\section{\class{wxCondition}}\label{wxcondition}
-TODO
+wxCondition variables correspond to pthread conditions or to Win32 event
+objects. They may be used in a multithreaded application to wait until the
+given condition becomes true which happens when the condition becomes signaled.
+
+For example, if a worker thread is doing some long task and another thread has
+to wait until it is finished, the latter thread will wait on the condition
+object and the worker thread will signal it on exit (this example is not
+perfect because in this particular case it would be much better to just
+\helpref{Wait()}{wxthreadwait} for the worker thread, but if there are several
+worker threads it already makes much more sense).
+
+Note that a call to \helpref{Signal()}{wxconditionsignal} may happen before the
+other thread calls \helpref{Wait()}{wxconditionwait} but, in marked contrast
+with the pthread conditions, this will still work as the missed signals are
+queued and \helpref{Wait()}{wxconditionwait} simply returns immediately if
+there are ny pending signals.
+
+However, the calls to \helpref{Broadcast()}{wxconditionbroadcast} are {\bf not}
+queued and so it will only wake up the threads already waiting on the
+condition. Accordingly, you will probably want to use a mutex to ensure that
+the thread(s) you want to be waken up have indeed started to wait before
+calling \helpref{Broadcast()}{wxconditionbroadcast}.
+
+\wxheading{Example}
+
+This example shows how a main thread may launch a worker thread and wait until
+it starts running:
+
+\begin{verbatim}
+class MyWaitingThread : public wxThread
+{
+public:
+ MyWaitingThread(wxCondition *condition)
+ {
+ m_condition = condition;
+
+ Create();
+ }
+
+ virtual ExitCode Entry()
+ {
+ // let the main thread know that we started running
+ m_condition->Signal();
+
+ ... do our job ...
+
+ return 0;
+ }
+
+private:
+ wxCondition *m_condition;
+};
+
+int main()
+{
+ wxCondition condition;
+ MyWaitingThread *thread - new MyWaitingThread(&condition);
+
+ thread->Run();
+
+ // wait until the thread really starts running
+ condition.Wait();
+
+ ...
+
+ return 0;
+}
+\end{verbatim}
\wxheading{Derived from}
None.
+\wxheading{Include files}
+
+<wx/thread.h>
+
\wxheading{See also}
\helpref{wxThread}{wxthread}, \helpref{wxMutex}{wxmutex}
\membersection{wxCondition::Wait}\label{wxconditionwait}
-\func{void}{Wait}{\param{wxMutex\&}{ mutex}}
+\func{void}{Wait}{\void}
Waits indefinitely.
-\func{bool}{Wait}{\param{wxMutex\&}{ mutex}, \param{unsigned long}{ sec}, \param{unsigned long}{ nsec}}
+\func{bool}{Wait}{\param{unsigned long}{ sec}, \param{unsigned long}{ nsec}}
Waits until a signal is raised or the timeout has elapsed.
\wxheading{Parameters}
-\docparam{mutex}{wxMutex object.}
-
\docparam{sec}{Timeout in seconds}
\docparam{nsec}{Timeout nanoseconds component (added to {\it sec}).}
The second form returns if the signal was raised, or FALSE if there was a timeout.
-