oracular (3) wxMenuItem.3erl.gz

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NAME

       wxMenuItem - Functions for wxMenuItem class

DESCRIPTION

       A menu item represents an item in a menu.

       Note  that  you usually don't have to deal with it directly as wxMenu methods usually construct an object
       of this class for you.

       Also please note that the methods related to  fonts  and  bitmaps  are  currently  only  implemented  for
       Windows, Mac and GTK+.

       See: wxMenuBar, wxMenu

       wxWidgets docs: wxMenuItem

EVENTS

       Event types emitted from this class: menu_open, menu_close, menu_highlight

DATA TYPES

       wxMenuItem() = wx:wx_object()

EXPORTS

       new() -> wxMenuItem()

       new(Options :: [Option]) -> wxMenuItem()

              Types:

                 Option =
                     {parentMenu, wxMenu:wxMenu()} |
                     {id, integer()} |
                     {text, unicode:chardata()} |
                     {help, unicode:chardata()} |
                     {kind, wx:wx_enum()} |
                     {subMenu, wxMenu:wxMenu()}

              Constructs a wxMenuItem object.

              Menu items can be standard, or "stock menu items", or custom. For the standard menu items (such as
              commands to open a file, exit the program and so on, see page_stockitems for the full list) it  is
              enough  to  specify  just  the  stock  ID  and  leave  text  and help string empty. Some platforms
              (currently wxGTK only, and see the remark in setBitmap/2 documentation) will  also  show  standard
              bitmaps for stock menu items.

              Leaving at least text empty for the stock menu items is actually strongly recommended as they will
              have appearance and keyboard interface (including standard accelerators) familiar to the user.

              For the custom (non-stock) menu items, text must be specified and while help string  may  be  left
              empty,  it's recommended to pass the item description (which is automatically shown by the library
              in the status bar when the menu item is selected) in this parameter.

              Finally note that you can e.g. use a stock menu label without using its stock help string:

              that is, stock properties are set independently one from the other.

       destroy(This :: wxMenuItem()) -> ok

              Destructor.

       check(This) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

       check(This, Options :: [Option]) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Option = {check, boolean()}

              Checks or unchecks the menu item.

              Note that this only works when the item is already appended to a menu.

       enable(This) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

       enable(This, Options :: [Option]) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Option = {enable, boolean()}

              Enables or disables the menu item.

       getBitmap(This) -> wxBitmap:wxBitmap()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the checked or unchecked bitmap.

              Only for:wxmsw

       getHelp(This) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the help string associated with the menu item.

       getId(This) -> integer()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the menu item identifier.

       getKind(This) -> wx:wx_enum()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the item kind, one of wxITEM_SEPARATOR, wxITEM_NORMAL, wxITEM_CHECK or wxITEM_RADIO.

       getLabelFromText(Text) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 Text = unicode:chardata()

              See: getLabelText/1.

       getLabelText(Text) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 Text = unicode:chardata()

              Strips all accelerator characters and mnemonics from the given text.

              For example:

              will return just "Hello".

              See: getItemLabelText/1, getItemLabel/1

       getText(This) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              See: getItemLabel/1.

       getItemLabel(This) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the text associated with the menu item including  any  accelerator  characters  that  were
              passed to the constructor or setItemLabel/2.

              See: getItemLabelText/1, getLabelText/1

       getLabel(This) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              See: getItemLabelText/1.

       getItemLabelText(This) -> unicode:charlist()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the text associated with the menu item, without any accelerator characters.

              See: getItemLabel/1, getLabelText/1

       getMenu(This) -> wxMenu:wxMenu()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the menu this menu item is in, or NULL if this menu item is not attached.

       getSubMenu(This) -> wxMenu:wxMenu()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns the submenu associated with the menu item, or NULL if there isn't one.

       isCheckable(This) -> boolean()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns true if the item is checkable.

