/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
-// Name: roughguide
+// Name: roughguide.h
// Purpose: topic overview
// Author: wxWidgets team
// RCS-ID: $Id$
-// Licence: wxWindows license
+// Licence: wxWindows licence
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
-/*!
+/**
-@page overview_roughguide Writing a wxWidgets Application: A Rough Guide
+@page overview_roughguide A Quick Guide to Writing Applications
-To set a wxWidgets application going, you will need to derive a #wxApp class
-and override wxApp::OnInit.
+To set a wxWidgets application going, you will need to derive a wxApp class and
+override wxApp::OnInit.
-An application must have a top-level #wxFrame or #wxDialog window. Each frame
-may contain one or more instances of classes such as #wxPanel,
-#wxSplitterWindow or other windows and controls.
+An application must have a top-level wxFrame or wxDialog window. Each frame may
+contain one or more instances of classes such as wxPanel, wxSplitterWindow or
+other windows and controls.
-A frame can have a #wxMenuBar, a #wxToolBar, a status line, and a #wxIcon for
-when the frame is iconized.
+A frame can have a wxMenuBar, a wxToolBar, a wxStatusBar, and a wxIcon for when
+the frame is iconized.
-A #wxPanel is used to place controls (classes derived from #wxControl) which
-are used for user interaction. Examples of controls are #wxButton, #wxCheckBox,
-#wxChoice, #wxListBox, #wxRadioBox, #wxSlider.
+A wxPanel is used to place controls (classes derived from wxControl) which are
+used for user interaction. Examples of controls are wxButton, wxCheckBox,
+wxChoice, wxListBox, wxRadioBox, and wxSlider.
-Instances of #wxDialog can also be used for controls and they have the
-advantage of not requiring a separate frame.
+Instances of wxDialog can also be used for controls and they have the advantage
+of not requiring a separate frame.
Instead of creating a dialog box and populating it with items, it is possible
-to choose one of the convenient common dialog classes, such as #wxMessageDialog
-and #wxFileDialog.
+to choose one of the convenient common dialog classes, such as wxMessageDialog
+and wxFileDialog.
You never draw directly onto a window - you use a <em>device context</em> (DC).
-#wxDC is the base for #wxClientDC, #wxPaintDC, #wxMemoryDC, #wxPostScriptDC,
-#wxMemoryDC, #wxMetafileDC and #wxPrinterDC. If your drawing functions have
-wxDC as a parameter, you can pass any of these DCs to the function, and thus
-use the same code to draw to several different devices. You can draw using the
-member functions of wxDC, such as wxDC::DrawLine and wxDC::DrawText. Control
-colour on a window (#wxColour) with brushes (#wxBrush) and pens (#wxPen).
+wxDC is the base for wxClientDC, wxPaintDC, wxMemoryDC, wxPostScriptDC,
+wxMemoryDC, wxMetafileDC and wxPrinterDC. If your drawing functions have wxDC
+as a parameter, you can pass any of these DCs to the function, and thus use the
+same code to draw to several different devices. You can draw using the member
+functions of wxDC, such as wxDC::DrawLine and wxDC::DrawText. Control colour on
+a window (wxColour) with brushes (wxBrush) and pens (wxPen).
To intercept events, you add a DECLARE_EVENT_TABLE macro to the window class
declaration, and put a BEGIN_EVENT_TABLE ... END_EVENT_TABLE block in the
implementation file. Between these macros, you add event macros which map the
event (such as a mouse click) to a member function. These might override
-predefined event handlers such as for #wxKeyEvent and #wxMouseEvent.
+predefined event handlers such as for wxKeyEvent and wxMouseEvent.
Most modern applications will have an on-line, hypertext help system; for this,
-you need wxHelp and the #wxHelpController class to control wxHelp.
+you need wxHelp and the wxHelpController class to control wxHelp.
GUI applications aren't all graphical wizardry. List and hash table needs are
-catered for by #wxList and #wxHashMap. You will undoubtedly need some
-platform-independent @ref functions_file, and you may find it handy to
-maintain and search a list of paths using #wxPathList. There's many
-@ref functions_miscellany of operating system methods and other functions.
+catered for by wxList and wxHashMap. You will undoubtedly need some
+platform-independent @ref group_funcmacro_file, and you may find it handy to
+maintain and search a list of paths using wxPathList. There's many
+@ref group_funcmacro_misc of operating system methods and other functions.
-@seealso
+@see
-@li @ref overview_classesbycat
+@li @ref group_class
*/