A Brief History of wxWidgets

team bbl


The wxWidgets project started life in 1992 when Julian Smart was working at the University of Edinburgh on a diagramming tool called Hardy. He didn't want to choose between deploying it either on Sun workstations or PCs, so he decided to use a cross-platform framework. Because the range of existing cross-platform frameworks was limited, and the department didn't have a budget for it anyway, there was little choice but to write his own. The university gave him permission to upload wxWidgets 1.0 to the department's FTP site in September 1992, and other developers began to use the code. Initially, wxWidgets targeted XView and MFC 1.0; Borland C++ users complained about the requirement for MFC, so it was rewritten to use pure Win32. Because XView was giving way to Motif, a Motif port quickly followed.

Over time, a small but enthusiastic community of wxWidgets users was established and a mailing list created. Contributions and fixes were sent in, including an Xt port by Markus Holzem. wxWidgets gradually picked up more and more users from all over the world: individuals, academics, government departments, andmost gratifying of allcorporate users who found that wxWidgets offered a better product and better support than the commercial products they had looked at or used.

In 1997, a new wxWidgets 2 API was designed with help from Markus Holzem. Wolfram Gloger suggested that wxWidgets should be ported to GTK+, the up-and-coming widget set being adopted for the GNOME desktop environment. Robert Roebling became the lead developer for wxGTK, which is now the main Unix/Linux port of wxWidgets. In 1998, the Windows and GTK+ ports were merged and put under CVS control. Vadim Zeitlin joined the project to contribute huge amounts of design and code, and Stefan Csomor started a Mac OS port, also in 1998.

1999 saw the addition of Vaclav Slavik's impressive wxHTML classes and the HTML-based help viewer. In 2000, SciTech, Inc. sponsored initial development of wxUniversal, wxWidgets's own set of widgets for use on platforms that have no widget set of their own. wxUniversal was first used in SciTech's port to MGL, their low-level graphics layer.

In 2002, Julian Smart and Robert Roebling added the wxX11 port using the wxUniversal widgets. Requiring only Unix and X11, wxX11 is suitable for any Unix environment and can be used in fairly low-spec systems.

In July 2003, wxWidgets started running on Windows CE, and Robert Roebling demonstrated wxGTK applications running on the GPE embedded Linux platform.

In 2004, wxWidgets was renamed from the original moniker "wxWindows," after objections from Microsoft based on its Windows trademark.

Also during 2004, Stefan Csomor and a host of other contributors completely revamped wxMac for OS X, significantly improving the appearance and functionality of OS X applications. A port using Cocoa was also steadily improved, led by David Elliot, and William Osborne won our challenge to deliver an embryonic Palm OS 6 port that supports the wxWidgets "minimal" sample. Version 2.6 was released in April 2005, incorporating major improvements to all ports.

Future plans for wxWidgets include

  • A package management tool, to make it easier to integrate third-party components

  • Improved support for embedded applications

  • Alternative event handling mechanisms

  • Enhanced controls, such as a combined tree and list control

  • wxHTML 2, with full web capabilities on all platforms

  • Further compatibility with standards such as STL

  • A full Palm OS port

    team bbl



    Cross-Platform GUI Programming with wxWidgets
    Cross-Platform GUI Programming with wxWidgets
    ISBN: 0131473816
    EAN: 2147483647
    Year: 2005
    Pages: 262

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