<wx/mimetype.h>
+\wxheading{Library}
+
+\helpref{wxBase}{librarieslist}
+
\wxheading{See also}
\helpref{wxMimeTypesManager}{wxmimetypesmanager}
\begin{verbatim}
wxString command;
if ( filetype->GetOpenCommand(&command,
- MailMessageParamaters("foo.txt", "text/plain")) )
+ MailMessageParameters("foo.txt", "text/plain")) )
{
// the full command for opening the text documents is in 'command'
// (it might be "notepad foo.txt" under Windows or "cat foo.txt" under Unix)
\membersection{wxFileType::GetIcon}\label{wxfiletypegeticon}
-\func{bool}{GetIcon}{\param{wxIcon*}{ icon}}
+\func{bool}{GetIcon}{\param{wxIconLocation *}{ iconLoc}}
+
+If the function returns {\tt true}, the {\tt iconLoc} is filled with the
+location of the icon for this MIME type. A \helpref{wxIcon}{wxicon} may be
+created from {\it iconLoc} later.
+
+{\bf Windows:} The function returns the icon shown by Explorer for the files of
+the specified type.
-If the function returns {\tt true}, the icon associated with this file type will be
-created and assigned to the {\it icon} parameter.
+{\bf Mac:} This function is not implemented and always returns {\tt false}.
{\bf Unix:} MIME manager gathers information about icons from GNOME
and KDE settings and thus GetIcon's success depends on availability
In the second case, only the filename is specified and the command to be used
to open this kind of file is returned directly. An empty string is returned to
-indicate that an error occured (typically meaning that there is no standard way
+indicate that an error occurred (typically meaning that there is no standard way
to open this kind of files).
\membersection{wxFileType::GetPrintCommand}\label{wxfiletypegetprintcommand}
This function is primarily intended for GetOpenCommand and GetPrintCommand
usage but may be also used by the application directly if, for example, you want
-to use some non default command to open the file.
+to use some non-default command to open the file.
The function replaces all occurrences of