X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/cc81d32f2bf8c159f3b1bf6ddaf62e6d77720209..24d705907ddcbe8e701867be2fb6f457a3dfab6f:/docs/latex/wx/tnoneng.tex diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tnoneng.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tnoneng.tex index fd5d75fa06..6e26d578fe 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tnoneng.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tnoneng.tex @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ different charsets under Unix and Windows (and other platforms, to make situation even more complicated). These charsets usually differ in so many characters it is impossible to use same texts under all platforms. -wxWindows library provides mechanism that helps you avoid distributing many +wxWidgets library provides mechanism that helps you avoid distributing many identical, only differently encoded, packages with your application (e.g. help files and menu items in iso8859-13 and windows-1257). Thanks to this mechanism you can, for example, distribute only iso8859-13 data @@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ msgstr "" (Make sure that the header is {\bf not} marked as {\it fuzzy}.) -wxWindows is able to use this catalog under any supported platform +wxWidgets is able to use this catalog under any supported platform (although iso8859-2 is a Unix encoding and is normally not understood by Windows). @@ -90,24 +90,22 @@ user's operating system. This is default behaviour of the \wxheading{Font mapping} -You can use \helpref{wxEncodingConverter}{wxencodingconverter} and +You can use \helpref{wxMBConv classes}{mbconvclasses} and \helpref{wxFontMapper}{wxfontmapper} to display text: \begin{verbatim} if (!wxFontMapper::Get()->IsEncodingAvailable(enc, facename)) { wxFontEncoding alternative; - if (wxTheFontMapper->GetAltForEncoding(enc, &alternative, - facename, false)) + if (wxFontMapper::Get()->GetAltForEncoding(enc, &alternative, + facename, false)) { - wxEncodingConverted encconv; - if (!encconv.Init(enc, alternative)) - ...failure... - else - text = encconv.Convert(text); + wxCSConv convFrom(wxFontMapper::Get()->GetEncodingName(enc)); + wxCSConv convTo(wxFontMapper::Get()->GetEncodingName(alternative)); + text = wxString(text.mb_str(convFrom), convTo); } else - ...failure... + ...failure (or we may try iso8859-1/7bit ASCII)... } ...display text... \end{verbatim} @@ -115,8 +113,10 @@ if (!wxFontMapper::Get()->IsEncodingAvailable(enc, facename)) \wxheading{Converting data} You may want to store all program data (created documents etc.) in -the same encoding, let's say windows1250. Obviously, the best way would -be to use \helpref{wxEncodingConverter}{wxencodingconverter}. +the same encoding, let's say {\tt utf-8}. You can use +\helpref{wxCSConv}{wxcsconv} class to convert data to encoding used by the +system your application is running on (see +\helpref{wxLocale::GetSystemEncoding}{wxlocalegetsystemencoding}). \wxheading{Help files}