These are the "Frequently Asked Questions" for the Perl Win32::GUI module. These questions and answers have been collected from the Win32::GUI-Users mailing list.
You can subscribe to the mailing list at http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/perl-win32-gui-users
This FAQ is currently significantly out of date - hopefully it will be reviewed and updated for the next Win32::GUI release.
If you run some lengthy processing like web page retrieval with LWP,
database search, file processing etc., and you cannot call
$Window->DoEvents()
within that processing, your window will seem to
freeze during your processing. The solution to that is, to do the
processing in a separate Windows thread or process. ActivePerl 5.6
simulates the "fork" command using Windows threads.
"Well, from Windows point of view, it is a thread. From Perl's point of view, it is a process. The Perl interpreter is busily keeping the data separate between the two threads (I'm not sure I understand the complete technique of the magic that does that, but I'm sure it can be made to work because the Perl language doesn't expose "real" addresses (much))."
"On the other hand, the (UNIX) model for "fork" is that the multiple processes (threads on Perl for Windows) start off with identical data/variables/file handles. And the Windows model for "windows" is that the windows are owned by a process (not a thread), and can be accessed by any thread that has the window handle. (And in fact, because Windows was developed on DOS, the windows are even a bit visible to other processes, but that doesn't concern us here.)"
"By creating the Win32::GUI objects before forking, both the parent and child threads get copies (?) of the object variables. Because of the nature of Windows, the embedded Window handles inside both copies of the object variables are equally usable. Because of the (present) nature of Win32::GUI, whereby most of the parameter data is pumped into Win32 API parameters, and most of the return values are obtained by calling Win32 APIs to obtain it, I have shown experimentally that it is possible to use the Win32::GUI object references from both a parent and a child thread. Now it is important to remember that Windows only delivers window messages to the first thread of a program, so in the Perl "fork" environment, this gets translated to *only the parent process of a group of Perl-forked processes can successfully run Win32::GUI::Dialog* (Yep, I tried it the other way first, figuring that the parent could more easily monitor the child process for death, since fork returns the child pid, and waitpid works that way--but it just hung, and the windows never appeared). However, *the child can use the object references created by Win32::GUI* [before the fork] to access the "IsEnabled", "IsVisible" attributes of the window widgets, and they are dynamically updated (not cached in the object). The child can access the current selection from combo boxes. The child can enable and disable widgets, and the display gets updated appropriately. This is quite adequate for my application, which now can do its "long" operations in the child "process", and keep the GUI window "active" (except that certain parts get disabled during "long" operations)."
Put a call to DoEvents()
inside the loop. This will ensure that all
queued messages are processed before going on with the loop:
use strict; use Win32::GUI;
my $main = Win32::GUI::Window->new( -name => "Main", -title => "Win32-GUI: Doevents-Demo", -left => 100, -top => 100, -width => 600, -height => 400, );
sub Main_Terminate() { print "Main window terminated\n"; return -1; }
my $textfield = $main->AddTextfield( -name => "Textfield", -text => "have fun and more", -left => 75, -top => 150, -width => 200, -height => 40, -readonly => 1, );
$main->Show();
$textfield->Text("Processing infile..."); open INFILE, "<infile.txt" or die "open infile error: $!"; my $linenr = 0; foreach my $line (<INFILE>) { $linenr++; $textfield->Text("Processing line $linenr"); Win32::GUI::DoEvents() >= 0 or die "Window was closed during processing";*
sleep 1; #body of the loop... }
$textfield->Text("completed"); Win32::GUI::DoEvents(); sleep 1; #program continues...
This will, of course, make your loop run slightly slower (almost irrelevant if there is no activity on the window). But there is the advantage (other than having the Textfield saying "Processing...") of being able to stop the loop in the middle by killing the window, or with a 'dedicated' stopbutton, for example.
If I develop a product in Perl with usage of the Win32::GUI module, and I spread (well lets assume for FREE) to the public.. Is it still under GNU license or do we have to pay the Win32::GUI team something?
"No, you don't have to pay anything. I'm not a lawyer and I don't want to pay a lawyer :-) Win32::GUI is released under the Artistic License, e.g. you can redistribute it under the same terms of Perl itself."
