X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/cddfbd9f55f9b5c15705ab32b22653cf68e400ab..751731864888f00e31e6dce1092ac28a1fac5358:/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex?ds=inline diff --git a/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex b/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex index ccea6686b5..50b8108536 100644 --- a/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex +++ b/docs/latex/wx/tcommdlg.tex @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Classes: \helpref{wxColourDialog}{wxcolourdialog}, \helpref{wxFontDialog}{wxfont \rtfsp\helpref{wxPrintDialog}{wxprintdialog}, \helpref{wxFileDialog}{wxfiledialog},\rtfsp \helpref{wxDirDialog}{wxdirdialog}, \helpref{wxTextEntryDialog}{wxtextentrydialog},\rtfsp \helpref{wxMessageDialog}{wxmessagedialog}, \helpref{wxSingleChoiceDialog}{wxsinglechoicedialog},\rtfsp -\helpref{wxMultipleChoiceDialog}{wxmultiplechoicedialog} +\helpref{wxMultiChoiceDialog}{wxmultichoicedialog} Common dialog classes and functions encapsulate commonly-needed dialog box requirements. They are all `modal', grabbing the flow of control until the user dismisses the dialog, @@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ uses it to set the background of a window. \begin{verbatim} wxColourData data; - data.SetChooseFull(TRUE); + data.SetChooseFull(true); for (int i = 0; i < 16; i++) { wxColour colour(i*16, i*16, i*16); @@ -92,11 +92,10 @@ Under Windows, the native font selector common dialog is used. This presents a dialog box with controls for font name, point size, style, weight, underlining, strikeout and text foreground colour. A sample of the font is shown on a white area of the dialog box. Note that -in the translation from full MS Windows fonts to wxWindows font +in the translation from full MS Windows fonts to wxWidgets font conventions, strikeout is ignored and a font family (such as Swiss or Modern) is deduced from the actual font name (such as Arial -or Courier). The full range of Windows fonts cannot be used in wxWindows -at present. +or Courier). {\bf The generic font selector} @@ -106,11 +105,6 @@ underlining and text foreground colour are provided, and a sample is shown upon a white background. The generic font selector is also available under MS Windows; use the name wxGenericFontDialog. -In both cases, the application is responsible for deleting the -new font returned from calling wxFontDialog::Show (if any). -This returned font is guaranteed to be a new object and not -one currently in use in the application. - {\bf Example} In the samples/dialogs directory, there is an example of using @@ -167,7 +161,7 @@ The wildcard may be a specification for multiple types of file with a description for each, such as: \begin{verbatim} - "BMP files (*.bmp) | *.bmp | GIF files (*.gif) | *.gif" + "BMP files (*.bmp)|*.bmp|GIF files (*.gif)|*.gif" \end{verbatim} \subsection{wxDirDialog overview}\label{wxdirdialogoverview} @@ -202,11 +196,10 @@ This dialog shows a list of choices, plus OK and (optionally) Cancel. The user c select one of them. The selection can be obtained from the dialog as an index, a string or client data. -\subsection{wxMultipleChoiceDialog overview}\label{wxmultiplechoicedialogoverview} +\subsection{wxMultiChoiceDialog overview}\label{wxmultichoicedialogoverview} -Classes: \helpref{wxMultipleChoiceDialog}{wxmultiplechoicedialog} +Classes: \helpref{wxMultiChoiceDialog}{wxmultichoicedialog} This dialog shows a list of choices, plus OK and (optionally) Cancel. The user can select one or more of them. -