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.
\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.