Note that some of the extensions may be released under different terms. Please ensure that you check the documentation of such extensions for individual licencing terms.
"Win32::GUI is a Win32-platform native graphical user interface toolkit for Perl. Basically, it's an XS implementation of most of the functions found in user32.dll and gdi32.dll, with an object oriented Perl interface and an event-based dialog model that mimic the functionality of visual basic. It was a big fun for me to put it up, hope it will be a fun for you too :-)"
The creator and guru of the Win32::GUI project is Aldo Calpini. Some (old) information can be found on his website at http://dada.perl.it/.
The project is under active development, and the latest information and releases can be found at the Win32::GUI homepage on SourceForge.
Both source distributions and PPM distributions (for ActiveState Perl 5.6 an 5.8) can be found here. It should be noted that the PPMs currently available directly from the ActiveState repositories and now very old, and should not be preferred for installations.
There are some other binary distributions around (some linked from CPAN, for example), but due to complexities in the project's build process these may well be missing the documentation. SourceForge is your best download location at the time of writing.
Full documentation is installed with the PPM installation, and can be found online at:
Somewhat older versions of the documents can be found at:
Yes, Win32::GUI supports things like these (it's really Perl that supports it :-), but you need to escape your window-handler variable $W:
eval qq ( sub main::$subtxt { print "button clicked\n"; *\$W*->SimpleLabel->Text("Got a click"); } ); $@ or die "Error in eval: $@"; $$$verify
...and always check for $@ after an eval!
Add these options when you create the textfield:
-multiline => 1 -autovscroll => 1
This should do the trick.
There is a Selection method that returns the start and end of the selection. Then you just make a substr on the Textfield content:
($from, $to) = $Textfield->Selection(); $var = substr($Textfield->Text, $from, $to-$from);
"I'd like to share a solution to a problem that has been driving me nuts for a while. I changed a Textfield control to a RichEdit and it would not give me the _Change event. I dug in the GUI.xs and could find nothing wrong. I finally tracked it down to the eventmask being zero, which means that the notification messages don't come to the GUI message loop in the first place. The workaround is to do
$MainWindow->myRichEditField->SendMessage (0x445, 0, 1);
That sends EM_SETEVENTMASK (0x445) to the control with the ENM_CHANGE bit set. Hope that spares somebody else a headache."
There is a SetCharFormat method to the RichEdit control.
$Rich->Select ($from_here, $to_there); $Rich->SetCharFormat (-color => $flashy_pink)
To set the font at the beginning you can use:
my $Font = new Win32::GUI::Font( -name => "Courier New", -height => 16, -bold => 0, );
### or the font/style of your choice... ### and then in your AddRichEdit use
-font => $Font
You can use the
-singlesel
option on the ListView to achieve what you want.
(that is, the Minimize, Maximize, and (sometimes) Help buttons)
Create a DialogBox and set the "-minimizebox", "-maximizebox", "-helpbutton" options approprietly. For example,
$db = new Win32::GUI::DialogBox( -name => "dialog_box", -text => "DialogBox Test", -size => [800,550], -helpbutton => 1, -menu => 0, -maximizebox => 0, -minimizebox => 0, -resizable => 0, );
I think these will work, I haven't tried them all.
Settings ================================= 0 - display only the OK button 1 - display OK and Cancel buttons 2 - display Abort, Retry, and Ignore buttons 3 - display Yes, No, and Cancel buttons 4 - display Yes and No buttons 5 - display Retry and Cancel buttons
16 - display Critical Message icon 32 - display Warning Query icon 48 - display Warning Message icon 64 - display Information Message icon
0 - set first button as default 256 - set second button as default 512 - set third button as default 768 - set fourth button as default
Return Values ============= 1 - OK 2 - Cancel 3 - Abort 4 - Retry 5 - Ignore 6 - Yes 7 - No
Basically, what you want is
Win32::GUI::SetCursor ()
the tricky thing is to get the standard resource of the hourglass. Feel free to use my perl module http://www.fairymails.com/perl/WinStRes.pm for exactly this: (Notice: Win32::API must be installed)
Win32::GUI::SetCursor (WinCursor (WAIT)); # hourglass ... Win32::GUI::SetCursor (WinCursor ()); # ... and back
What this module does is
$LoadImage = new Win32::API ('user32', 'LoadImage', [N,N,I,I,I,I],N) or die 'can\'t find LoadImage function'; .... %cursors = ( 'NORMAL' => 32512, 'IBEAM' => 32513, 'WAIT' => 32514, .... sub WinCursor { local $_ = $cursors{$_[0]} or $cursors{'NORMAL'}; return $LoadImage->Call (0, $_, 2, 0, 0, 0x8040); }
Example:
First download the module http://www.fairymails.com/perl/WinStRes.pm and store it under the name 'WinStRes.pm' in the directory where you have your perl program, or in the perl modules directory. Second, make sure Win32::API is installed, or install it using ppm. The perl program below now shows the hourglass cursor for two seconds each time the button "search now" is clicked.
