wxWidgets/docs/latex/wx/boxsizer.tex
Ron Lee 1912918cce typo fix.
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\section{\class{wxBoxSizer}}\label{wxboxsizer}
The basic idea behind a box sizer is that windows will most often be laid out in rather
simple basic geometry, typically in a row or a column or several hierarchies of either.
As an example, we will construct a dialog that will contain a text field at the top and
two buttons at the bottom. This can be seen as a top-hierarchy column with the text at
the top and buttons at the bottom and a low-hierarchy row with an OK button to the left
and a Cancel button to the right. In many cases (particularly dialogs under Unix and
normal frames) the main window will be resizable by the user and this change of size
will have to get propagated to its children. In our case, we want the text area to grow
with the dialog, whereas the button shall have a fixed size. In addition, there will be
a thin border around all controls to make the dialog look nice and - to make matter worse -
the buttons shall be centred as the width of the dialog changes.
It is the unique feature of a box sizer, that it can grow in both directions (height and
width) but can distribute its growth in the main direction (horizontal for a row) {\it unevenly}
among its children. In our example case, the vertical sizer is supposed to propagate all its
height changes to only the text area, not to the button area. This is determined by the {\it option} parameter
when adding a window (or another sizer) to a sizer. It is interpreted
as a weight factor, i.e. it can be zero, indicating that the window may not be resized
at all, or above zero. If several windows have a value above zero, the value is interpreted
relative to the sum of all weight factors of the sizer, so when adding two windows with
a value of 1, they will both get resized equally much and each half as much as the sizer
owning them. Then what do we do when a column sizer changes its width? This behaviour is
controlled by {\it flags} (the second parameter of the Add() function): Zero or no flag
indicates that the window will preserve it is original size, wxGROW flag (same as wxEXPAND)
forces the window to grow with the sizer, and wxSHAPED flag tells the window to change it is
size proportionally, preserving original aspect ratio. When wxGROW flag is not used,
the item can be aligned within available space. wxALIGN\_LEFT, wxALIGN\_TOP, wxALIGN\_RIGHT,
wxALIGN\_BOTTOM, wxALIGN\_CENTER\_HORIZONTAL and wxALIGN\_CENTER\_VERTICAL do what they say.
wxALIGN\_CENTRE (same as wxALIGN\_CENTER) is defined as (wxALIGN\_CENTER\_HORIZONTAL |
wxALIGN\_CENTER\_VERTICAL). Default alignment is wxALIGN\_LEFT | wxALIGN\_TOP.
As mentioned above, any window belonging to a sizer may have border, and it can be specified
which of the four sides may have this border, using the wxTOP, wxLEFT, wxRIGHT and wxBOTTOM
constants or wxALL for all directions (and you may also use wxNORTH, wxWEST etc instead). These
flags can be used in combination with the alignment flags above as the second parameter of the
Add() method using the binary or operator |. The sizer of the border also must be made known,
and it is the third parameter in the Add() method. This means, that the entire behaviour of
a sizer and its children can be controlled by the three parameters of the Add() method.
\begin{verbatim}
// we want to get a dialog that is stretchable because it
// has a text ctrl at the top and two buttons at the bottom
MyDialog::MyDialog(wxFrame *parent, wxWindowID id, const wxString &title )
: wxDialog(parent, id, title, wxDefaultPosition, wxDefaultSize,
wxDEFAULT_DIALOG_STYLE | wxRESIZE_BORDER)
{
wxBoxSizer *topsizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxVERTICAL );
// create text ctrl with minimal size 100x60
topsizer->Add(
new wxTextCtrl( this, -1, "My text.", wxDefaultPosition, wxSize(100,60), wxTE_MULTILINE),
1, // make vertically stretchable
wxEXPAND | // make horizontally stretchable
wxALL, // and make border all around
10 ); // set border width to 10
wxBoxSizer *button_sizer = new wxBoxSizer( wxHORIZONTAL );
button_sizer->Add(
new wxButton( this, wxID_OK, "OK" ),
0, // make horizontally unstretchable
wxALL, // make border all around (implicit top alignment)
10 ); // set border width to 10
button_sizer->Add(
new wxButton( this, wxID_CANCEL, "Cancel" ),
0, // make horizontally unstretchable
wxALL, // make border all around (implicit top alignment)
10 ); // set border width to 10
topsizer->Add(
button_sizer,
0, // make vertically unstretchable
wxALIGN_CENTER ); // no border and centre horizontally
SetAutoLayout( TRUE ); // tell dialog to use sizer
SetSizer( topsizer ); // actually set the sizer
topsizer->Fit( this ); // set size to minimum size as calculated by the sizer
topsizer->SetSizeHints( this ); // set size hints to honour mininum size
}
\end{verbatim}
\wxheading{Derived from}
\helpref{wxSizer}{wxsizer}\\
\helpref{wxObject}{wxobject}
\membersection{wxBoxSizer::wxBoxSizer}\label{wxboxsizerwxboxsizer}
\func{}{wxBoxSizer}{\param{int }{orient}}
Constructor for a wxBoxSizer. {\it orient} may be either of wxVERTICAL
or wxHORIZONTAL for creating either a column sizer or a row sizer.
\membersection{wxBoxSizer::RecalcSizes}\label{wxboxsizerrecalcsizes}
\func{void}{RecalcSizes}{\void}
Implements the calculation of a box sizer's dimensions and then sets
the size of its its children (calling \helpref{wxWindow::SetSize}{wxwindowsetsize}
if the child is a window). It is used internally only and must not be called
by the user. Documented for information.
\membersection{wxBoxSizer::CalcMin}\label{wxboxsizercalcmin}
\func{wxSize}{CalcMin}{\void}
Implements the calculation of a box sizer's minimal. It is used internally
only and must not be called by the user. Documented for information.
\membersection{wxBoxSizer::GetOrientation}\label{wxboxsizergetorientation}
\func{int}{GetOrientation}{\void}
Returns the orientation of the box sizer, either wxVERTICAL
or wxHORIZONTAL.