\twocolitem{{\bf wxCURSOR\_SPRAYCAN}}{A spraycan cursor.}
\twocolitem{{\bf wxCURSOR\_WAIT}}{A wait cursor.}
\twocolitem{{\bf wxCURSOR\_WATCH}}{A watch cursor.}
+\twocolitem{{\bf wxCURSOR\_ARROWWAIT}}{A cursor with both an arrow and
+an hourglass, (windows.)}
\end{twocollist}\twocolwidtha{5cm}
Note that not all cursors are available on all platforms.}
\pythonnote{Constructors supported by wxPython are:\par
\indented{2cm}{\begin{twocollist}
-\twocolitem{\bf{wxCursor(name, flags, hotSpotX=0,
+\twocolitem{{\bf wxCursor(name, flags, hotSpotX=0,
hotSpotY=0)}}{Constructs a cursor from a filename}
-\twocolitem{\bf{wxStockCursor(id)}}{Constructs a stock cursor }
+\twocolitem{{\bf wxStockCursor(id)}}{Constructs a stock cursor }
\end{twocollist}}
}
+\perlnote{Contructors supported by wxPerl are:\par
+\begin{itemize}
+\item{Wx::Cursor->new( name, type, hotSpotX = 0, hotSpotY = 0 )}
+\item{Wx::Cursor->new( id )}
+\end{itemize}
+}
+
\membersection{wxCursor::\destruct{wxCursor}}
\func{}{\destruct{wxCursor}}{\void}
Destroys the cursor. A cursor can be reused for more
than one window, and does not get destroyed when the window is
destroyed. wxWindows destroys all cursors on application exit, although
-it's best to clean them up explicitly.
+it is best to clean them up explicitly.
\membersection{wxCursor::Ok}\label{wxcursorok}