- @page overview_docview Document/view overview
-
- Classes: #wxDocument, #wxView, #wxDocTemplate, #wxDocManager, #wxDocParentFrame,
- #wxDocChildFrame, #wxDocMDIParentFrame, #wxDocMDIChildFrame,
- #wxCommand, #wxCommandProcessor
-
- The document/view framework is found in most application frameworks, because it
- can dramatically simplify the code required to build many kinds of application.
-
- The idea is that you can model your application primarily in terms of @e documents to store data
- and provide interface-independent operations upon it, and @e views to visualise and manipulate
- the data. Documents know how to do input and output given stream objects, and views are responsible
- for taking input from physical windows and performing the manipulation on the document data.
-
- If a document's data changes, all views should be updated to reflect the change.
- The framework can provide many user-interface elements based on this model.
-
- Once you have defined your own classes and the relationships between them, the framework
- takes care of popping up file selectors, opening and closing files, asking the user to save
- modifications, routing menu commands to appropriate (possibly default) code, even
- some default print/preview functionality and support for command undo/redo.
-
- The framework is highly modular, allowing overriding and replacement of functionality
- and objects to achieve more than the default behaviour.
+@page overview_docview Document/View Framework
+
+Classes: wxDocument, wxView, wxDocTemplate, wxDocManager, wxDocParentFrame,
+ wxDocChildFrame, wxDocMDIParentFrame, wxDocMDIChildFrame,
+ wxCommand, wxCommandProcessor
+
+The document/view framework is found in most application frameworks, because it
+can dramatically simplify the code required to build many kinds of application.
+
+The idea is that you can model your application primarily in terms of @e documents to store data
+and provide interface-independent operations upon it, and @e views to visualise and manipulate
+the data. Documents know how to do input and output given stream objects, and views are responsible
+for taking input from physical windows and performing the manipulation on the document data.
+
+If a document's data changes, all views should be updated to reflect the change.
+The framework can provide many user-interface elements based on this model.
+
+Once you have defined your own classes and the relationships between them, the framework
+takes care of popping up file selectors, opening and closing files, asking the user to save
+modifications, routing menu commands to appropriate (possibly default) code, even
+some default print/preview functionality and support for command undo/redo.
+
+The framework is highly modular, allowing overriding and replacement of functionality
+and objects to achieve more than the default behaviour.