been measured by machines, i.e. that may have thousands of values. One example of
such data would be the well known ECG measuring the electrical activity of your
heart: the measuring device will produce thousands of values per minute, several
-measurements are done simultanously and you might want to have a look at parts
+measurements are done simultaneously and you might want to have a look at parts
of the curves, enlarging them or scrolling from one position to another. Note
that this window is not useful for real-time measuring or for displaying charts
with error bars etc.
+A single curve in the plot window is represented by the \helpref{wxPlotCurve}{wxplotcurve}
+class.
+
The wxPlotWindow interacts with program using events, for example when clicking
or double clicking on a curve or when selecting one by clicking on it (which
can be vetoed). Future versions will hopefully feature selecting values or
\wxheading{Window styles}
\begin{twocollist}\itemsep=0pt
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_MOVE}}{Display buttons to allao moving individual curves up or down.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_MOVE}}{Display buttons to allow moving individual curves up or down.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_ENLARGE}}{Display buttons to allow enlarging individual curves vertically.}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_ZOOM}}{Display all buttons.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_ZOOM}}{Display buttons to allow zooming all curves horizontally.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_BUTTON\_ALL}}{Display all buttons.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_Y\_AXIS}}{Display an Y axis to the left of the drawing area.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_X\_AXIS}}{Display a X axis at the bottom of the drawing area.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxPLOT\_DEFAULT}}{All of the above options.}
\func{void}{SetUnitsPerValue}{\param{double }{upv}}
-This sets the virtual untis per value. Normally, you will not be interested in
+This sets the virtual units per value. Normally, you will not be interested in
what measured value you see, but what it stands for. If you want to display seconds
on the X axis and the measuring device produced 50 values per second, set this
value to 50. This will affect all curves being displayed.
\func{void}{SetEnlargeAroundWindowCentre}{\param{bool}{ aroundwindow = TRUE}}
-Depending on the kind of data you display, the enlarging the individual curves might
+Depending on the kind of data you display, enlarging the individual curves might
have different desired effects. Sometimes, the data will be supposed to get enlarged
with the fixed point being the origin, sometimes the fixed point should be the centre
of the current drawing area. This function controls this behaviour.