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Glyph Class

Definition

Represents a single user interface (UI) entity managed by an Adorner.

public ref class Glyph abstract
public abstract class Glyph
type Glyph = class
Public MustInherit Class Glyph
Inheritance
Glyph
Derived

Examples

The following example demonstrates how to create your own Glyph based class with Behavior associated with it. This code example is part of a larger example provided for the BehaviorService class.


// By providing our own behavior we can do something
// interesting when the user clicks or manipulates our glyph.
public  ref class DemoBehavior : public Behavior
{
public:
    bool OnMouseUp(Glyph^ g, MouseButtons^ button)
    {
        MessageBox::Show("Hey, you clicked the mouse here");

        // indicating we processed this event.
        return true;
    }
};

public ref class DemoGlyph : public Glyph
{
    Control^ control;
    BehaviorService^ behavior;

public:
    DemoGlyph(BehaviorService^ behavior, Control^ control):
      Glyph(gcnew BehaviorServiceSample::DemoBehavior)
      {
          this->behavior = behavior;
          this->control = control;
      }

public:
    virtual property Rectangle Bounds
    {
        Rectangle get() override
        {
            // Create a glyph that is 10x10 and sitting
            // in the middle of the control.  Glyph coordinates
            // are in adorner window coordinates, so we must map
            // using the behavior service.
            Point edge = behavior->ControlToAdornerWindow(control);
            Size size = control->Size;
            Point center = Point(edge.X + (size.Width / 2),
                edge.Y + (size.Height / 2));

            Rectangle bounds = Rectangle(center.X - 5,
                center.Y - 5, 10, 10);

            return bounds;
        }
    }

public:
    virtual Cursor^ GetHitTest(Point p) override
    {
        // GetHitTest is called to see if the point is
        // within this glyph.  This gives us a chance to decide
        // what cursor to show.  Returning null from here means
        // the mouse pointer is not currently inside of the
        // glyph.  Returning a valid cursor here indicates the
        // pointer is inside the glyph, and also enables our
        // Behavior property as the active behavior.
        if (Bounds.Contains(p))
        {
            return Cursors::Hand;
        }
        return nullptr;
    }

public:
    virtual void Paint(PaintEventArgs^ pe) override
    {
        // Draw our glyph.  Our's is simple:  a blue ellipse.
        pe->Graphics->FillEllipse(Brushes::Blue, Bounds);
    }
};
class MyGlyph : Glyph
{
    Control control;
    BehaviorService behaviorSvc;

    public MyGlyph(BehaviorService behaviorSvc, Control control) : 
        base(new MyBehavior())
    {
        this.behaviorSvc = behaviorSvc;
        this.control = control;
    }

    public override Rectangle Bounds
    {
        get
        {
            // Create a glyph that is 10x10 and sitting
            // in the middle of the control.  Glyph coordinates
            // are in adorner window coordinates, so we must map
            // using the behavior service.
            Point edge = behaviorSvc.ControlToAdornerWindow(control);
            Size size = control.Size;
            Point center = new Point(edge.X + (size.Width / 2), 
                edge.Y + (size.Height / 2));

            Rectangle bounds = new Rectangle(
                center.X - 5,
                center.Y - 5,
                10,
                10);

            return bounds;
        }
    }

    public override Cursor GetHitTest(Point p)
    {
        // GetHitTest is called to see if the point is
        // within this glyph.  This gives us a chance to decide
        // what cursor to show.  Returning null from here means
        // the mouse pointer is not currently inside of the glyph.
        // Returning a valid cursor here indicates the pointer is
        // inside the glyph, and also enables our Behavior property
        // as the active behavior.
        if (Bounds.Contains(p))
        {
            return Cursors.Hand;
        }

        return null;
    }

    public override void Paint(PaintEventArgs pe)
    {
        // Draw our glyph. It is simply a blue ellipse.
        pe.Graphics.FillEllipse(Brushes.Blue, Bounds);
    }

