A focus event is sent when a window’s focus changes.
The window losing focus receives a “kill focus” event while the window gaining it gets a “set focus” one.
Notice that the set focus event happens both when the user gives focus to the window (whether using the mouse or keyboard) and when it is done from the program itself using wx.Window.SetFocus
.
The focus event handlers should almost invariably call wx.Event.Skip
on their event argument to allow the default handling to take place. Failure to do this may result in incorrect behaviour of the native controls. Also note that wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS handler must not call wx.Window.SetFocus
as this, again, is not supported by all native controls. If you need to do this, consider using the Delayed Action Mechanism described in wx.IdleEvent documentation.
^^
Handlers bound for the following event types will receive a wx.FocusEvent parameter.
EVT_SET_FOCUS: Process a wxEVT_SET_FOCUS
event.
EVT_KILL_FOCUS: Process a wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS
event. ^^
Constructor. |
|
Returns the window associated with this event, that is the window which had the focus before for the |
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wx.
FocusEvent
(Event)¶Possible constructors:
FocusEvent(eventType=wxEVT_NULL, id=0)
A focus event is sent when a window’s focus changes.
__init__
(self, eventType=wxEVT_NULL, id=0)¶Constructor.
eventType (wx.EventType) –
id (int) –
GetWindow
(self)¶Returns the window associated with this event, that is the window which had the focus before for the wxEVT_SET_FOCUS
event and the window which is going to receive focus for the wxEVT_KILL_FOCUS
one.
Warning: the window pointer may be None
!