A wxScrolledWindow will normally scroll itself and therefore its child windows as well. It
might however be desired to scroll a different window than itself: e.g. when designing a
-spreadsheet, you'll normally only have to scroll the (usually white) cell area, whereas the
+spreadsheet, you will normally only have to scroll the (usually white) cell area, whereas the
(usually grey) label area will scroll very differently. For this special purpose, you can
call \helpref{SetTargetWindow}{wxscrolledwindowsettargetwindow} which means that pressing
the scrollbars will scroll a different window.
Translates the logical coordinates to the device ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
-CalcScrolledPosition(0, 0, \&xx, \&yy) will return 10 in yy.
+CalcScrolledPosition(0, 10, \&xx, \&yy) will return 0 in yy.
\wxheading{See also}
\pythonnote{The wxPython version of this methods accepts only two
parameters and returns xx and yy as a tuple of values.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes two parameters and returns a
+2-element list {\tt ( xx, yy )}.}
+
\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::CalcUnscrolledPosition}\label{wxscrolledwindowcalcunscrolledposition}
\constfunc{void}{CalcUnscrolledPosition}{
Translates the device coordinates to the logical ones. For example, if a window is
scrolled 10 pixels to the bottom, the device coordinates of the origin are (0, 0)
(as always), but the logical coordinates are (0, 10) and so the call to
-CalcUnscrolledPosition(0, 10, \&xx, \&yy) will return 0 in yy.
+CalcUnscrolledPosition(0, 0, \&xx, \&yy) will return 10 in yy.
\wxheading{See also}
\pythonnote{The wxPython version of this methods accepts only two
parameters and returns xx and yy as a tuple of values.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes two parameters and returns a
+2-element list {\tt ( xx, yy )}.}
+
\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::Create}\label{wxscrolledwindowcreate}
\func{bool}{Create}{\param{wxWindow*}{ parent}, \param{wxWindowID }{id = -1},\rtfsp
\pythonnote{The wxPython version of this methods accepts no
parameters and returns a tuple of values for xUnit and yUnit.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes no parameters and returns a
+2-element list {\tt ( xUnit, yUnit )}.}
\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::GetVirtualSize}\label{wxscrolledwindowgetvirtualsize}
\pythonnote{The wxPython version of this methods accepts no
parameters and returns a tuple of values for x and y.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes no parameters and returns a
+2-element list {\tt ( x, y )}.}
+
\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::IsRetained}\label{wxscrolledwindowisretained}
\constfunc{bool}{IsRetained}{\void}
\func{void}{SetScrollbars}{\param{int}{ pixelsPerUnitX}, \param{int}{ pixelsPerUnitY},\rtfsp
\param{int}{ noUnitsX}, \param{int}{ noUnitsY},\rtfsp
-\param{int }{xPos = 0}, \param{int}{ yPos = 0}}
+\param{int }{xPos = 0}, \param{int}{ yPos = 0},\rtfsp
+\param{bool }{noRefresh = FALSE}}
Sets up vertical and/or horizontal scrollbars.
\docparam{yPos}{Position to initialize the scrollbars in the vertical direction, in scroll units.}
+\docparam{noRefresh}{Will not refresh window if TRUE.}
+
\wxheading{Remarks}
The first pair of parameters give the number of pixels per `scroll step', i.e. amount
Call this function to tell wxScrolledWindow to perform the actually scrolling on
a different window (not on itself).
-\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::ViewStart}\label{wxscrolledwindowviewstart}
+\membersection{wxScrolledWindow::GetViewStart}\label{wxscrolledwindowgetviewstart}
-\constfunc{void}{ViewStart}{\param{int* }{x}, \param{int* }{ y}}
+\constfunc{void}{GetViewStart}{\param{int* }{x}, \param{int* }{ y}}
Get the position at which the visible portion of the window starts.
\pythonnote{The wxPython version of this methods accepts no
parameters and returns a tuple of values for x and y.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes no parameters and returns a
+2-element list {\tt ( x, y )}.}
+