diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc b/examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc index e20480198a..ac32c592fc 100644 --- a/examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc +++ b/examples/widgets/doc/src/application.qdoc @@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ Just before we create the \uicontrol{Help} menu, we call QMenuBar::addSeparator(). This has no effect for most widget - styles (e.g., Windows and Mac OS X styles), but for some + styles (e.g., Windows and OS X styles), but for some styles this makes sure that \uicontrol{Help} is pushed to the right side of the menu bar. @@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ load the user's preferences and other application settings. The QSettings class provides a high-level interface for storing settings permanently on disk. On Windows, it uses the (in)famous - Windows registry; on Mac OS X, it uses the native XML-based + Windows registry; on OS X, it uses the native XML-based CFPreferences API; on Unix/X11, it uses text files. The QSettings constructor takes arguments that identify your @@ -310,7 +310,7 @@ We start by opening the file in read-only mode. The QFile::Text flag indicates that the file is a text file, not a binary file. - On Unix and Mac OS X, this makes no difference, but on Windows, + On Unix and OS X, this makes no difference, but on Windows, it ensures that the "\\r\\n" end-of-line sequence is converted to "\\n" when reading. |