 or greater)} \end{twocollist} wxGetOsVersion will return these values: \begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt \twocolitem{wxWINDOWS\_POCKETPC}{The application is running under PocketPC.} \twocolitem{wxWINDOWS\_SMARTPHONE}{The application is running under Smartphone.} \twocolitem{wxWINDOWS\_CE}{The application is running under Windows CE (built with the Standard SDK).} \end{twocollist} \subsubsection{Window sizing in wxWinCE} When creating frames and dialogs, create them with wxDefaultPosition and wxDefaultSize, which will tell WinCE to create them full-screen. Don't call Fit() and Centre(), so the content sizes to the window rather than fitting the window to the content. (We really need a single API call that will do the right thing on each platform.) If the screen orientation changes, the windows will automatically be resized so no further action needs to be taken (unless you want to change the layout according to the orientation, which you could detect in idle time, for example). However, if the input panel (SIP) is shown, windows do not yet resize accordingly. This will be implemented soon. \subsubsection{Dialogs in wxWinCE} PocketPC dialogs have an OK button on the caption, and so you should generally not repeat an OK button on the dialog. You can add a Cancel button if necessary, but some dialogs simply don't offer you the choice (the guidelines recommend you offer an Undo facility to make up for it). When the user clicks on the OK button, your dialog will receive a wxID\_OK event by default. If you wish to change this, call wxDialog::SetAffirmativeId with the required identifier to be used. Or, override wxDialog::DoOK (return false to have wxWidgets simply call Close to dismiss the dialog). Smartphone dialogs do {\it not} have an OK button on the caption, and are closed using one of the two menu buttons. You need to assign these using wxTopLevelWindow::SetLeftMenu and wxTopLevelWindow::SetRightMenu, for example: \begin{verbatim} #ifdef __SMARTPHONE__ SetLeftMenu(wxID_OK); SetRightMenu(wxID_CANCEL, _("Cancel")); #elif defined(__POCKETPC__) // No OK/Cancel buttons on PocketPC, OK on caption will close #else topsizer->Add( CreateButtonSizer( wxOK|wxCANCEL ), 0, wxEXPAND | wxALL, 10 ); #endif \end{verbatim} For implementing property sheets (flat tabs), use a wxNotebook with wxNB_FLAT|wxNB_BOTTOM and have the notebook left, top and right sides overlap the dialog by about 3 pixels to eliminate spurious borders. You can do this by using a negative spacing in your sizer Add() call. The cross-platform property sheet dialog \helpref{wxPropertySheetDialog}{wxpropertysheetdialog} is provided, to show settings in the correct style on PocketPC and on other platforms. Notifications (bubble HTML text with optional buttons and links) will also be implemented in the future for PocketPC. Modeless dialogs probably don't make sense for PocketPC and Smartphone, since frames and dialogs are normally full-screen, and a modeless dialog is normally intended to co-exist with the main application frame. \subsubsection{Menubars and toolbars in wxWinCE} \wxheading{Menubars and toolbars in PocketPC} On PocketPC, a frame must always have a menubar, even if it's empty. An empty menubar is automatically provided for dialogs, to hide any existing menubar for the duration of the dialog. Menubars and toolbars are implemented using a combined control, but you can use essentially the usual wxWidgets API; wxWidgets will combine the menubar and toolbar. However, there are some restrictions: \itemsep=0pt \begin{itemize} \item You must create the frame's primary toolbar with wxFrame::CreateToolBar, because this uses the special wxToolMenuBar class (derived from wxToolBar) to implement the combined toolbar and menubar. Otherwise, you can create and manage toolbars using the wxToolBar class as usual, for example to implement an optional formatting toolbar above the menubar as Pocket Word does. But don't assign a wxToolBar to a frame using SetToolBar - you should always use CreateToolBar for the main frame toolbar. \item Deleting and adding tools to wxToolMenuBar is not supported. \end{itemize} \wxheading{Menubars and toolbars in Smartphone} On Smartphone, there are only two menu buttons, so a menubar is simulated using a nested menu on the right menu button. Any toolbars are simply ignored on Smartphone. \subsubsection{Closing windows in wxWinCE} The guidelines state that applications should not have a Quit menu item, since the user should not have to know whether an application is in memory or not. The close button on a window does not call the window's close handler; it simply hides the window. However, the guidelines say that the Ctrl+Q accelerator can be used to quit the application, so wxWidgets defines this accelerator by default and if your application handles wxID\_EXIT, it will do the right thing. \subsubsection{Control differences on wxWinCE} These controls are missing from wxWinCE: \itemsep=0pt \begin{itemize} \item {\bf wxCheckListBox} This can be implemented using a wxListCtrl in report mode with checked/unchecked images. \end{itemize} This section is currently incomplete. \subsubsection{Online help in wxWinCE} You can use the help controller wxWinceHelpController which controls simple {\tt .htm} files, usually installed in the Windows directory. \subsubsection{Remaining issues} These are some of the remaining problems to be sorted out, and features to be supported. \itemsep=0pt \begin{itemize} \item {\bf Font dialog.} The generic font dialog is currently used, which needs to be simplified (and speeded up). \item {\bf Sizer speed.} Particularly for dialogs containing notebooks, layout seems slow. Some analysis is required. \item {\bf Notification boxes.} The balloon-like notification messages, and their icons, should be implemented. This will be quite straightforward. \item {\bf WM\_SETTINGCHANGE.} This message needs to be handled by calling SHHandleWMSettingChange. \item {\bf WM\_ACTIVATE.} This message needs to be handled by calling SHHandleWMActivate. \item {\bf WM\_HIBERNATE.} We need to handle this message. \item {\bf SIP size.} We need to be able to get the area taken up by the SIP (input panel), and the remaining area, by calling SHSipInfo. We also may need to be able to show and hide the SIP programmatically, with SHSipPreference. See also the {\it Input Dialogs} topic in the {\it Programming Windows CE} guide for more on this, and how to have dialogs show the SIP automatically using the WC_SIPREF control. \item {\bf Drawing.} The "Life!" demo shows some droppings being left on the window, indicating that drawing works a bit differently between desktop and mobile versions of Win32. \item {\bf wxStaticBitmap.} The About box in the "Life!" demo shows a bitmap that is the correct size on the emulator, but too small on a VGA Pocket Loox device. \item {\bf wxStaticLine.} Lines don't show up, and the documentation suggests that missing styles are implemented with WM\_PAINT. \item {\bf wxCheckListBox.} This class needs to be implemented in terms of a wxListCtrl in report mode, using icons for checkbox states. This is necessary because owner-draw listboxes are not supported on Windows CE. \item {\bf OK button.} We should allow the OK button on a dialog to be optional, perhaps by using wxCLOSE\_BOX to indicate when the OK button should be displayed. \item {\bf Dynamic adaptation.} We should probably be using run-time tests more than preprocessor tests, so that the same WinCE application can run on different versions of the operating system. \item {\bf Home screen plugins.} Figure out how to make home screen plugins for use with wxWidgets applications (see {\tt http://www.codeproject.com/ce/CTodayWindow.asp} for inspiration). Although we can't use wxWidgets to create the plugin (too large), we could perhaps write a generic plugin that takes registry information from a given application, with options to display information in a particular way using icons and text from a specified location. \item {\bf Further abstraction.} We should be able to abstract away more of the differences between desktop and mobile applications, in particular for sizer layout. \end{itemize}