--- a/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-8675AC01-E2D8-425C-899F-12BE99345AA9.dita Fri Jul 02 12:51:36 2010 +0100
+++ b/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-8675AC01-E2D8-425C-899F-12BE99345AA9.dita Fri Jul 16 17:23:46 2010 +0100
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@
// 3 wasted bytes
TReal iReal; // offset 8, 8 bytes
} // total length = 16 bytes</codeblock><fig id="GUID-70477651-EC14-4321-ACA5-79CEE4AEC69E">
-<image href="GUID-7E801A44-4509-5AC0-88D5-7DEA1AF7969D_d0e7653_href.png" placement="inline"/>
+<image href="GUID-7E801A44-4509-5AC0-88D5-7DEA1AF7969D_d0e7775_href.png" placement="inline"/>
</fig><p>Structures are regarded as <codeph>T</codeph> types: that is they
may not own heap-allocated resources such as <codeph>C</codeph> type classes.
</p><p>An array contains many built-ins or other types </p><codeblock xml:space="preserve">TInt a[32]; // 32 TInts, = 128 bytes
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@
take the address of an object, then you can refer to it by pointer:</p><codeblock xml:space="preserve">S* ps; // pointer to an S
ps=&s // take address of existing S
</codeblock><p>A pointer is a 32-bit machine word, and could point to anything.</p><fig id="GUID-D33AB198-0B62-4391-B86D-088595AE6B8B">
-<image href="GUID-045F3455-2B5A-5B20-ABCE-ED202DC5078A_d0e7684_href.png" placement="inline"/>
+<image href="GUID-045F3455-2B5A-5B20-ABCE-ED202DC5078A_d0e7806_href.png" placement="inline"/>
</fig><p>The specifier is placed next to the type rather than the name. </p><p>There
is often a need to refer to memory as anything: for this, a <codeph>void*</codeph> pointer
is used in C++. In Symbian, a <codeph>TAny*</codeph> may be referred to instead.
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@
does two things: firstly, it sets aside six bytes of memory containing the
characters 'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', '\0'. Secondly, it sets the pointer hello
to contain the address of the first of those bytes. </p><fig id="GUID-08C1AF40-8D93-414E-B103-1E57AB17480F">
-<image href="GUID-512D0DA7-0BC2-534F-9233-11F46D285CA6_d0e7711_href.png" placement="inline"/>
+<image href="GUID-512D0DA7-0BC2-534F-9233-11F46D285CA6_d0e7833_href.png" placement="inline"/>
</fig><p>Functions accessing the string rely on this address as its starting
point, and the terminating <codeph>\0</codeph> to indicate its end. Functions
which manipulate the string must either deliberately not extend it, or must