Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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It's not like they're ever going to change the definition of
WORD (knock on wood) -- but I guess it's proper to use them as if
their definitions might change.
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If it is relevant to add height for a header for a given list view, it
is better to override Height and do it there.
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Next step is to allow a double click to reset the split to be
automatically resized.
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I don't hate Hungarian notation. It has some very nice qualities. But
it also adds a lot of typing.
That said, not using it feels a bit... unsafe. I might go back on this
decision. We'll see.
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This makes it much more ergonomic and less error-prone to look up list
view items.
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This reverts much of 97f0a27.
1. It turns out not to be a good idea to resize the list view columns
based on the list view window's own rectangle, as it will change
depending on whether a scrollbar is visible. The problem is that
resizing the columns may add a horizontal scrollbar -- which in
turn may add a vertical scrollbar.
2. The WS_EX_CLIENTEDGE style does not look very good in "modern"
(non-classic) themes. In 97f0a27, I tried solving this by extending
the dimensions of the child windows such that their edges were
hidden. However, this type of overlapping causes problems with the
status bar. My new solution is to instead *reduce* the child
windows' dimensions. This achieves a visual impression similar to
the thicker (more well-designed) edges of the "classically themed"
list view control. To make it look even better, the main window
background is changed from COLOR_WINDOWFRAME (white) to
COLOR_WINDOW (light gray).
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This incidentally removes the need for the variable
template introduced by 21e96c6. I'm sure it will be
needed at some point, though.
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A getter offers encapsulation, but it is also less transparent in a
sense. Thinking of ListView as a struct, it is natural to expose hWnd
as a public member variable.
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This is obviously a lot less obtuse.
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This avoids g_hWnd.
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This is feasible now that the makedeps script exists to automatically
manage build dependencies (see 6034fe2, d00f8b3).
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Some older UNIX programs are organized like this,
and I think it gives a very good overview over the code.
See troff for an example.
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