    // By providing our own behavior we can do something interesting
    // when the user clicks or manipulates our glyph.
    class MyBehavior : Behavior
    {
        public override bool OnMouseUp(Glyph g, MouseButtons button)
        {
            MessageBox.Show("Hey, you clicked the mouse here");
            return true; // indicating we processed this event.
        }
    }
}
Class MyGlyph
    Inherits Glyph
    Private control As Control
    Private behaviorSvc As _
        System.Windows.Forms.Design.Behavior.BehaviorService

    Public Sub New(ByVal behaviorSvc As _
        System.Windows.Forms.Design.Behavior.BehaviorService, _
        ByVal control As Control)

        MyBase.New(New MyBehavior())
        Me.behaviorSvc = behaviorSvc
        Me.control = control
    End Sub

    Public Overrides ReadOnly Property Bounds() As Rectangle
        Get
            ' Create a glyph that is 10x10 and sitting
            ' in the middle of the control.  Glyph coordinates
            ' are in adorner window coordinates, so we must map
            ' using the behavior service.
            Dim edge As Point = behaviorSvc.ControlToAdornerWindow(control)
            Dim size As Size = control.Size
            Dim center As New Point(edge.X + size.Width / 2, edge.Y + _
                size.Height / 2)

            Dim bounds1 As New Rectangle(center.X - 5, center.Y - 5, 10, 10)

            Return bounds1
        End Get
    End Property

    Public Overrides Function GetHitTest(ByVal p As Point) As Cursor
        ' GetHitTest is called to see if the point is
        ' within this glyph.  This gives us a chance to decide
        ' what cursor to show.  Returning null from here means
        ' the mouse pointer is not currently inside of the glyph.
        ' Returning a valid cursor here indicates the pointer is
        ' inside the glyph,and also enables our Behavior property
        ' as the active behavior.
        If Bounds.Contains(p) Then
            Return Cursors.Hand
        End If

        Return Nothing

    End Function


    Public Overrides Sub Paint(ByVal pe As PaintEventArgs)
        ' Draw our glyph.  It is simply a blue ellipse.
        pe.Graphics.FillEllipse(Brushes.Blue, Bounds)

    End Sub

    ' By providing our own behavior we can do something interesting
    ' when the user clicks or manipulates our glyph.

    Class MyBehavior
        Inherits System.Windows.Forms.Design.Behavior.Behavior

        Public Overrides Function OnMouseUp(ByVal g As Glyph, _
            ByVal button As MouseButtons) As Boolean
            MessageBox.Show("Hey, you clicked the mouse here")
            Return True
            ' indicating we processed this event.
        End Function 'OnMouseUp
    End Class

End Class

Remarks

The sole purpose of a Glyph is to paint and hit test. A Glyph does not have a window handle (HWND), as it is rendered on the adorner window control of the BehaviorService. Each Glyph can have a Behavior associated with it. A successfully hit-tested Glyph has the opportunity to push a new or different Behavior onto the behavior stack of the BehaviorService.

For more information, see Behavior Service Overview.

Constructors

Glyph(Behavior)

Initializes a new instance of the Glyph class.

Properties

Behavior

Gets the Behavior associated with the Glyph.

Bounds

Gets the bounds of the Glyph.

Methods

Equals(Object)

Determines whether the specified object is equal to the current object.

(Inherited from Object)
GetHashCode()

Serves as the default hash function.

(Inherited from Object)
GetHitTest(Point)

Provides hit test logic.

GetType()

Gets the Type of the current instance.

(Inherited from Object)
MemberwiseClone()

Creates a shallow copy of the current Object.

(Inherited from Object)
Paint(PaintEventArgs)

Provides paint logic.

SetBehavior(Behavior)

Changes the Behavior associated with the Glyph.

ToString()

Returns a string that represents the current object.

(Inherited from Object)

Applies to

See also