An MDI client window is a child of MDIParentFrame, and manages zero or
more MDIChildFrame objects.
The client window is the area where MDI child windows exist. It doesn’t have to cover the whole
parent frame; other windows such as toolbars and a help window might coexist with it.
There can be scrollbars on a client window, which are controlled by the parent window style.
The MDIClientWindow class is usually adequate without further derivation, and it is created
automatically when the MDI parent frame is created. If the application needs to derive a new class,
the function MDIParentFrame#on_create_client must be
overridden in order to give an opportunity to use a different class of client window.
Under Windows 95, the client window will automatically have a sunken border style when
the active child is not maximized, and no border style when a child is maximized.
MDIChildFrame, MDIParentFrame, Frame
Constructor, creating the window.
The second style of constructor is called within MDIParentFrame#on_create_client.
MDIParentFrame.new, MDIParentFrame#on_create_client
destructor()Destructor.
Used in two-step frame construction. See MDIClientWindow.new for further details.
[This page automatically generated from the Textile source at 2023-06-09 00:45:35 +0000]