X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/30738aae14dfbce0c492d8696c861947228028c2..1d156af3247c862e51a7c62f569a3fd302052a42:/docs/doxygen/overviews/nonenglish.h diff --git a/docs/doxygen/overviews/nonenglish.h b/docs/doxygen/overviews/nonenglish.h index b1b52d18cc..3cd30380e4 100644 --- a/docs/doxygen/overviews/nonenglish.h +++ b/docs/doxygen/overviews/nonenglish.h @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ // Purpose: topic overview // Author: wxWidgets team // RCS-ID: $Id$ -// Licence: wxWindows license +// Licence: wxWindows licence ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// -/*! +/** @page overview_nonenglish Writing Non-English Applications @@ -102,9 +102,7 @@ Windows). How is this done? When you tell the wxLocale class to load a message catalog that contains a correct header, it checks the charset. The catalog is then converted to the charset used (see wxLocale::GetSystemEncoding and -wxLocale::GetSystemEncodingName) by the user's operating system. This is the -default behaviour of the wxLocale class; you can disable it by @b not passing -@c wxLOCALE_CONV_ENCODING to wxLocale::Init. +wxLocale::GetSystemEncodingName) by the user's operating system. @section overview_nonenglish_strings Non-English Strings or 8-bit Characters in Source @@ -123,7 +121,7 @@ English using message catalogs: @li Specify the source code language and charset as arguments to wxLocale::AddCatalog. For example: @code - locale.AddCatalog(_T("myapp"), wxLANGUAGE_GERMAN, _T("iso-8859-1")); + locale.AddCatalog(wxT("myapp"), wxLANGUAGE_GERMAN, wxT("iso-8859-1")); @endcode