array.Last().MakeUpper();
\end{verbatim}
-There is also a varian of wxArrayString called wxSortedArrayString which has
+There is also a variant of wxArrayString called wxSortedArrayString which has
exactly the same methods as wxArrayString, but which always keeps the string
in it in (alphabetical) order. wxSortedArrayString uses binary search in its
-\helpref{Index}{wxarraystringindex} function (insteadf of linear search for
+\helpref{Index}{wxarraystringindex} function (instead of linear search for
wxArrayString::Index) which makes it much more efficient if you add strings to
the array rarely (because, of course, you have to pay for Index() efficiency
by having Add() be slower) but search for them often. Several methods should
-not be used with sorted array (basicly, all which break the order of items)
+not be used with sorted array (basically, all which break the order of items)
which is mentioned in their description.
Final word: none of the methods of wxArrayString is virtual including its
Assignment operator.
+\membersection{wxArrayString::operator==}\label{wxarraystringoperatorequal}
+
+\constfunc{bool}{operator $==$}{\param{const wxArrayString\&}{ array}}
+
+Compares 2 arrays respecting the case. Returns TRUE only if the arrays have
+the same number of elements and the same strings in the same order.
+
+\membersection{wxArrayString::operator!=}\label{wxarraystringoperatornotequal}
+
+\constfunc{bool}{operator $!=$}{\param{const wxArrayString\&}{ array}}
+
+Compares 2 arrays respecting the case. Returns TRUE if the arrays have
+different number of elements or if the elements don't match pairwise.
+
\membersection{wxArrayString::operator[]}\label{wxarraystringoperatorindex}
\func{wxString\&}{operator[]}{\param{size\_t }{nIndex}}
\membersection{wxArrayString::Add}\label{wxarraystringadd}
-\func{void}{Add}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}}
+\func{size\_t}{Add}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}, \param{size\_t}{ copies = $1$}}
-Appends a new item to the array.
+Appends the given number of {\it copies} of the new item {\it str} to the
+array and returns the index of the first new item in the array.
{\bf Warning:} For sorted arrays, the index of the inserted item will not be,
in general, equal to \helpref{GetCount()}{wxarraystringgetcount} - 1 because
\membersection{wxArrayString::Insert}\label{wxarraystringinsert}
-\func{void}{Insert}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}, \param{size\_t}{ nIndex}}
+\func{void}{Insert}{\param{const wxString\& }{str}, \param{size\_t}{ nIndex}, \param{size\_t }{copies = $1$}}
-Insert a new element in the array before the position {\it nIndex}. Thus, for
+Insert the given number of {\it copies} of the new element in the array before the position {\it nIndex}. Thus, for
example, to insert the string in the beginning of the array you would write
\begin{verbatim}
Insert("foo", 0);
\end{verbatim}
-If {\it nIndex} is equal to {\it GetCount() + 1} this function behaves as
+If {\it nIndex} is equal to {\it GetCount()} this function behaves as
\helpref{Add}{wxarraystringadd}.
-{\bf Warning:} this function should not be used with sorted array because it
+{\bf Warning:} this function should not be used with sorted arrays because it
could break the order of items and, for example, subsequent calls to
-\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would not work then!
+\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would then not work!
\membersection{wxArrayString::IsEmpty}\label{wxarraystringisempty}
an empty array will result in assert failure in debug build, however no checks
are done in release mode.
-\membersection{wxArrayString::Remove (by value)}\label{wxarraystringremoveval}
+\membersection{wxArrayString::Remove}\label{wxarraystringremove}
\func{void}{Remove}{\param{const char *}{ sz}}
Removes the first item matching this value. An assert failure is provoked by
an attempt to remove an element which does not exist in debug build.
-See also: \helpref{Index}{wxarraystringindex}, \helpref{Remove}{wxarraystringremove}
-
-\membersection{wxArrayString::Remove (by index)}\label{wxarraystringremove}
-
-\func{void}{Remove}{\param{size\_t }{nIndex}}
+See also: \helpref{Index}{wxarraystringindex}
-Removes the item at given position.
+\func{void}{Remove}{\param{size\_t }{nIndex}, \param{size\_t }{count = $1$}}
-See also: \helpref{Remove}{wxarraystringremoveval}
+Removes {\it count} items starting at position {\it nIndex} from the array.
\membersection{wxArrayString::Shrink}\label{wxarraystringshrink}
See also: \helpref{Alloc}{wxarraystringalloc}, \helpref{Dynamic array memory management}{wxarraymemorymanagement}
-\membersection{wxArrayString::Sort (alphabetically)}\label{wxarraystringsort}
+\membersection{wxArrayString::Sort}\label{wxarraystringsort}
\func{void}{Sort}{\param{bool}{ reverseOrder = FALSE}}
-Sorts the array in alphabetical order or in reverse alphabetical order if
+Sorts the array in alphabetical order or in reverse alphabetical order if
{\it reverseOrder} is TRUE.
{\bf Warning:} this function should not be used with sorted array because it
could break the order of items and, for example, subsequent calls to
-\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would not work then!
-
-See also: \helpref{Sort}{wxarraystringsortcallback}
-
-\membersection{wxArrayString::Sort (user defined)}\label{wxarraystringsortcallback}
+\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would then not work!
\func{void}{Sort}{\param{CompareFunction }{compareFunction}}
Sorts the array using the specified {\it compareFunction} for item comparison.
{\it CompareFunction} is defined as a function taking two {\it const
-wxString\&} parameters and returning {\it int} value less than, equal to or
+wxString\&} parameters and returning an {\it int} value less than, equal to or
greater than 0 if the first string is less than, equal to or greater than the
second one.
{\bf Warning:} this function should not be used with sorted array because it
could break the order of items and, for example, subsequent calls to
-\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would not work then!
-
-See also: \helpref{Sort}{wxarraystringsort}
+\helpref{Index()}{wxarraystringindex} would then not work!