Click here to Skip to main content
15,879,535 members
Articles / Desktop Programming / MFC

The SBJ MVC Framework - The Model, from Abstraction to Realization

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
5.00/5 (19 votes)
20 Mar 2009CPOL19 min read 109K   1.3K   51  
A Model-View-Controller Framework that integrates with the MFC Doc/View architecture
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// $Workfile: GDIUtils.cpp $
// $Header: /DevNet/SbjCore/SbjCore/Utils/GDIUtils.cpp 4     2/24/08 11:47a Steve $
//
//	Copyright � 2006 Tartus, Inc.
// All rights reserved.
//
// The information contained herein is confidential, proprietary to
// Tartus, Inc., and considered a trade secret as defined
// in section 499C of the penal code of the State of California.  Use
// of this information by anyone other than authorized employees of
// Tartus, Inc. is granted only under a written non-disclosure
// agreement, which expressly prescribes the scope and manner of such
// use.
//
// *** Authors ***
//	 Neal O'Hara
//	 John La Porta
//	 Zhimin Lin
//	 Andreas Christmann
//	 Steve Johnson
//	 Frankie Jefferson
//	 Tartus, Inc.
//
// $Revision: 4 $
//
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

#include "stdafx.h"
#include "GDIUtils.h"


#ifdef _DEBUG
#undef THIS_FILE
static char THIS_FILE[]=__FILE__;
#define new DEBUG_NEW
#endif


namespace SbjCore
{
	namespace Utils
	{
		namespace GDI 
		{
		
			
			LOGFONT InitLogFont(int nHeight, LPCTSTR lpszFaceName, 
				int nWeight /*= FW_REGULAR*/, bool bItalic /*= false*/, bool bUnderline /*= false*/, bool bStrikeOut /*= false*/)
			{
				LOGFONT lf;
				ZeroMemory(&lf, sizeof(LOGFONT));
				lf.lfHeight = nHeight;
				lf.lfWeight = nWeight;
				lf.lfItalic = bItalic;
				lf.lfUnderline = bUnderline;
				lf.lfStrikeOut = bStrikeOut;
				memcpy(&lf.lfFaceName, lpszFaceName, _tcslen(lpszFaceName));
				return lf;				
			}								  
		
			LOGFONT AFX_EXT_API CopyLogFont(const LOGFONT& lf)
			{
				return InitLogFont(lf.lfHeight, (LPCTSTR)&lf.lfFaceName, lf.lfWeight, lf.lfItalic, lf.lfUnderline, lf.lfStrikeOut);
			}

		
			LOGFONT InitPointLogFont(int n100thPoints, LPCTSTR lpszFaceName, 
				int nWeight /*= FW_REGULAR*/, bool bItalic /*= false*/, bool bUnderline /*= false*/, bool bStrikeOut /*= false*/)
			{
				CFont f;
				LOGFONT lf;
				ZeroMemory(&lf, sizeof(LOGFONT));
				f.CreatePointFont(n100thPoints, lpszFaceName);
				f.GetLogFont(&lf);
				lf.lfWeight = nWeight;
				lf.lfItalic = bItalic;
				lf.lfUnderline = bUnderline;
				lf.lfStrikeOut = bStrikeOut;
				return lf;
			}

		}
	}
}


//*** Modification History ***
// $Log: /DevNet/SbjCore/SbjCore/Utils/GDIUtils.cpp $
// 
// 4     2/24/08 11:47a Steve
// 
// 3     2/13/08 10:27a Steve
// Added Named Colors to ColorProp, Bold and Italics to Fonts and error
// checking to ProfiledFileProperty
// 
// 2     10/11/07 11:48a Steve
// Added InitLogFont
// 
// 1     10/11/07 11:19a Steve
// 
// 1     4/02/07 4:57p Steve
// 
// 1     6/09/06 5:16p Steve

By viewing downloads associated with this article you agree to the Terms of Service and the article's licence.

If a file you wish to view isn't highlighted, and is a text file (not binary), please let us know and we'll add colourisation support for it.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
SBJ
United States United States
Real name is Steve Johnson. Programming since 1979. Started on a Heathkit Micro with a DEC LSI-11 and UCSD Pascal. Moved to PCs & DOS as soon as Turbo Pascal became available. Did some Assembly, ISR, TSR etc. All this while working for a Manufacturing Co. for 8 years. Had my own solo Co. doing barcode labeling software for 4 years (terrible business man, all I wanted to do was code). Since then working for various software companies. Moved to Windows around the time of 3.1 with Borland C then C++. Then on to VC++ and MFC, and just about anything I could get my hands on or had to learn for my job, and been at it ever since. Of course recently I've been playing with .NET, ASP, C#, WPF etc.

Comments and Discussions