              Notice  that the radio buttons are considered to be checkable as well, so this method returns true
              for them too. Use IsCheck() (not implemented in wx) if you want to test for the check items only.

       isChecked(This) -> boolean()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns true if the item is checked.

       isEnabled(This) -> boolean()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns true if the item is enabled.

       isSeparator(This) -> boolean()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns true if the item is a separator.

       isSubMenu(This) -> boolean()

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()

              Returns true if the item is a submenu.

       setBitmap(This, Bmp) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Bmp = wxBitmap:wxBitmap()

              Sets the bitmap for the menu item.

              It is equivalent to wxMenuItem::SetBitmaps(bmp, wxNullBitmap) if checked is true  (default  value)
              or SetBitmaps(wxNullBitmap, bmp) otherwise.

              setBitmap/2  must  be  called  before  the  item  is appended to the menu, i.e. appending the item
              without a bitmap and setting one later is not guaranteed to work. But the bitmap can be changed or
              reset later if it had been set up initially.

              Notice that GTK+ uses a global setting called gtk-menu-images to determine if the images should be
              shown in the menus at all. If it is off (which is the case in e.g.  Gnome  2.28  by  default),  no
              images will be shown, consistently with the native behaviour.

              Only for:wxmsw,wxosx,wxgtk

       setHelp(This, HelpString) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 HelpString = unicode:chardata()

              Sets the help string.

       setMenu(This, Menu) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Menu = wxMenu:wxMenu()

              Sets the parent menu which will contain this menu item.

       setSubMenu(This, Menu) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Menu = wxMenu:wxMenu()

              Sets the submenu of this menu item.

       setText(This, Label) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Label = unicode:chardata()

              See: setItemLabel/2.

       setItemLabel(This, Label) -> ok

              Types:

                 This = wxMenuItem()
                 Label = unicode:chardata()

              Sets the label associated with the menu item.

              Note  that  if  the  ID  of  this menu item corresponds to a stock ID, then it is not necessary to
              specify a label: wxWidgets will automatically use the stock item label associated  with  that  ID.
              See the new/1 for more info.

              The  label string for the normal menu items (not separators) may include the accelerator which can
              be used to activate the menu item from keyboard. An accelerator key can  be  specified  using  the
              ampersand  &  character.  In  order  to  embed  an  ampersand character in the menu item text, the
              ampersand must be doubled.

              Optionally you can specify also an accelerator string appending a tab character \t followed  by  a
              valid  key  combination (e.g. CTRL+V). Its general syntax is any combination of "CTRL", "RAWCTRL",
              "ALT" and "SHIFT" strings (case doesn't matter) separated by either  '-'  or  '+'  characters  and
              followed  by  the  accelerator  itself.  Notice  that  CTRL  corresponds to the "Ctrl" key on most
              platforms but not under macOS where it is mapped to "Cmd" key on Mac  keyboard.  Usually  this  is
              exactly  what  you  want  in portable code but if you really need to use the (rarely used for this
              purpose) "Ctrl" key even under Mac, you may use RAWCTRL to prevent this mapping. Under  the  other
              platforms RAWCTRL is the same as plain CTRL.

              The  accelerator  may be any alphanumeric character, any function key (from F1 to F12), any numpad
              digit key using KP_ prefix (i.e. from KP_0 to KP_9) or one of the  special  strings  listed  below
              (again, case doesn't matter) corresponding to the specified key code:

              Examples:

              Note:  In  wxGTK  using  "SHIFT"  with  non-alphabetic  characters currently doesn't work, even in
              combination with other modifiers, due to GTK+ limitation. E.g. Shift+Ctrl+A works but Shift+Ctrl+1
              or Shift+/ do not, so avoid using accelerators of this form in portable code.

              Note:  In wxGTk, the left/right/up/down arrow keys do not work as accelerator keys for a menu item
              unless a modifier key is used. Additionally, the following keycodes  are  not  supported  as  menu
              accelerator keys:

              See: getItemLabel/1, getItemLabelText/1