Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-24039DCE-B5C4-46CB-9E02-AB421C64FB87.dita
changeset 12 80ef3a206772
parent 9 59758314f811
child 14 578be2adaf3e
--- a/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-24039DCE-B5C4-46CB-9E02-AB421C64FB87.dita	Fri Jul 02 12:51:36 2010 +0100
+++ b/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-24039DCE-B5C4-46CB-9E02-AB421C64FB87.dita	Fri Jul 16 17:23:46 2010 +0100
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
 words, it uses the physical coordinates of the display.</p>
 <p>The following figure illustrates this relationship.</p>
 <fig id="GUID-9D373EB7-096D-4C84-8060-577F33D462EE"><title>Relative positions of three controls where the top-level parent owns
-the window</title><image href="GUID-61C340D0-9058-45C2-9A90-4AB8E0612872_d0e68588_href.png"/></fig>
+the window</title><image href="GUID-61C340D0-9058-45C2-9A90-4AB8E0612872_d0e72801_href.png"/></fig>
 <p>Consider three controls, <b>A</b>, <b>B</b>, and <b>C</b> (shown in
 the figure above):</p>
 <ul>
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
 of its own, it is a child window of <b>A</b>'s window (as shown in the following
 figure). Then if <b>C</b> is a child of <b>B</b> and sets its window by calling <parmname>CCoeControl::SetContainerWindowL(B)</parmname>,
 the position of <b>C</b> (p') is relative to <b>B</b>'s window.</p>
-<fig id="GUID-5884BDB6-6ED0-4EF6-A64F-3EEAAAEE2FF0"><title>Relative positions of three controls where a child owns a window</title><image href="GUID-3A506E2A-2999-458B-BBA2-DCC4D2EA5492_d0e68691_href.png"/></fig>
+<fig id="GUID-5884BDB6-6ED0-4EF6-A64F-3EEAAAEE2FF0"><title>Relative positions of three controls where a child owns a window</title><image href="GUID-3A506E2A-2999-458B-BBA2-DCC4D2EA5492_d0e72904_href.png"/></fig>
 <p>As the example illustrates, a control position depends on the window
 in which it is drawn. Therefore, you need to know the drawing window for each
 control. It is an important issue when designing a UI layout. There are some