};
\end{verbatim}
-Different parst of the world use different conventions for the week start.
-In some countries, the week starts on Sunday, while in others - on Monday.
+Different parts of the world use different conventions for the week start.
+In some countries, the week starts on Sunday, while in others -- on Monday.
The ISO standard doesn't address this issue, so we support both conventions in
the functions whose result depends on it (\helpref{GetWeekOfYear}{wxdatetimegetweekofyear} and
\helpref{GetWeekOfMonth}{wxdatetimegetweekofmonth}).
\helpref{GetDay}{wxdatetimegetday}\\
\helpref{GetWeekDay}{wxdatetimegetweekday}\\
\helpref{GetHour}{wxdatetimegethour}\\
-\helpref{GeTMinute}{wxdatetimegetminute}\\
+\helpref{GetMinute}{wxdatetimegetminute}\\
\helpref{GetSecond}{wxdatetimegetsecond}\\
\helpref{GetMillisecond}{wxdatetimegetmillisecond}\\
\helpref{GetDayOfYear}{wxdatetimegetdayofyear}\\
\membersection{Parsing and formatting dates}
-These functions perform convert wxDateTime obejcts to and from text. The
+These functions convert wxDateTime obejcts to and from text. The
conversions to text are mostly trivial: you can either do it using the default
-date and time representations for the current locale (
-\helpref{FormatDate}{wxdatetimeformatdate} and
+date and time representations for the current locale (
+\helpref{FormatDate}{wxdatetimeformatdate} and
\helpref{FormatTime}{wxdatetimeformattime}), using the international standard
-representation defined by ISO 8601 (
-\helpref{FormatISODate}{wxdatetimeformatisodate} and
+representation defined by ISO 8601 (
+\helpref{FormatISODate}{wxdatetimeformatisodate} and
\helpref{FormatISOTime}{wxdatetimeformatisotime}) or by specifying any format
at all and using \helpref{Format}{wxdatetimeformat} directly.
The conversions from text are more interesting, as there are much more
-possibilities to care about. The simples cases can be taken care of with
+possibilities to care about. The simplest cases can be taken care of with
\helpref{ParseFormat}{wxdatetimeparseformat} which can parse any date in the
given (rigid) format. \helpref{ParseRfc822Date}{wxdatetimeparserfc822date} is
-another function for parsing dates in predefined format - the one of RFC 822
+another function for parsing dates in predefined format -- the one of RFC 822
which (still...) defines the format of email messages on the Internet. This
-format can not be described with {\tt strptime(3)}-like format strings used by
+format can not be described with {\tt strptime(3)}-like format strings used by
\helpref{Format}{wxdatetimeformat}, hence the need for a separate function.
But the most interesting functions are
-\helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} and
+\helpref{ParseTime}{wxdatetimeparsetime},
\helpref{ParseDate}{wxdatetimeparsedate} and
-\helpref{ParseTime}{wxdatetimeparsetime}. They try to parse the date ans time
-(or only one of them) in `free' format, i.e. allow them to be specified in any
-of possible ways. These functions will usually be used to parse the
-(interactive) user input which is not bound to be in any predefined format. As
-an example, \helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} can parse the
-strings such as {\tt "tomorrow"}, {\tt "March first"}, {\tt "next Sunday"}.
+\helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime}. They try to parse the date
+ans time (or only one of them) in `free' format, i.e. allow them to be
+specified in any of possible ways. These functions will usually be used to
+parse the (interactive) user input which is not bound to be in any predefined
+format. As an example, \helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} can
+parse the strings such as {\tt "tomorrow"}, {\tt "March first"} and even
+{\tt "next Sunday"}.
\helpref{ParseRfc822Date}{wxdatetimeparserfc822date}\\
\helpref{ParseFormat}{wxdatetimeparseformat}\\
week with given number (either in the month or in the year) and so on.
All (non-const) functions in this section don't modify the time part of the
-wxDateTime - they only work with the date part of it.
+wxDateTime -- they only work with the date part of it.
\helpref{SetToWeekDayInSameWeek}{wxdatetimesettoweekdayinsameweek}\\
\helpref{GetWeekDayInSameWeek}{wxdatetimegetweekdayinsameweek}\\
For example, {\tt SetToWeekDay(2, wxDateTime::Wed)} will set the date to the
second Wednesday in the current month and
-{\tt SetToWeekDay(-1, wxDateTime::Sun)} - to the last Sunday in it.
+{\tt SetToWeekDay(-1, wxDateTime::Sun)} -- to the last Sunday in it.
Returns {\tt TRUE} if the date was modified successfully, {\tt FALSE}
otherwise meaning that the specified date doesn't exist.