X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/526954c5968baa29218c994ec48e476ae2bd4b9f..7344108e8a129a3f9b4df5ab0f98a1713db03b89:/interface/wx/dynarray.h diff --git a/interface/wx/dynarray.h b/interface/wx/dynarray.h index 830e7ab60a..f9066994d6 100644 --- a/interface/wx/dynarray.h +++ b/interface/wx/dynarray.h @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ functions are inline, so they do not take @e any space at all. wxWidgets has three different kinds of array. All of them derive from - wxBaseArray class which works with untyped data and can not be used + wxBaseArray class which works with untyped data and cannot be used directly. The standard macros WX_DEFINE_ARRAY(), WX_DEFINE_SORTED_ARRAY() and WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY() are used to define a new class deriving from it. The classes declared will be called in this documentation wxArray, @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ however dumb, C++ compiler in the world. Remember to include @ just before each - WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY() ocurrence in your code, even if you have several in + WX_DEFINE_OBJARRAY() occurrence in your code, even if you have several in the same file. Things are much simpler for wxArray and wxSortedArray however: it is enough @@ -659,7 +659,7 @@ public: /** This macro may be used to delete all elements of the array before emptying - it. It can not be used with wxObjArrays - but they will delete their + it. It cannot be used with wxObjArrays - but they will delete their elements anyway when you call Empty(). */ #define WX_CLEAR_ARRAY(wxArray_arrayToBeCleared)