A dialog box is a window with a title bar and sometimes a system menu, which
can be moved around the screen. It can contain controls and other windows and
-is usually used to allow the user to make some choice or to answer a question.
+is often used to allow the user to make some choice or to answer a question.
+
+
+\wxheading{Dialog Buttons}
+
+The dialog usually contains either a single button allowing to close the
+dialog or two buttons, one accepting the changes and the other one discarding
+them (such button, if present, is automatically activated if the user presses
+the \texttt{"Esc"} key). By default, buttons with the standard \texttt{wxID\_OK}
+and \texttt{wxID\_CANCEL} identifiers behave as expected. Starting with
+wxWidgets 2.7 it is also possible to use a button with a different identifier
+instead, see \helpref{SetAffirmativeId}{wxdialogsetaffirmativeid} and
+\helpref{SetEscapeId}{wxdialogsetescapeid}.
+
+Also notice that the \helpref{CreateButtonSizer()}{wxdialogcreatebuttonsizer}
+should be used to create the buttons appropriate for the current platform and
+positioned correctly (including their order which is platform-dependent).
+
+
\wxheading{Derived from}
<wx/dialog.h>
-\wxheading{Remarks}
+\wxheading{Modal and modeless dialogs}
There are two kinds of dialog -- {\it modal}\ and {\it modeless}. A modal dialog
blocks program flow and user input on other windows until it is dismissed,
\func{wxSizer*}{CreateButtonSizer}{\param{long}{ flags}}
Creates a sizer with standard buttons. {\it flags} is a bit list
-of the following flags: wxOK, wxCANCEL, wxYES, wxNO, wxHELP, wxNO\_DEFAULT.
+of the following flags: wxOK, wxCANCEL, wxYES, wxNO, wxAPPLY, wxCLOSE,
+wxHELP, wxNO\_DEFAULT.
The sizer lays out the buttons in a manner appropriate to the platform.
-This function simply calls \helpref{CreateStdDialogButtonSizer}{wxdialogcreatestddialogbuttonsizer}.
+This function uses \helpref{CreateStdDialogButtonSizer}{wxdialogcreatestddialogbuttonsizer}
+internally for most platforms but doesn't create the sizer at all for the
+platforms with hardware buttons (such as smartphones) for which it sets up the
+hardware buttons appropriately and returns \NULL, so don't forget to test that
+the return value is valid before using it.
+
+
+\membersection{wxDialog::CreateSeparatedButtonSizer}\label{wxdialogcreateseparatedbuttonsizer}
+
+\func{wxSizer*}{CreateSeparatedButtonSizer}{\param{long}{ flags}}
+
+Creates a sizer with standard buttons using
+\helpref{CreateButtonSizer}{wxdialogcreatebuttonsizer} separated from the rest
+of the dialog contents by a horizontal \helpref{wxStaticLine}{wxstaticline}.
+
+Please notice that just like CreateButtonSizer() this function may return \NULL
+if no buttons were created.
\membersection{wxDialog::CreateStdDialogButtonSizer}\label{wxdialogcreatestddialogbuttonsizer}
\func{wxStdDialogButtonSizer*}{CreateStdDialogButtonSizer}{\param{long}{ flags}}
Creates a \helpref{wxStdDialogButtonSizer}{wxstddialogbuttonsizer} with standard buttons. {\it flags} is a bit list
-of the following flags: wxOK, wxCANCEL, wxYES, wxNO, wxHELP, wxNO\_DEFAULT.
+of the following flags: wxOK, wxCANCEL, wxYES, wxNO, wxAPPLY, wxCLOSE,
+wxHELP, wxNO\_DEFAULT.
The sizer lays out the buttons in a manner appropriate to the platform.
Returns true if the dialog box is modal, false otherwise.
-\membersection{wxDialog::OnApply}\label{wxdialogonapply}
-
-\func{void}{OnApply}{\param{wxCommandEvent\& }{event}}
-
-The default handler for the wxID\_APPLY identifier.
-
-\wxheading{Remarks}
-
-This function calls \helpref{wxWindow::Validate}{wxwindowvalidate} and \helpref{wxWindow::TransferDataFromWindow}{wxwindowtransferdatafromwindow}.
-
-\wxheading{See also}
-
-\helpref{wxDialog::OnOK}{wxdialogonok}, \helpref{wxDialog::OnCancel}{wxdialogoncancel}
-
-
-\membersection{wxDialog::OnCancel}\label{wxdialogoncancel}
-
-\func{void}{OnCancel}{\param{wxCommandEvent\& }{event}}
-
-The default handler for the wxID\_CANCEL identifier.
-
-\wxheading{Remarks}
-
-The function either calls {\bf EndModal(wxID\_CANCEL)} if the dialog is modal, or
-sets the return value to wxID\_CANCEL and calls {\bf Show(false)} if the dialog is modeless.
-
-\wxheading{See also}
-
-\helpref{wxDialog::OnOK}{wxdialogonok}, \helpref{wxDialog::OnApply}{wxdialogonapply}
-
-
-\membersection{wxDialog::OnOK}\label{wxdialogonok}
-
-\func{void}{OnOK}{\param{wxCommandEvent\& }{event}}
-
-The default handler for the wxID\_OK identifier.
-
-\wxheading{Remarks}
-
-The function calls
-\rtfsp\helpref{wxWindow::Validate}{wxwindowvalidate}, then \helpref{wxWindow::TransferDataFromWindow}{wxwindowtransferdatafromwindow}.
-If this returns true, the function either calls {\bf EndModal(wxID\_OK)} if the dialog is modal, or
-sets the return value to wxID\_OK and calls {\bf Show(false)} if the dialog is modeless.
-
-\wxheading{See also}
-
-\helpref{wxDialog::OnCancel}{wxdialogoncancel}, \helpref{wxDialog::OnApply}{wxdialogonapply}
-
\membersection{wxDialog::OnSysColourChanged}\label{wxdialogonsyscolourchanged}
\helpref{wxDialog::EndModal}{wxdialogendmodal},\rtfsp
\helpref{wxDialog:GetReturnCode}{wxdialoggetreturncode},\rtfsp
\helpref{wxDialog::SetReturnCode}{wxdialogsetreturncode}
+