diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc b/src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc index d6f96f6579..9b3ea6ae66 100644 --- a/src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc +++ b/src/corelib/doc/src/objectmodel/bindableproperties.qdoc @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ different objects. The \l {Introductory Example} below demonstrates the usage of bindable - properties in C++ code. You can also check \l {Bindable Properties Example} + properties in C++ code. You can also check \l {Bindable Properties} example to see how the bindable properties can help to improve your code. \section1 Introductory Example @@ -256,8 +256,8 @@ Q_PROPERTYs without \c BINDABLE can also be bound and be used in binding expressions, as long as they define a \c NOTIFY signal. You must wrap the property in a \l QBindable using the \c {QBindable(QObject* obj, const char* property)} constructor. Then, the - property can be bound using \c \l QBindable::setBinding() or used in a binding - expression via \c \l QBindable::value(). You must use \c QBindable::value() in binding + property can be bound using \l QBindable::setBinding() or used in a binding + expression via \l QBindable::value(). You must use \c QBindable::value() in binding expressions instead of the normal property \c READ function (or \c MEMBER) to enable dependency tracking if the property is not \c BINDABLE. |