Translates the logical coordinates to the device ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
Translates the logical coordinates to the device ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
-CalcScrolledPosition(0, 0, \&xx, \&yy) will return 10 in yy.
+CalcScrolledPosition(0, 10, \&xx, \&yy) will return 0 in yy.
Translates the device coordinates to the logical ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
Translates the device coordinates to the logical ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
-CalcUnscrolledPosition(0, 10, \&xx, \&yy) will return 0 in yy.
+CalcUnscrolledPosition(0, 0, \&xx, \&yy) will return 10 in yy.
\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes no parameters and returns a
2-element list {\tt ( x, y )}.}
\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes no parameters and returns a
2-element list {\tt ( x, y )}.}