fixed LaTeX markup to suit tex2rtf

git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@38536 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
This commit is contained in:
Vadim Zeitlin
2006-04-03 22:16:22 +00:00
parent e7feeafa56
commit 5e51fb4ca5

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@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ text strings between multibyte (SBCS or DBCS) encodings and Unicode.
In the documentation for this and related classes please notice that
\emph{length} of the string refers to the number of characters in the string
not counting the terminating \NUL, if any. While the \emph{size} of the string
is the total number of bytes in the string, including any trailing {\NUL}s.
is the total number of bytes in the string, including any trailing \NUL.
Thus, length of wide character string \texttt{L"foo"} is $3$ while its size can
be either $8$ or $16$ depending on whether \texttt{wchar\_t} is $2$ bytes (as
under Windows) or $4$ (Unix).
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ interested in the length of the resulting string}
\wxheading{Return value}
The length of the converted string \emph{excluding} the trailing {\NUL}.
The length of the converted string \emph{excluding} the trailing \NUL.
\membersection{wxMBConv::WC2MB}\label{wxmbconvwc2mb}
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ Converts from Unicode to multibyte encoding. The semantics of this function
Notice that when the function is called with a non-\NULL buffer, the
{\it n} parameter should be the size of the buffer and so it \emph{should} take
into account the trailing NUL, which might take two or four bytes for some
into account the trailing \NUL, which might take two or four bytes for some
encodings (UTF-16 and UTF-32) and not one.
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ the result.
The first overload takes a \NUL-terminated input string. The second one takes a
string of exactly the specified length and the string may include or not the
trailing {\NUL}s. If the string is not \NUL-terminated, a temporary
trailing \NUL character(s). If the string is not \NUL-terminated, a temporary
\NUL-terminated copy of it suitable for passing to \helpref{MB2WC}{wxmbconvmb2wc}
is made, so it is more efficient to ensure that the string is does have the
appropriate number of \NUL bytes (which is usually $1$ but may be $2$ or $4$