%% Created: 25.03.00
%% RCS-ID: $Id$
%% Copyright: (c) 2000 Ove Kaaven
-%% Licence: wxWidgets license
+%% Licence: wxWindows licence
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\section{wxMBConv classes overview}\label{mbconvclasses}
Classes: \helpref{wxMBConv}{wxmbconv}, wxMBConvLibc,
\helpref{wxMBConvUTF7}{wxmbconvutf7}, \helpref{wxMBConvUTF8}{wxmbconvutf8},
-\helpref{wxCSConv}{wxcsconv},
+\helpref{wxCSConv}{wxcsconv},
\helpref{wxMBConvUTF16}{wxmbconvutf16}, \helpref{wxMBConvUTF32}{wxmbconvutf32}
-The wxMBConv classes in wxWidgets enables an Unicode-aware application to
+The wxMBConv classes in wxWidgets enable an Unicode-aware application to
easily convert between Unicode and the variety of 8-bit encoding systems still
in use.
But often, your environment doesn't want Unicode strings. You could be sending
data over a network, or processing a text file for some other application. You
need a way to quickly convert your easily-handled Unicode data to and from a
-traditional 8-bit-encoding. And this is what the wxMBConv classes do.
+traditional 8-bit encoding. And this is what the wxMBConv classes do.
\subsection{wxMBConv classes}\label{wxmbconvclasses}
\subsection{wxMBConv objects}\label{wxmbconvobjects}
Several of the wxWidgets-provided wxMBConv classes have predefined instances
-(wxConvLibc, wxConvFile, wxConvUTF7, wxConvUTF8, wxConvLocal). You can use
+(wxConvLibc, wxConvFileName, wxConvUTF7, wxConvUTF8, wxConvLocal). You can use
these predefined objects directly, or you can instantiate your own objects.
A variable, wxConvCurrent, points to the conversion object that the user