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authorSamuel Gaist <samuel.gaist@idiap.ch>2020-05-28 11:46:05 +0200
committerSamuel Gaist <samuel.gaist@idiap.ch>2020-06-03 00:39:06 +0200
commit654a3ad08e52dd84dac3a729e06458cfa568f6bb (patch)
treee5508ea584228a15b04493d79b1197d852784f04 /src/corelib
parent93a04332eb477e013a417f383df496b9a333ca7e (diff)
Doc: fix some typos in QRegularExpression documentation
Pick-to: 5.15 Change-Id: Ibf96fc775b08df4de0b20d499d8779204ff7df30 Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/corelib')
-rw-r--r--src/corelib/text/qregularexpression.cpp16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/src/corelib/text/qregularexpression.cpp b/src/corelib/text/qregularexpression.cpp
index 97fcb0beb6..c6422ee11c 100644
--- a/src/corelib/text/qregularexpression.cpp
+++ b/src/corelib/text/qregularexpression.cpp
@@ -328,7 +328,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
match is found, then this one should be reported, and the input string
accepted as fully valid.
- This behaviour is implemented by the PartialPreferCompleteMatch match type.
+ This behavior is implemented by the PartialPreferCompleteMatch match type.
For instance:
\snippet code/src_corelib_tools_qregularexpression.cpp 15
@@ -338,7 +338,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
\snippet code/src_corelib_tools_qregularexpression.cpp 16
- Another example with a different pattern, showing the behaviour of
+ Another example with a different pattern, showing the behavior of
preferring a complete match over a partial one:
\snippet code/src_corelib_tools_qregularexpression.cpp 17
@@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
is not to be taken literally -- the engine will never try to access
any character after the last one in the subject.
- QRegularExpression implements this behaviour when using the
+ QRegularExpression implements this behavior when using the
PartialPreferFirstMatch match type. This match type reports a partial match
as soon as it is found, and other match alternatives are not tried
(even if they could lead to a complete match). For instance:
@@ -382,7 +382,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
\snippet code/src_corelib_tools_qregularexpression.cpp 20
- This shows what could seem a counterintuitve behaviour of quantifiers:
+ This shows what could seem a counterintuitive behavior of quantifiers:
since \c{?} is greedy, then the engine tries first to continue the match
after having matched \c{"abc"}; but then the matching reaches the end of the
subject string, and therefore a partial match is reported. This is
@@ -390,7 +390,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
\snippet code/src_corelib_tools_qregularexpression.cpp 21
- It's easy to understand this behaviour if we remember that the engine
+ It's easy to understand this behavior if we remember that the engine
expects the subject string to be only a substring of the whole text we're
looking for a match into (that is, how we said before, that the engine
assumes that there are other characters beyond the end of the subject
@@ -427,7 +427,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
QRegularExpression does not support all the features available in
Perl-compatible regular expressions. The most notable one is the fact that
duplicated names for capturing groups are not supported, and using them can
- lead to undefined behaviour.
+ lead to undefined behavior.
This may change in a future version of Qt.
@@ -488,7 +488,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
The convenience function capturedTexts() will return \e{all} the captured
substrings at once (including the substring matched by the entire pattern)
- in the order they have been captured by captring groups; that is,
+ in the order they have been captured by capturing groups; that is,
\c{captured(i) == capturedTexts().at(i)}.
You can retrieve the QRegularExpression object the subject string was
@@ -581,7 +581,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
outside a character class causes all the following characters, until
the first newline (included), to be ignored. This can be used to
increase the readability of a pattern string as well as put comments
- inside regular expressions; this is particulary useful if the pattern
+ inside regular expressions; this is particularly useful if the pattern
string is loaded from a file or written by the user, because in C++
code it is always possible to use the rules for string literals to put
comments outside the pattern string. This option corresponds to the \c{/x}