\section{Standard event identifiers}\label{stdevtid}
-wxWindows defines a special identifier value {\tt wxID\_ANY} which is used in
+wxWidgets defines a special identifier value {\tt wxID\_ANY} which is used in
the following two situations:
+
\begin{itemize}
- \item when creating a new window you may specify {\tt wxID\_ANY} to let
- wxWindows assign an unused identifier to it automatically
- \item when installing an event handler using either the event table
- macros or \helpref{wxEvtHandler::Connect}{wxevthandlerconnect}
- you may use it to indicate that you want to handle the events
- coming from any control, regardless of its identifier
+\item when creating a new window you may specify {\tt wxID\_ANY} to let
+wxWidgets assign an unused identifier to it automatically
+\item when installing an event handler using either the event table
+macros or \helpref{wxEvtHandler::Connect}{wxevthandlerconnect},
+you may use it to indicate that you want to handle the events
+coming from any control, regardless of its identifier
\end{itemize}
-wxWindows also defines a few standard command identifiers which may be used by
-the user code and also are sometimes used by wxWindows itself. These reserved
+wxWidgets also defines a few standard command identifiers which may be used by
+the user code and also are sometimes used by wxWidgets itself. These reserved
identifiers are all in the range between {\tt wxID\_LOWEST} and
{\tt wxID\_HIGHEST} and, accordingly, the user code should avoid defining its
own constants in this range.