X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/605d715ddd84ddc3e78423e3f3ae5c27c8ff4d43..a9249b2eb2a40d8c71f828669045c4ddaa8dc5ff:/docs/latex/wx/datstrm.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/datstrm.tex b/docs/latex/wx/datstrm.tex index f1adb8aed5..7eaabb563d 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/datstrm.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/datstrm.tex @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ is defined as signed int on 32-bit architectures) so that you cannot use long. T problems (here and elsewhere), make use of the wxInt32, wxUint32, etc types. For example: + \begin{verbatim} wxFileInputStream input( "mytext.dat" ); wxDataInputStream store( input ); @@ -93,7 +94,7 @@ Reads a double (IEEE encoded) from the stream. \membersection{wxDataInputStream::ReadString} -\func{wxString}{wxDataInputStream::ReadString}{\void} +\func{wxString}{ReadString}{\void} Reads a string from a stream. Actually, this function first reads a long integer specifying the length of the string (without the last null character) and then @@ -152,31 +153,31 @@ little-endian order. \membersection{wxDataOutputStream::Write8} -\func{void}{wxDataOutputStream::Write8}{{\param wxUint8 }{i8}} +\func{void}{Write8}{{\param wxUint8 }{i8}} Writes the single byte {\it i8} to the stream. \membersection{wxDataOutputStream::Write16} -\func{void}{wxDataOutputStream::Write16}{{\param wxUint16 }{i16}} +\func{void}{Write16}{{\param wxUint16 }{i16}} Writes the 16 bit integer {\it i16} to the stream. \membersection{wxDataOutputStream::Write32} -\func{void}{wxDataOutputStream::Write32}{{\param wxUint32 }{i32}} +\func{void}{Write32}{{\param wxUint32 }{i32}} Writes the 32 bit integer {\it i32} to the stream. \membersection{wxDataOutputStream::WriteDouble} -\func{void}{wxDataOutputStream::WriteDouble}{{\param double }{f}} +\func{void}{WriteDouble}{{\param double }{f}} Writes the double {\it f} to the stream using the IEEE format. \membersection{wxDataOutputStream::WriteString} -\func{void}{wxDataOutputStream::WriteString}{{\param const wxString\& }{string}} +\func{void}{WriteString}{{\param const wxString\& }{string}} Writes {\it string} to the stream. Actually, this method writes the size of the string before writing {\it string} itself.