use strict; use Win32::GUI;
#How to get the "wait cursor" resource. #Alternative 1, using the Win32::API module: use Win32::API; my $loadImage = new Win32::API ('user32', 'LoadImage', ['N','N','I','I','I','I'],'N') or die 'cannot find LoadImage function'; my $waitCursor = $loadImage->Call(0, 32514, 2, 0, 0, 0x8040);
#Alternative 2, using the WinStRes module (uses Win32::API) #use WinStRes; #download from http://www.fairymails.com/perl/WinStRes.pm #my $waitCursor = WinCursor("WAIT");
my $main = Win32::GUI::Window->new( -name => "Main", -title => "Win32-GUI: Hourglass Cursor Demo", -left => 100, -top => 100, -width => 600, -height => 400, );
my $search = $main->AddButton( -name => 'Search', -text => 'search now', -left => 25, -top => 25, );
sub Search_Click { print "Searching..."; my $oldCursor = Win32::GUI::SetCursor($waitCursor); #show hourglass ...
sleep 2; #do your search here print "done\n"; Win32::GUI::SetCursor($oldCursor); #show previous arrow cursor again return 1; }
sub Main_Terminate { print "Main Window terminated\n"; return -1; }
$main->Show(); Win32::GUI::Dialog();
Have a look at Win32::GUI::Grid.
The original author was Laurent Rocher, but the module is included with Win32::GUI from V1.04 onwards
"No, and I don't think I will try to implement one :-) You should instead look at Win32::OLE, to see if you can embed an InternetExplorer instance in a window. That said, it seems that RichEdit 3.0 (available in Windows 2000) has a lot of nice features, that I'll try to implement if time permits."
So, I used the Win32:OLE example from Learning Perl on Win32:
use Win32::OLE; my $browser = CreateObject OLE "InternetExplorer.Application.1" || return 0; $browser->{'Visible'} = 1; $browser->Navigate("http://www.perlmonks.org/");
This works fine, except I'm now forcing the user to use IE instead of Netscape. And it's possible (not likely I realize) that they don't even have IE. So what happens then?
To show an URL in the default browser of your PC, the Win32::Shell helps. Win32::Shell can be downloaded from the Activestate archive using ppm. It is not in CPAN at present (June 2001).
use Win32::Shell; $url = "http://www.perlmonks.org"; Win32::Shell::Execute("open", $url, undef, undef, "SW_SHOWNORMAL");
This starts the default browser opened to the correct URL, with no delay, and no console window.
An alternative is to use Win32::GUI::AxWindow by Laurent Rocher. This control adds ActiveX control hosting to Win32::GUI. This will allow you to "add" a web browser to a Win32::GUI window.
Win32::GUI::AxWindow is included in the Win32::GUI distribution with V1.04 and later.
Win32::GUI::DIBitmap add new reading/writing bitmap formats to Win32::GUI and some images manipulations (Conversion, Screen capture, ...). This package uses FreeImage 3.5.1, an open source image library supporting all common bitmap formats (visit: http://freeimage.sourceforge.net/).
