Hi,

On 24/05/2013 11:19, Helen Craigman wrote:
Hi Mark


In my code, I do use the CheckItem method, and that's working fine.
The issue is, after I change the item check state, the event handler
for EVT_TREELIST_ITEM_CHECKED does not get
triggered,

Yes, this particular event is only triggered when the change is caused
by the user interface. That is a wxWidgets design decision /feature /
bug - depending on your view. The behaviour is documented though.

Studing the documentation, I undestood that the way to
have the event handler invoked, is to programatically raise the "command
event" (in this case: EVT_TREELIST_ITEM_CHECKED).

No. (as noted previously). You can created your own custom events but
'mimicking' a built in event is not the way to go. An actual
wxTreeListEvent derives from wxNotifyEvent - you would really need to
create the event properly.


Now an event handler has this in the beginning:
Quote ----------
my( $this, $event ) = @_;
  $item = $event->GetItem;
Unquote -------

So, since  it's looking for an event object, I don't know how to call it,
except for raising EVT_TREELIST_ITEM_CHECKED.
And in order to raise the event programatically, you need
wxEVT_TREELIST_ITEM_CHECKED.

By the way, other command event constants do get exported in wxPerl
(for example wxEVT_COMMAND_CHECKBOX_CLICKED).

true, but this isn't to allow end user usage, rather it it just the way
the event 'macro' sub routines are implemented for this particular event.


How do you propose I should do it?

sub handle_item_change {
   my($self, $item) = @_;
   # do stuff with $item;
}

sub on_event_item_checked {
   my($self, $event) = @_;
   my $item = $event->GetItem;
   $self->handle_item_change( $item );
}

sub set_item_state_by_code {
   my($self, $item, $newstate) = @_;
   $self->{treelist}->CheckItem($item, $newstate);
   $self->handle_item_change( $item );
}


Regards

Mark






















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