-But the most interesting functions are
-\helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} and
-\helpref{ParseDate}{wxdatetimeparsedate} and
-\helpref{ParseTime}{wxdatetimeparsetime}. They try to parse the date ans time
-(or only one of them) in `free' format, i.e. allow them to be specified in any
-of possible ways. These functions will usually be used to parse the
-(interactive) user input which is not bound to be in any predefined format. As
-an example, \helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} can parse the
-strings such as {\tt "tomorrow"}, {\tt "March first"}, {\tt "next Sunday"}.
+But the most interesting functions are
+\helpref{ParseTime}{wxdatetimeparsetime},
+\helpref{ParseDate}{wxdatetimeparsedate} and
+\helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime}. They try to parse the date
+ans time (or only one of them) in `free' format, i.e. allow them to be
+specified in any of possible ways. These functions will usually be used to
+parse the (interactive) user input which is not bound to be in any predefined
+format. As an example, \helpref{ParseDateTime}{wxdatetimeparsedatetime} can
+parse the strings such as {\tt "tomorrow"}, {\tt "March first"} and even
+{\tt "next Sunday"}.
+
+Finally notice that each of the parsing functions is available in several
+overloads: if the input string is a narrow (\texttt{char *}) string, then a
+narrow pointer is returned. If the input string is a wide string, a wide char
+pointer is returned. Finally, if the input parameter is a wxString, a narrow
+char pointer is also returned for backwards compatibility but there is also an
+additional argument of wxString::const\_iterator type in which, if it is not
+\NULL, an iterator pointing to the end of the scanned string part is returned.