You can now register a GWidget subclass with REGISTER_GWIDGET(class)
and it will be available for factory construction through the new
GWidgetClassRegistration interface.
To obtain a GWidgetClassRegistration for a given class name, you call
GWidgetClassRegistration::find(class_name). You can also iterate over
all the registered classes using GWCR::for_each(callback).
This will be very useful for implementing a proper GUI designer, and
also in the future for things like script bindings.
NOTE: All of the registrations are done in GWidget.cpp at the moment
since I ran into trouble with the fricken linker pruning the global
constructors this mechanism relies on. :^)
Originally, it would stop being highlighted if the mouse was moved away from
it, even while in use. Now it will stay highlighted for the duration of
usage.
This macro goes at the top of every CObject-derived class like so:
class SomeClass : public CObject {
C_OBJECT(SomeClass)
public:
...
At the moment, all it does is create an override for the class_name() getter
but in the future this will be used to automatically insert member functions
into these classes.