%% Created: 2005-01-19
%% RCS-ID: $Id$
%% Copyright: (c) 2005 Vadim Zeitlin
-%% License: wxWidgets license
+%% License: wxWindows license
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\section{\class{wxStackWalker}}\label{wxstackwalker}
wxStackWalker allows an application to enumerate, or walk, the stack frames (the function callstack).
-It is mostly useful in only two situations:
+It is mostly useful in only two situations:
inside \helpref{wxApp::OnFatalException}{wxapponfatalexception} function to
-programmatically get the location of the crash and, in debug builds, in
-\helpref{wxApp::OnAssert}{wxapponassert} to report the caller of the failed
+programmatically get the location of the crash and, in debug builds, in
+\helpref{wxApp::OnAssertFailure}{wxapponassertfailure} to report the caller of the failed
assert.
wxStackWalker works by repeatedly calling
\membersection{wxStackWalker::Walk}\label{wxstackwalkerwalk}
-\func{void}{Walk}{\param{size\_t }{skip = 1}}
+\func{void}{Walk}{\param{size\_t }{skip = 1}, \param{size\_t }{maxDepth = 200}}
Enumerate stack frames from the current location, skipping the initial
number of them (this can be useful when Walk() is called from some known
location and you don't want to see the first few frames anyhow; also
notice that Walk() frame itself is not included if skip $\ge 1$).
+Up to \arg{maxDepth} frames are walked from the innermost to the outermost one.
+
\membersection{wxStackWalker::WalkFromException}\label{wxstackwalkerwalkfromexception}
\func{void}{WalkFromException}{\void}
Enumerate stack frames from the location of uncaught exception.
-This method can only be called from
+This method can only be called from
\helpref{wxApp::OnFatalException()}{wxapponfatalexception}.