\end{verbatim}
}
-The values below are the possible return codes of the
+The values below are the possible return codes of the
\helpref{HitTest}{wxtextctrlhittest} method:
{\small
\begin{verbatim}
\func{void}{SetLeftIndent}{\param{int }{indent}, \param{int }{subIndent = 0}}
Sets the left indent in tenths of a millimetre.
-subIndent sets the indent for all lines but the first line in a paragraph
+subIndent sets the indent for all lines but the first line in a paragraph
relative to the first line.
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_RICH2}}{Use rich text control version 2.0 or 3.0
under Win32, this style is ignored under other platforms}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_AUTO\_URL}}{Highlight the URLs and generate the
-wxTextUrlEvents when mouse events occur over them. This style is supported
-under Win32 only and requires wxTE\_RICH.}
+wxTextUrlEvents when mouse events occur over them. This style is only supported
+for wxTE\_RICH Win32 and multi-line wxGTK2 text controls.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_NOHIDESEL}}{By default, the Windows text control
doesn't show the selection when it doesn't have focus - use this style to force
it to always show it. It doesn't do anything under other platforms.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxHSCROLL}}{A horizontal scrollbar will be created and
-used, so that text won't be wrapped. No effect under GTK+.}
+used, so that text won't be wrapped. No effect under wxGTK1.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_LEFT}}{The text in the control will be left-justified (default).}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_CENTRE}}{The text in the control will be centered (currently wxMSW and wxGTK2 only).}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_RIGHT}}{The text in the control will be right-justified (currently wxMSW and wxGTK2 only).}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_DONTWRAP}}{Same as {\tt wxHSCROLL} style.}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_LINEWRAP}}{Wrap the lines too long to be shown entirely at any position (wxUniv only currently).}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_WORDWRAP}}{Wrap the lines too long to be shown entirely at word boundaries only (wxUniv only currently).}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_DONTWRAP}}{Same as {\tt wxHSCROLL} style: don't wrap at all, show horizontal scrollbar instead.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_CHARWRAP}}{Wrap the lines too long to be shown entirely at any position (wxUniv and wxGTK2 only).}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_WORDWRAP}}{Wrap the lines too long to be shown entirely at word boundaries (wxUniv and wxGTK2 only).}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_BESTWRAP}}{Wrap the lines at word boundaries or at any other character if there are words longer than the window width (this is the default).}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxTE\_CAPITALIZE}}{On PocketPC and Smartphone, causes the first letter to be capitalized.}
\end{twocollist}
-See also \helpref{window styles overview}{windowstyles} and
-\helpref{wxTextCtrl::wxTextCtrl}{wxtextctrlctor}.
+See also \helpref{window styles overview}{windowstyles} and \helpref{wxTextCtrl::wxTextCtrl}{wxtextctrlctor}.
\wxheading{wxTextCtrl text format}
separated by {\tt $\backslash$n} characters, i.e. in the Unix text format even
on non-Unix platforms. This allows the user code to ignore the differences
between the platforms but at a price: the indices in the control such as those
-returned by \helpref{GetInsertionPoint}{wxtextctrlgetinsertionpoint} or
+returned by \helpref{GetInsertionPoint}{wxtextctrlgetinsertionpoint} or
\helpref{GetSelection}{wxtextctrlgetselection} can {\bf not} be used as
indices into the string returned by \helpref{GetValue}{wxtextctrlgetvalue} as
-they're going to be slightly off for platforms using
+they're going to be slightly off for platforms using
{\tt $\backslash$r$\backslash$n} as separator (as Windows does), for example.
Instead, if you need to obtain a substring between the $2$ indices obtained
from the control with the help of the functions mentioned above, you should
use \helpref{GetRange}{wxtextctrlgetrange}. And the indices themselves can
-only be passed to other methods, for example
-\helpref{SetInsertionPoint}{wxtextctrlsetinsertionpoint} or
+only be passed to other methods, for example
+\helpref{SetInsertionPoint}{wxtextctrlsetinsertionpoint} or
\helpref{SetSelection}{wxtextctrlsetselection}.
