\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxSTAY\_ON\_TOP}}{Stay on top of other windows. Windows only.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxSYSTEM\_MENU}}{Displays a system menu.}
\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxSIMPLE\_BORDER}}{Displays no border or decorations. GTK and Windows only.}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxRESIZE\_BORDER}}{Displays a resizeable border around the window (Unix only).}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_FLOAT\_ON\_PARENT}}{Causes the frame to be above the parent window in the
-z-order and not shown in the taskbar. Without this style, frames are created as top-level windows that may be obscured by
-the parent window, and frame titles are shown in the taskbar. Windows and GTK.}
-\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_TOOL\_WINDOW}}{Causes a frame with a small titlebar to be created;
-the frame title does not appear in the taskbar. Windows only.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxRESIZE\_BORDER}}{Displays a resizeable border around the window.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_TOOL\_WINDOW}}{Causes a frame with a small
+titlebar to be created; the frame does not appear in the taskbar under Windows.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_NO\_TASKBAR}}{Creates a normal frame but if
+this frame has a parent it does not appear in the taskbar under Windows. Note
+that a frame without parent will still appear in the taskbar even with this
+style. Has no effect under other platforms.}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_FLOAT\_ON\_PARENT}}{Unused any longer, use
+wxFRAME\_TOOL\_WINDOW or wxFRAME\_NO\_TASKBAR instead}
+\twocolitem{\windowstyle{wxFRAME\_EX\_CONTEXTHELP}}{Under Windows, puts a query button on the
+caption. When pressed, Windows will go into a context-sensitive help mode and wxWindows will send
+a wxEVT\_HELP event if the user clicked on an application window. {\it Note} that this is an extended
+style and must be set by calling \helpref{SetExtraStyle}{wxwindowsetextrastyle} before Create is called (two-step construction).
+You cannot use this style together with wxMAXIMIZE\_BOX or wxMINIMIZE\_BOX.}
\end{twocollist}
The default frame style is for normal, resizeable frames. To create a frame
\helpref{wxFrame::IsIconized}{wxframeisiconized}, \helpref{wxFrame::Maximize}{wxframemaximize}.
+\membersection{wxFrame::IsFullScreen}\label{wxframeisfullscreen}
+
+\func{bool}{IsFullScreen}{\void}
+
+Returns TRUE if the frame is in fullscreen mode.
+
+\wxheading{See also}
+
+\helpref{wxFrame::ShowFullScreen}{wxframeshowfullscreen}
+
\membersection{wxFrame::IsIconized}\label{wxframeisiconized}
\constfunc{bool}{IsIconized}{\void}
counting, the copy is very quick. It is safe to delete {\it icon} after
calling this function.
-Under Windows, instead of using {\bf SetIcon}, you can add the
-following lines to your MS Windows resource file:
-
-\begin{verbatim}
-wxSTD_MDIPARENTFRAME ICON icon1.ico
-wxSTD_MDICHILDFRAME ICON icon2.ico
-wxSTD_FRAME ICON icon3.ico
-\end{verbatim}
-
-where icon1.ico will be used for the MDI parent frame, icon2.ico
-will be used for MDI child frames, and icon3.ico will be used for
-non-MDI frames.
-
-If these icons are not supplied, and {\bf SetIcon} is not called either,
-then the following defaults apply if you have included wx.rc.
-
-\begin{verbatim}
-wxDEFAULT_FRAME ICON std.ico
-wxDEFAULT_MDIPARENTFRAME ICON mdi.ico
-wxDEFAULT_MDICHILDFRAME ICON child.ico
-\end{verbatim}
-
-You can replace std.ico, mdi.ico and child.ico with your own defaults
-for all your wxWindows application. Currently they show the same icon.
-
-{\it Note:} a wxWindows application linked with subsystem equal to 4.0
-(i.e. marked as a Windows 95 application) doesn't respond properly
-to wxFrame::SetIcon. To work around this until a solution is found,
-mark your program as a 3.5 application. This will also ensure
-that Windows provides small icons for the application automatically.
+% VZ: we don't have all this any more (18.08.00)
+%
+%Under Windows, instead of using {\bf SetIcon}, you can add the
+%following lines to your MS Windows resource file:
+%
+%\begin{verbatim}
+%wxSTD_MDIPARENTFRAME ICON icon1.ico
+%wxSTD_MDICHILDFRAME ICON icon2.ico
+%wxSTD_FRAME ICON icon3.ico
+%\end{verbatim}
+%
+%where icon1.ico will be used for the MDI parent frame, icon2.ico
+%will be used for MDI child frames, and icon3.ico will be used for
+%non-MDI frames.
+%
+%If these icons are not supplied, and {\bf SetIcon} is not called either,
+%then the following defaults apply if you have included wx.rc.
+%
+%\begin{verbatim}
+%wxDEFAULT_FRAME ICON std.ico
+%wxDEFAULT_MDIPARENTFRAME ICON mdi.ico
+%wxDEFAULT_MDICHILDFRAME ICON child.ico
+%\end{verbatim}
+%
+%You can replace std.ico, mdi.ico and child.ico with your own defaults
+%for all your wxWindows application. Currently they show the same icon.
See also \helpref{wxIcon}{wxicon}.
\pythonnote{Only a single parameter is required, a Python list of
integers.}
+\perlnote{In wxPerl this method takes the field widths as parameters.}
+
\membersection{wxFrame::SetToolBar}\label{wxframesettoolbar}
\func{void}{SetToolBar}{\param{wxToolBar*}{ toolBar}}
\item wxFULLSCREEN\_ALL (all of the above)
\end{itemize}
-This function only works on Windows and has not been tested with MDI frames.
+This function has not been tested with MDI frames.
+
+\wxheading{See also}
+\helpref{wxFrame::IsFullScreen}{wxframeisfullscreen}