-\section{wxHTML quick start}\label{wxhtmlquickstart}
+\subsection{wxHTML quick start}\label{wxhtmlquickstart}
-\wxheading{Displaying HMTL}
+\wxheading{Displaying HTML}
First of all, you must include <wx/wxhtml.h>.
mywin -> LoadPage("test.htm");
mywin -> SetPage("<html><body>"
"<h1>Error</h1>"
- "Some error occured :-H)"
- "</body></hmtl>");
+ "Some error occurred :-H)"
+ "</body></hmtl>");
\end{verbatim}
-I think the difference is quite clear.
-
\wxheading{Displaying Help}
See \helpref{wxHtmlHelpController}{wxhtmlhelpcontroller}.
\wxheading{Setting up wxHtmlWindow}
Because wxHtmlWindow is derived from wxScrolledWindow and not from
-wxFrame, it doesn't have visible frame. But the user usually want to see
-the title of HTML page displayed somewhere and frame's titlebar is
-ideal place for it.
+wxFrame, it doesn't have visible frame. But the user usually wants to see
+the title of HTML page displayed somewhere and the frame's titlebar is
+the ideal place for it.
wxHtmlWindow provides 2 methods in order to handle this:
\helpref{SetRelatedFrame}{wxhtmlwindowsetrelatedframe} and
html -> SetRelatedStatusBar(0);
\end{verbatim}
-The first command associates html object with it's parent frame
-(this points to wxFrame object there) and sets format of title.
+The first command associates the HTML object with its parent frame
+(this points to wxFrame object there) and sets the format of the title.
Page title "Hello, world!" will be displayed as "HTML : Hello, world!"
in this example.