wxwidgets/samples/oleauto/oleauto.cpp
Vadim Zeitlin 4f4c5fcfdf Use nullptr instead of NULL in the code and documentation
This is a combination of running clang-tidy with modernize-use-nullptr
check for some ports (GTK, X11, OSX) and manual changes to the ports for
which it couldn't be used easily (MSW, DFB) and also manually updating
the docs.

Also replace NULL with null or nullptr in the comments as this is more
consistent with the use of nullptr in the code and makes it simpler to
grep for the remaining occurrences of NULL itself.

And also use null in the assert messages.

Only a few occurrences of "NULL" are still left in non-C files, mostly
corresponding to unclear comments or string output which it might not be
safe to change.
2022-10-18 01:25:25 +02:00

236 lines
7.6 KiB
C++

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Name: oleauto.cpp
// Purpose: OLE Automation wxWidgets sample
// Author: Julian Smart
// Modified by:
// Created: 08/12/98
// Copyright: (c) Julian Smart
// Licence: wxWindows licence
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// ============================================================================
// declarations
// ============================================================================
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// headers
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// For compilers that support precompilation, includes "wx/wx.h".
#include "wx/wxprec.h"
// for all others, include the necessary headers (this file is usually all you
// need because it includes almost all "standard" wxWidgets headers
#ifndef WX_PRECOMP
#include "wx/wx.h"
#endif
#include "wx/msw/ole/automtn.h"
#ifndef __WINDOWS__
#error "Sorry, this sample works under Windows only."
#endif
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// resources
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// the application icon
#ifndef wxHAS_IMAGES_IN_RESOURCES
#include "../sample.xpm"
#endif
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// private classes
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Define a new application type, each program should derive a class from wxApp
class MyApp : public wxApp
{
public:
// override base class virtuals
// ----------------------------
// this one is called on application startup and is a good place for the app
// initialization (doing it here and not in the ctor allows to have an error
// return: if OnInit() returns false, the application terminates)
virtual bool OnInit() override;
};
// Define a new frame type: this is going to be our main frame
class MyFrame : public wxFrame
{
public:
// ctor(s)
MyFrame(const wxString& title, const wxPoint& pos, const wxSize& size);
// event handlers (these functions should _not_ be virtual)
void OnQuit(wxCommandEvent& event);
void OnAbout(wxCommandEvent& event);
void OnTest(wxCommandEvent& event);
private:
// any class wishing to process wxWidgets events must use this macro
wxDECLARE_EVENT_TABLE();
};
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// constants
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// IDs for the controls and the menu commands
enum
{
// menu items
OleAuto_Quit = 1,
OleAuto_About,
OleAuto_Test,
// controls start here (the numbers are, of course, arbitrary)
OleAuto_Text = 1000
};
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// event tables and other macros for wxWidgets
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// the event tables connect the wxWidgets events with the functions (event
// handlers) which process them. It can be also done at run-time, but for the
// simple menu events like this the static method is much simpler.
wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(MyFrame, wxFrame)
EVT_MENU(OleAuto_Quit, MyFrame::OnQuit)
EVT_MENU(OleAuto_About, MyFrame::OnAbout)
EVT_MENU(OleAuto_Test, MyFrame::OnTest)
wxEND_EVENT_TABLE()
// Create a new application object: this macro will allow wxWidgets to create
// the application object during program execution (it's better than using a
// static object for many reasons) and also declares the accessor function
// wxGetApp() which will return the reference of the right type (i.e. MyApp and
// not wxApp)
wxIMPLEMENT_APP(MyApp);
// ============================================================================
// implementation
// ============================================================================
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// the application class
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// `Main program' equivalent: the program execution "starts" here
bool MyApp::OnInit()
{
if ( !wxApp::OnInit() )
return false;
// Create the main application window
MyFrame *frame = new MyFrame("OleAuto wxWidgets App",
wxPoint(50, 50), wxSize(450, 340));
// Show it
frame->Show(true);
// success: wxApp::OnRun() will be called which will enter the main message
// loop and the application will run. If we returned false here, the
// application would exit immediately.
return true;
}
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// main frame
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// frame constructor
MyFrame::MyFrame(const wxString& title, const wxPoint& pos, const wxSize& size)
: wxFrame(nullptr, wxID_ANY, title, pos, size)
{
// set the frame icon
SetIcon(wxICON(sample));
// create a menu bar
wxMenu *menuFile = new wxMenu;
menuFile->Append(OleAuto_Test, "&Test Excel Automation...");
menuFile->Append(OleAuto_About, "&About");
menuFile->AppendSeparator();
menuFile->Append(OleAuto_Quit, "E&xit");
// now append the freshly created menu to the menu bar...
wxMenuBar *menuBar = new wxMenuBar;
menuBar->Append(menuFile, "&File");
// ... and attach this menu bar to the frame
SetMenuBar(menuBar);
#if wxUSE_STATUSBAR
// create a status bar just for fun (by default with 1 pane only)
CreateStatusBar(2);
SetStatusText("Welcome to wxWidgets!");
#endif // wxUSE_STATUSBAR
}
// event handlers
void MyFrame::OnQuit(wxCommandEvent& WXUNUSED(event))
{
// true is to force the frame to close
Close(true);
}
void MyFrame::OnAbout(wxCommandEvent& WXUNUSED(event))
{
wxMessageBox("This is an OLE Automation sample",
"About OleAuto", wxOK | wxICON_INFORMATION, this);
}
/* Tests OLE automation by making the active Excel cell bold,
* and changing the text.
*/
void MyFrame::OnTest(wxCommandEvent& WXUNUSED(event))
{
wxMessageBox("Excel will be started if it is not running after you have pressed OK button."
"\nThe active cell should then say 'wxWidgets automation test!' in bold.",
"Excel start");
wxAutomationObject excelObject;
if ( !excelObject.GetInstance("Excel.Application") )
{
wxLogError("Could not create Excel object.");
return;
}
// Ensure that Excel is visible
if (!excelObject.PutProperty("Visible", true))
{
wxLogError("Could not make Excel object visible");
}
const wxVariant workbooksCountVariant = excelObject.GetProperty("Workbooks.Count");
if (workbooksCountVariant.IsNull())
{
wxLogError("Could not get workbooks count");
return;
}
const long workbooksCount = workbooksCountVariant;
if (workbooksCount == 0)
{
const wxVariant workbook = excelObject.CallMethod("Workbooks.Add");
if (workbook.IsNull())
{
wxLogError("Could not create new Workbook");
return;
}
}
if (!excelObject.PutProperty("ActiveCell.Value", "wxWidgets automation test!"))
{
wxLogError("Could not set active cell value.");
return;
}
if (!excelObject.PutProperty("ActiveCell.Font.Bold", wxVariant(true)) )
{
wxLogError("Could not put Bold property to active cell.");
return;
}
}