Supports many formats, such as:
Format Reading Writing Description. BMP Y Y Windows or OS/2 Bitmap ICO Y N Windows Icon JPEG Y Y JPEG - JFIF Compliant JNG Y N JPEG Network Graphics KOALA Y N C64 Koala Graphics IFF Y N IFF Interleaved Bitmap MNG Y N Multiple Network Graphics PBM Y Y Portable Bitmap (ASCII) PBMRAW Y Y Portable Bitmap (RAW) PCD Y N Kodak PhotoCD PCX Y N Zsoft Paintbrush PGM Y Y Portable Greymap (ASCII) PGMRAW Y Y Portable Greymap (RAW) PNG Y Y Portable Network Graphics PPM Y Y Portable Pixelmap (ASCII) PPMRAW Y Y Portable Pixelmap (RAW) RAS Y N Sun Raster Image TARGA Y N Truevision Targa TIFF Y Y Tagged Image File Format WBMP Y Y Wireless Bitmap PSD Y N Adobe Photoshop
Current version : 0.03
For more information see
Win32::GUI::DIBitmap is included with Win32::GUI v1.04 and later
"Dealing with moving and resizing stuff when a window is resized is really annoying, not to mention boring. So I created a class to make that easier. That was a lot more fun for some reason :) Anyway, the result is Win32::GUI::Resizer.
Please try it out if you like and let me know what you think. " (email from Johan Lindström, Sourcerer, Boss Casinos Ltd, Antigua, jpl@bosscasinos.com)
yes, well.. at least a basic one. Download
For more information, check the Win32::GUI mailing-list, the emails from David Hiltz.
Another one is the GUI Loft by Johan Lindström. This is a powerful and easy-to-use WYSIWYG editor for designing Win32::GUI windows, dialog boxes and toolwindows. It is also a set of classes used to create the window for you at runtime.
Download source and/or binaries here:
The Perl Artistic License applies.
There is an extensive User Manual in the Help menu, please read it. But try the program first, you are programmers and power-users after all, right? :)
Currently supported controls are: Window, DialogBox, ToolbarWindow, Button, Label, TextField, RadioButton, CheckBox, GroupBox, Listbox, RichEdit, ListView, ComboBox, TreeView, TabStrip, Timer, ImageList
Cool features include:
Here is an example how it can be done:
# define popup menu for listview my $PopupMenu = new Win32::GUI::Menu( "Item Properties" => "ItemProp", ">&Properties" => "ItemProperties", ); # get right-click in listview sub DataView_RightClick { my($X, $Y) = Win32::GUI::GetCursorPos(); $MainWindow->TrackPopupMenu($PopupMenu->{ItemProp},$X, $Y); } # clicked on particular menu item in popup menu sub ItemProperties_Click { ## code you want to process; }
You need to use a WebBrowser control for that (not a MSHTML). MSHTML display html but can not navigate in same window (lauch defaut navigator). You can directly write HTML in a webbrowser with GetOLE and Win32::OLE.
$OLEControl = $Control->GetOLE(); # Get Win32::Ole object $OLEControl->Navigate("about:blank"); # Clear control and load a blank document $OLEControl->{Document}->write('perl.com <http://www.perl.com>'); # Write Html Now, when you click on link, # it navigate in same window.
From: "Laurent Rocher" Subject: Re: [perl-win32-gui-users] AxWindow: Creating HTML on the fly without loading a file! Date: Thu, 31 Jul 2003 13:04:02 +0200
This FAQ has been constructed by contributions to the users mailing list. You can join the mailing list by following the instructions at http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/perl-win32-gui-users.
The following people have contributed in collating this FAQ:
Aldo Calpini, dada at perl dot it Erick Bourgeois, erick at jeb dot ca Felix Gaehler, feli at freesurf dot ch Robert May, robertemay at users dor sourceforge dot net
Documentation for Win32::GUI v1.06 created 13 Feb 2008
This document is autogenerated by the build process. Edits made here will be lost. Edit docs/GUI/UserGuide/FAQ.pod instead.
Homepage: http://perl-win32-gui.sourceforge.net/.
For further support join the users mailing list(perl-win32-gui-users@lists.sourceforge.net
) from the website
at http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/perl-win32-gui-users. There is a searchable list archive at http://sourceforge.net/mail/.
Copyright (c) 1997..2008 Aldo Calpini. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.