X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/2edb0bdef6238c8c246b6978bc14828b7033d931..71aba8333cc915afff9e740c944f7fa7247abacb:/docs/latex/wx/longlong.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/longlong.tex b/docs/latex/wx/longlong.tex index 37f62f17eb..e3e44f2785 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/longlong.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/longlong.tex @@ -25,10 +25,16 @@ also has operators for implicit construction from and conversion to the native You would usually use this type in exactly the same manner as any other (built-in) arithmetic type. Note that wxLongLong is a signed type, if you -want unsigned values use wxULongLong. +want unsigned values use wxULongLong which has exactly the same API as +wxLongLong except when explicitly mentioned otherwise. If a native (i.e. supported directly by the compiler) 64 bit integer type was -found a typedef {\it wxLongLong\_t} will be defined to correspond it. +found to exist, {\it wxLongLong\_t} macro will be defined to correspond to it. +Also, in this case only, two additional macros will be defined: +\helpref{wxLongLongFmtSpec}{wxlonglongfmtspec} for printing 64 bit integers +using the standard {\tt printf()} function (but see also +\helpref{ToString()}{wxlonglongtostring} for a more portable solution) and +\helpref{wxLL}{wxll} for defining 64 bit integer compile-time constants. \wxheading{Derived from}