X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/23790a2a29ef25f28568b30e78b7f251f1492a12..7f4f5e8c24607ead9b5e2f4c60658dcd61f028f4:/interface/wx/utils.h
diff --git a/interface/wx/utils.h b/interface/wx/utils.h
index 08b6a55037..490cf53f61 100644
--- a/interface/wx/utils.h
+++ b/interface/wx/utils.h
@@ -649,8 +649,34 @@ bool wxGetUserName(char* buf, int sz);
wxString wxGetOsDescription();
/**
- Gets the version and the operating system ID for currently running OS. See
- wxPlatformInfo for more details about wxOperatingSystemId.
+ Gets the version and the operating system ID for currently running OS.
+ The returned wxOperatingSystemId value can be used for a basic categorization
+ of the OS family; the major and minor version numbers allows to detect a specific
+ system.
+
+ For Unix-like systems (@c wxOS_UNIX) the major and minor version integers will
+ contain the kernel major and minor version numbers (as returned by the
+ 'uname -r' command); e.g. "2" and "6" if the machine is using kernel 2.6.19.
+
+ For Mac OS X systems (@c wxOS_MAC) the major and minor version integers are the
+ natural version numbers associated with the OS; e.g. "10" and and "6" if the machine
+ is using Mac OS X Snow Leopard.
+
+ For Windows-like systems (@c wxOS_WINDOWS) the major and minor version integers will
+ contain the following values:
+ @beginTable
+ @row3col{Windows OS name, Major version, Minor version}
+ @row3col{Windows 7, 6, 1}
+ @row3col{Windows Server 2008 R2, 6, 1}
+ @row3col{Windows Server 2008, 6, 0}
+ @row3col{Windows Vista, 6, 0}
+ @row3col{Windows Server 2003 R2, 5, 2}
+ @row3col{Windows Server 2003, 5, 2}
+ @row3col{Windows XP, 5, 1}
+ @row3col{Windows 2000, 5, 0}
+ @endDefList
+ See the MSDN
+ for more info about the values above.
@see wxGetOsDescription(), wxPlatformInfo
@@ -780,9 +806,7 @@ wxLinuxDistributionInfo wxGetLinuxDistributionInfo();
@header{wx/utils.h}
@beginWxPerlOnly
- This function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdoutStderr and it only takes the
- @a command argument, and returns a 3-element list (@c status, @c output,
- @c errors), where @c output and @c errors are array references.
+ In wxPerl this function is called @c Wx::ExecuteCommand.
@endWxPerlOnly
*/
long wxExecute(const wxString& command, int flags = wxEXEC_ASYNC,
@@ -815,6 +839,10 @@ long wxExecute(const wxString& command, int flags = wxEXEC_ASYNC,
wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
@header{wx/utils.h}
+
+ @beginWxPerlOnly
+ In wxPerl this function is called @c Wx::ExecuteArgs.
+ @endWxPerlOnly
*/
long wxExecute(char** argv, int flags = wxEXEC_ASYNC,
wxProcess* callback = NULL);
@@ -847,6 +875,12 @@ long wxExecute(wchar_t** argv, int flags = wxEXEC_ASYNC,
wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
@header{wx/utils.h}
+
+ @beginWxPerlOnly
+ This function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdout: it only takes the
+ @a command argument, and returns a 2-element list (@c status, @c output),
+ where @c output in an array reference.
+ @endWxPerlOnly
*/
long wxExecute(const wxString& command, wxArrayString& output, int flags = 0);
@@ -874,6 +908,12 @@ long wxExecute(const wxString& command, wxArrayString& output, int flags = 0);
wxLaunchDefaultApplication(), wxLaunchDefaultBrowser()
@header{wx/utils.h}
+
+ @beginWxPerlOnly
+ This function is called @c Wx::ExecuteStdoutStderr: it only takes the
+ @a command argument, and returns a 3-element list (@c status, @c output,
+ @c errors), where @c output and @c errors are array references.
+ @endWxPerlOnly
*/
long wxExecute(const wxString& command, wxArrayString& output,
wxArrayString& errors, int flags = 0);