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							- /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
 
- // Name:        backwardcompatibility.h
 
- // Purpose:     topic overview
 
- // Author:      wxWidgets team
 
- // Licence:     wxWindows licence
 
- /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
 
- /**
 
- @page overview_backwardcompat Backwards Compatibility
 
- @tableofcontents
 
- Many of the GUIs and platforms supported by wxWidgets are continuously
 
- evolving, and some of the new platforms wxWidgets now supports were quite
 
- unimaginable even a few years ago. In this environment wxWidgets must also
 
- evolve in order to support these new features and platforms.
 
- However the goal of wxWidgets is not only to provide a consistent programming
 
- interface across many platforms, but also to provide an interface that is
 
- reasonably stable over time, to help protect its users from some of the
 
- uncertainty of the future.
 
- @section overview_backwardcompat_versionnumbering The Version Numbering Scheme
 
- wxWidgets version numbers can have up to four components, with trailing zeros
 
- sometimes omitted:
 
- @verbatim
 
- major.minor.release.sub-release
 
- @endverbatim
 
- A stable release of wxWidgets will have an even number for @e minor, e.g.
 
- 2.6.0. Stable, in this context, means that the API is not changing. In truth,
 
- some changes are permitted, but only those that are backward compatible. For
 
- example, you can expect later 2.6.x releases, such as 2.6.1 and 2.6.2 to be
 
- backward compatible with their predecessor.
 
- When it becomes necessary to make changes which are not wholly backward
 
- compatible, the stable branch is forked, creating a new development branch of
 
- wxWidgets. This development branch will have an odd number for @e minor, for
 
- example 2.7.x. Releases from this branch are known as development snapshots.
 
- The stable branch and the development branch will then be developed in parallel
 
- for some time. When it is no longer useful to continue developing the stable
 
- branch, the development branch is renamed and becomes a new stable branch, for
 
- example: 2.8.0. And the process begins again. This is how the tension between
 
- keeping the interface stable, and allowing the library to evolve is managed.
 
- You can expect the versions with the same major and even minor version number
 
- to be compatible, but between minor versions there will be incompatibilities.
 
- Compatibility is not broken gratuitously however, so many applications will
 
- require no changes or only small changes to work with the new version.
 
- @section overview_backwardcompat_sourcecompat Source Level Compatibility
 
- Later releases from a stable branch are backward compatible with earlier
 
- releases from the same branch at the source level. This means that, for
 
- example, if you develop your application using wxWidgets 2.8.0 then it should
 
- also compile fine with all later 2.8.x versions.
 
- The converse is also true providing you avoid any new features not present in
 
- the earlier version. For example if you develop using 2.6.1 your program will
 
- compile fine with wxWidgets 2.8.0 providing you don't use any 2.8.1 specific
 
- features.
 
- For some platforms binary compatibility is also supported, see
 
- @ref overview_backwardcompat_libbincompat below.
 
- Between minor versions, for example between 2.4.x, 2.6.x and 2.8.x, there will
 
- be some incompatibilities. Wherever possible the old way of doing something is
 
- kept alongside the new for a time wrapped inside:
 
- @code
 
- #if WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_6
 
-     // deprecated feature
 
-     ...
 
- #endif
 
- @endcode
 
- By default the @c WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_X_X macro is set to 1 for the previous
 
- stable branch, for example in 2.8.x, @c WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_6 = 1. For the
 
- next earlier stable branch the default is 0, so @c WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_4 = 0
 
- for 2.8.x. Earlier than that, obsolete features are removed.
 
- These macros can be changed in @c setup.h. Or on UNIX-like systems you can set
 
- them using the @c --disable-compat26 and @c --enable-compat24 options to
 
- configure.
 
- They can be useful in two ways:
 
- @li Changing @c WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_6 to 0 can be useful to find uses of
 
-     deprecated features in your program that should eventually be removed.
 
- @li Changing @c WXWIN_COMPATIBILITY_2_4 to 1 can be useful to compile a program
 
-     developed using 2.4.x that no longer compiles with 2.8.x.
 
- A program requiring one of these macros to be 1 will become incompatible with
 
- some future version of wxWidgets, and you should consider updating it.
 
- @section overview_backwardcompat_libbincompat Library Binary Compatibility
 
- For some platforms, releases from a stable branch are not only source level
 
- compatible but can also be binary compatible.
 
- Binary compatibility makes it possible to get the maximum benefit from using
 
- shared libraries, also known as dynamic link libraries (DLLs) on Windows or
 
- dynamic shared libraries on OS X.
 
- For example, suppose several applications are installed on a system requiring
 
- wxWidgets 2.6.0, 2.6.1 and 2.6.2. Since 2.6.2 is backward compatible with the
 
- earlier versions, it should be enough to install just wxWidgets 2.6.2 shared
 
- libraries, and all the applications should be able to use them. If binary
 
- compatibility is not supported, then all the required versions 2.6.0, 2.6.1 and
 
- 2.6.2 must be installed side by side.
 
- Achieving this, without the user being required to have the source code and
 
- recompile everything, places many extra constraints on the changes that can be
 
- made within the stable branch. So it is not supported for all platforms, and
 
- not for all versions of wxWidgets. To date it has mainly been supported by
 
- wxGTK for UNIX-like platforms.
 
- Another practical consideration is that for binary compatibility to work, all
 
- the applications and libraries must have been compiled with compilers that are
 
- capable of producing compatible code; that is, they must use the same ABI
 
- (Application Binary Interface). Unfortunately most different C++ compilers do
 
- not produce code compatible with each other, and often even different versions
 
- of the same compiler are not compatible.
 
- @section overview_backwardcompat_appbincompat Application Binary Compatibility
 
- The most important aspect of binary compatibility is that applications compiled
 
- with one version of wxWidgets, e.g. 2.6.1, continue to work with shared
 
- libraries of a later binary compatible version, for example 2.6.2. The converse
 
- can also be useful however. That is, it can be useful for a developer using a
 
- later version, e.g. 2.6.2 to be able to create binary application packages that
 
- will work with all binary compatible versions of the shared library starting
 
- with, for example 2.6.0.
 
- To do this the developer must, of course, avoid any features not available in
 
- the earlier versions. However this is not necessarily enough; in some cases an
 
- application compiled with a later version may depend on it even though the same
 
- code would compile fine against an earlier version.
 
- To help with this, a preprocessor symbol @c wxABI_VERSION can be defined during
 
- the compilation of the application (this would usually be done in the
 
- application's makefile or project settings). It should be set to the lowest
 
- version that is being targeted, as a number with two decimal digits for each
 
- component, for example @c wxABI_VERSION=20600 for 2.6.0.
 
- Setting @c wxABI_VERSION should prevent the application from implicitly
 
- depending on a later version of wxWidgets, and also disables any new features
 
- in the API, giving a compile time check that the source is compatible with the
 
- versions of wxWidgets being targeted.
 
- Uses of @c wxABI_VERSION are stripped out of the wxWidgets sources when each
 
- new development branch is created. Therefore it is only useful to help achieve
 
- compatibility with earlier versions with the same major and even minor version
 
- numbers. It won't, for example, help you write code compatible with 2.6.x using
 
- wxWidgets 2.8.x.
 
- */
 
 
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