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							- /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
 
- // Name:        container.h
 
- // Purpose:     topic overview
 
- // Author:      wxWidgets team
 
- // Licence:     wxWindows licence
 
- /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
 
- /**
 
- @page overview_container Container Classes
 
- @tableofcontents
 
- For historical reasons, wxWidgets uses custom container classes internally.
 
- This was unfortunately unavoidable during a long time when the standard library
 
- wasn't widely available and can't be easily changed even now that it is for
 
- compatibility reasons. If you are building your own version of the library and
 
- don't care about compatibility nor slight (less than 5%) size penalty imposed
 
- by the use of STL classes, you may choose to use the "STL" build of wxWidgets
 
- in which these custom classes are replaced with their standard counterparts and
 
- only read the section @ref overview_container_std explaining how to do it.
 
- Otherwise you will need to know about the custom wxWidgets container classes
 
- such as wxList<T> and wxArray<T> if only to use wxWidgets functions that work
 
- with them, e.g. wxWindow::GetChildren(), and you should find the information
 
- about using these classes below useful.
 
- Notice that we recommend that you use standard classes directly in your own
 
- code instead of the container classes provided by wxWidgets in any case as the
 
- standard classes are easier to use and may also be safer because of extra
 
- run-time checks they may perform as well as more efficient.
 
- Finally notice that recent versions of wxWidgets also provide standard-like
 
- classes such as wxVector<T>, wxStack<T> or wxDList which can be used exactly
 
- like the std::vector<T>, std::stack<T> and std::list<T*>, respectively, and
 
- actually are just typedefs for the corresponding types if wxWidgets is compiled
 
- in STL mode. These classes could be useful if you wish to avoid the use of the
 
- standard library in your code for some reason.
 
- To summarize, you should use the standard container classes such as
 
- std::vector<T> and std::list<T> if possible and wxVector<T> or wxDList<T> if
 
- it isn't and only use legacy wxWidgets containers such as wxArray<T> and
 
- wxList<T> when you must, i.e. when you use a wxWidgets function taking or
 
- returning a container of such type.
 
- @see @ref group_class_containers
 
- @section overview_container_legacy Legacy Classes
 
- The list classes in wxWidgets are doubly-linked lists which may either own the
 
- objects they contain (meaning that the list deletes the object when it is
 
- removed from the list or the list itself is destroyed) or just store the
 
- pointers depending on whether or not you called wxList<T>::DeleteContents()
 
- method.
 
- Dynamic arrays resemble C arrays but with two important differences: they
 
- provide run-time range checking in debug builds and they automatically expand
 
- the allocated memory when there is no more space for new items. They come in
 
- two sorts: the "plain" arrays which store either built-in types such as "char",
 
- "int" or "bool" or the pointers to arbitrary objects, or "object arrays" which
 
- own the object pointers to which they store.
 
- For the same portability reasons, the container classes implementation in
 
- wxWidgets don't use templates, but are rather based on C preprocessor i.e. are
 
- implemented using the macros: WX_DECLARE_LIST() and WX_DEFINE_LIST() for the
 
- linked lists and WX_DECLARE_ARRAY(), WX_DECLARE_OBJARRAY() and
 
- WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY() for the dynamic arrays.
 
- The "DECLARE" macro declares a new container class containing the elements of
 
- given type and is needed for all three types of container classes: lists,
 
- arrays and objarrays. The "DEFINE" classes must be inserted in your program in
 
- a place where the @e full declaration of container element class is in scope
 
- (i.e. not just forward declaration), otherwise destructors of the container
 
- elements will not be called!
 
- As array classes never delete the items they contain anyhow, there is no
 
- WX_DEFINE_ARRAY() macro for them.
 
- Examples of usage of these macros may be found in wxList<T> and wxArray<T>
 
- documentation.
 
- Finally, wxWidgets predefines several commonly used container classes. wxList
 
- is defined for compatibility with previous versions as a list containing
 
- wxObjects and wxStringList as a list of C-style strings (char *), both of these
 
- classes are deprecated and should not be used in new programs. The following
 
- array classes are defined: wxArrayInt, wxArrayLong, wxArrayPtrVoid and
 
- wxArrayString. The first three store elements of corresponding types, but
 
- wxArrayString is somewhat special: it is an optimized version of wxArray which
 
- uses its knowledge about wxString reference counting schema.
 
- @section overview_container_std STL Build
 
- To build wxWidgets with the standard containers you need to set
 
- wxUSE_STD_CONTAINERS option to 1 in @c wx/msw/setup.h for wxMSW builds or
 
- specify @c --enable-std_containers option to configure (which is also
 
- implicitly enabled by @c --enable-stl option) in Unix builds.
 
- The standard container build is mostly, but not quite, compatible with the
 
- default one. Here are the most important differences:
 
-  - wxList::compatibility_iterator must be used instead of wxList::Node* when
 
-    iterating over the list contents. The compatibility_iterator class has the
 
-    same semantics as a Node pointer but it is an object and not a pointer, so
 
-    you need to write
 
-         @code
 
-         for ( wxWindowList::compatibility_iterator it = list.GetFirst();
 
-               it;
 
-               it = it->GetNext() )
 
-             ...
 
-         @endcode
 
-    instead of the old
 
-         @code
 
-         for ( wxWindowList::Node *n = list.GetFirst(); n; n = n->GetNext() )
 
-             ...
 
-         @endcode
 
-  - wxSortedArrayString and wxArrayString are separate classes now and the
 
-    former doesn't derive from the latter. If you need to convert a sorted array
 
-    to a normal one, you must copy all the elements. Alternatively, you may
 
-    avoid the use of wxSortedArrayString by using a normal array and calling its
 
-    Sort() method when needed.
 
-  - WX_DEFINE_ARRAY_INT(bool) cannot be used because of the differences in
 
-    std::vector<bool> specialization compared with the generic std::vector<>
 
-    class. Please either use std::vector<bool> directly or use an integer array
 
-    instead.
 
- */
 
 
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