I have created a combobox on a dialog using wxwidgets C++ library (with MSVC and GCC). The list of items in the combobox are too many and when I click on the combobox whole list is shown on the screen and it looks bad and choosing an item from this list is not that user frendly.
Is there anyway we can see this list in a small popup window with a scrollbar? I could not find any relevant methods to set the size for popup window.
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks,
Harik
Have you tried setting the desired size in the constructor?
Something like this, which will restrict the height of the popup to 50 pixels
int ComboboxHeightPixels = 50;
new wxComboBox( this, ComboID, L"",wxPoint(-1,-1),
wxSize(-1,ComboboxHeightPixels));
You need to use wxComboCtrl with some popup window (see wxPopupWindow) that provides a wxListView and a resizing method (you probably have to implement that yourself).
Related
so this project follows my last question. I implemented the buttons and found out how to render events when they are clicked, this question is a next-step for me that I am struggling with. Utilizing the winapi I want to create a dialog box when a button is clicked on the window class, but I want the dialog box to take the properties of another window class so I can pass specific properties to it. How would I approach this? Again, some demo code would be greatly appreciated! Thanks for taking the time.
I have a design like below:
So basically, I want to embed three dialogs in the application main dialog and switch between them, for each button click i.e., button 1 will show dialog one , button 2 will hide dialog 1 and show dialog 2 .. and so on.
Each dialog will be having a different design and functions.
I tried using CPropertySheet class to Add pages but its GUI is different. It has either option for navigating the dialogs using next / back button , or from a tab control.
None of which is as per my requirement.
So I want to know is it possible to have a design like this in MFC ? If yes how? Which Class/ control should I use.
Any help will be appreciated.
What you can do is use a normal CDialog class, add your buttons to it and also create a frame/rect as a placeholder for where your embedded dialogs are to appear. The following piece of code will create and position your embedded dialog.
CRect rect;
CWnd *pHost = GetDlgItem(ID_OF_YOUR_FRAME_RECT);
pHost->GetWindowRect(&rect);
ScreenToClient(&rect);
pDialog->Create(ID_OF_YOUR_DIALOG, this);
pDialog->MoveWindow(&rect);
pDialog->ShowWindow(SW_SHOW);
On button clicks, you hide the previously shown dialog (SW_HIDE) and show your selected dialog(SW_SHOW) with ShowWindow(...).
If you create your embedded dialogs with IDD_FORMVIEW style in the add resource editor it'll have the proper styles for embedding.
Another option is probably to use an embedded PropertySheet and hide the tab row and programatically change the tabs on the button clicks. I just find it to be too much fuzz with borders, positioning, validation and such for my liking.
If you have the MFC Feature Pack, that first came with VS2008 SP1 and is in all later versions, you might like to consider CMFCPropertySheet. There are a number of examples on the linked page, that are very similar to your design.
For example, this:
What worked for me just using dialog based application is SetParent() method. Dont know why nobody mentioned it. It seems to work fine.
I am doing like below:
VERIFY(pDlg1.Create(PanelDlg::IDD, this));
VERIFY(pDlg2.Create(PanelDlg2::IDD, this));
VERIFY(pDlg3.Create(PanelDlg2::IDD, this));
::SetParent(pDlg1.GetSafeHwnd(), this->m_hWnd);
::SetParent(pDlg2.GetSafeHwnd(), this->m_hWnd);
::SetParent(pDlg3.GetSafeHwnd(), this->m_hWnd);
Now I can show or hide a child dialog at will (button clicks) as below:
pDlg1.ShowWindow(SW_SHOW);
pDlg2.ShowWindow(SW_HIDE);
pDlg3.ShowWindow(SW_HIDE);
I have a dialog that initially has several buttons, let's call them Write, View, OK, and Cancel.
The way it should to is to have the dialog upon creation only have those three buttons and nothing more.
When the Write button is cancelled, it's supposed to create a QLineEdit object in the window above the buttons where the user can enter a new string,which when OK is then clicked will be added to an external QStringList.
When View is clicked, LineEdit should go away (if it's up) and a QListView to come up instead to view everything in that list.
The problem is, I know how to use hide() to get objects that are already in the dialog to NOT appear.
but I am having trouble figuring out how to get an object not currently on the table to appear. I'm new to using Qt so it may be something easy I'm just accidentally overlooking (in fact I hope it is).
Could anyone please offer advice? Thanks!
Just create the items normally and then set:
ui->control->setVisible(false);
after you have created the UI (after ui->setupUi(this);) possibly in the constructor (in case you use code generated by Qt Creator).
And when you need them:
ui->control->setVisible(true);
Doc for this:
http://qt-project.org/doc/qt-4.8/qwidget.html#visible-prop
when using a QListView you should also have a QListModel that provides the data to it, if you only have QStrings then a QStringListModel is premade for you to use
to add a row you can do:
int rows = model->rowCount();
model->addRow(rows,1);
QModelIndex index = model->index(rows,0);
model->setData(index, string);
I have a C++ MFC MDI application. I have a tool bar with some buttons on it. I need to add some check boxes to this toolbar and i need them to have custom bitmaps just as my buttons do. Thanks
EDIT:
By bitmpas i refer to the pixel images that can be created using the tool bar editor in visual stuidos 2008. I would like a picture (of my creation) instead of the usual tick box.
You don't use checkboxes on toolbars.
You should rather use regular buttons in Check mode. That means that the button stays pressed when user releases it. Clicking it a second time releases the button. This is the same behaviour as a checkbox.
You can either set a toolbar button as checkable by code:
m_ToolBar.SetButtonStyle(nButtonId, TBBS_CHECKBOX);
Or by enabling the corresponding property in the resource editor.
If you want to modify the image displayed when the button is pressed, in your ON_UPDATE_COMMAND_UI handler, use m_ToolBar.GetButtonInfo() to check if the image matches the state. If not, change it using m_ToolBar.SetButtonInfo() and specify the index of an extra image added to the image list of the toolbar.
The following is a link which might help you
http://www.ucancode.net/Visual_C_Control/Place-Combo-Edit-Box-Progress-Control-On-ToolBar-CToolBar-VC-Example.htm
I think I may be using a wrong window style or something or maybe just adding the menu to the window incorrectly. I'll post a link to an image here so you can see what I mean about the menu not diplaying correctly:
http://img707.imageshack.us/img707/4828/wtfmenu.jpg
And here's a link to the code that creates the menu and the window:
http://pastebin.com/CBrSVXUD
I'm sure I'm missing something simple and dumb in the labyrinth of styles, settings and etc that are part and parcel for the Win32 API. Has anyone seen this before and know what I'm doing wrong? I just want a 'normal' menu bar along the top, snug against the title bar.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
The MF_MENUBREAK flag you use when adding the popups causes this—that flag is only required if you want the menu item to appear on a new line in the menu bar. Take out both of the MF_MENUBREAK flags and all will be well.