To summarize: never use the indices returned by (multiline) wxTextCtrl as
generated when enter is pressed in a text control (which must have
wxTE\_PROCESS\_ENTER style for this event to be generated).}
\twocolitem{{\bf EVT\_TEXT\_URL(id, func)}}{A mouse event occured over an URL
-in the text control (Win32 only)}
+in the text control (wxMSW and wxGTK2 only)}
\twocolitem{{\bf EVT\_TEXT\_MAXLEN(id, func)}}{User tried to enter more text
into the control than the limit set by
\helpref{SetMaxLength}{wxtextctrlsetmaxlength}.}
\func{bool}{EmulateKeyPress}{\param{const wxKeyEvent\& }{event}}
This functions inserts into the control the character which would have been
-inserted if the given key event had occured in the text control. The
+inserted if the given key event had occured in the text control. The
{\it event} object should be the same as the one passed to {\tt EVT\_KEY\_DOWN}
handler previously by wxWidgets.
\membersection{wxTextCtrl::GetLastPosition}\label{wxtextctrlgetlastposition}
-\constfunc{virtual long}{GetLastPosition}{\void}
+\constfunc{virtual wxTextPos}{GetLastPosition}{\void}
Returns the zero based index of the last position in the text control,
which is equal to the number of characters in the control.
wxTextCtrl method.
Please note that the positions in a multiline wxTextCtrl do {\bf not}
-correspond to the indices in the string returned by
+correspond to the indices in the string returned by
\helpref{GetValue}{wxtextctrlgetvalue} because of the different new line
representations ({\tt CR} or {\tt CR LF}) and so this method should be used to
obtain the correct results instead of extracting parts of the entire value. It
This function finds the character at the specified position expressed in
pixels. If the return code is not \texttt{wxTE\_HT\_UNKNOWN} the row and column
-of the character closest to this position are returned in the \arg{col} and
+of the character closest to this position are returned in the \arg{col} and
\arg{row} parameters (unless the pointers are {\tt NULL} which is allowed).
Please note that this function is currently only implemented in wxUniv,
Returns {\tt true} if the controls contents may be edited by user (note that it
always can be changed by the program), i.e. if the control hasn't been put in
-read-only mode by a previous call to
+read-only mode by a previous call to
\helpref{SetEditable}{wxtextctrlseteditable}.
\constfunc{bool}{IsModified}{\void}
-Returns {\tt true} if the text has been modified by user. Note that calling
+Returns {\tt true} if the text has been modified by user. Note that calling
\helpref{SetValue}{wxtextctrlsetvalue} doesn't make the control modified.
% VZ: commenting this out as: (a) the docs are wrong (you can't replace
% anything), (b) wxTextCtrl doesn't have any OnChar() anyhow
%% \membersection{wxTextCtrl::OnChar}\label{wxtextctrlonchar}
-%%
+%%
%% \func{void}{OnChar}{\param{wxKeyEvent\& }{event}}
-%%
+%%
%% Default handler for character input.
-%%
+%%
%% \wxheading{Remarks}
-%%
+%%
%% It is possible to intercept character
%% input by overriding this member. Call this function
%% to let the default behaviour take place; not calling
%% it results in the character being ignored. You can
%% replace the {\it keyCode} member of {\it event} to
%% translate keystrokes.
-%%
+%%
%% Note that Windows and Motif have different ways
%% of implementing the default behaviour. In Windows,
%% calling wxTextCtrl::OnChar immediately
%% to let default processing happen. This might affect
%% the way in which you write your OnChar function
%% on different platforms.
-%%
+%%
%% \wxheading{See also}
-%%
+%%
%% \helpref{wxKeyEvent}{wxkeyevent}
\func{virtual void}{SetValue}{\param{const wxString\& }{ value}}
-Sets the text value and marks the control as not-modified (which means that
+Sets the text value and marks the control as not-modified (which means that
\helpref{IsModified}{wxtextctrlismodified} would return {\tt false} immediately
after the call to SetValue).