X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/49742d4ecc295b12cf0f557089b2b64a6b1131a2..81c882b613b5d99ddb1e5ab69fcd7ebccc287025:/docs/latex/wx/tdb.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tdb.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tdb.tex index bc458335d4..71a470d202 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tdb.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tdb.tex @@ -835,9 +835,9 @@ they also needed to take in to account different database manufacturers and different ODBC driver manufacturers. Because of all the possible combinations of OS/database/drivers, it is impossible to say that these classes will work perfectly with datasource ABC, ODBC driver XYZ, on platform LMN. You may run -in to some incompatibilities or unsupported features when moving your +into some incompatibilities or unsupported features when moving your application from one environment to another. But that is what makes -cross-platform programming fun. It is also pinpoints one of the great +cross-platform programming fun. It also pinpoints one of the great things about open source software. It can evolve! The most common difference between different database/ODBC driver @@ -920,8 +920,8 @@ and OS on which the program will be compiled/run is Unicode capable. The one major difference in writing code that can be compiled in either unicode or non-unicode builds that is specific to the wxODBC classes is to -use the SQL_C_WXCHAR datatype for string columns rather than SQL_C_CHAR or -SQL_C_WCHAR. +use the SQL\_C\_WXCHAR datatype for string columns rather than SQL\_C\_CHAR or +SQL\_C\_WCHAR. \subsection{wxODBC - Sample Code}\label{wxodbcsamplecode1}