diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp b/src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp index ff1438e250..9dc06138a6 100644 --- a/src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp +++ b/src/gui/kernel/qkeysequence.cpp @@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ void Q_GUI_EXPORT qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic(bool b) { qt_sequence_no_mnemoni QKeySequence objects can be cast to a QString to obtain a human-readable translated version of the sequence. Similarly, the toString() function - produces human-readable strings for use in menus. On Mac OS X, the + produces human-readable strings for use in menus. On OS X, the appropriate symbols are used to describe keyboard shortcuts using special keys on the Macintosh keyboard. @@ -202,12 +202,12 @@ void Q_GUI_EXPORT qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic(bool b) { qt_sequence_no_mnemoni code point of the character; for example, 'A' gives the same key sequence as Qt::Key_A. - \b{Note:} On Mac OS X, references to "Ctrl", Qt::CTRL, Qt::Control + \b{Note:} On OS X, references to "Ctrl", Qt::CTRL, Qt::Control and Qt::ControlModifier correspond to the \uicontrol Command keys on the Macintosh keyboard, and references to "Meta", Qt::META, Qt::Meta and Qt::MetaModifier correspond to the \uicontrol Control keys. Developers on - Mac OS X can use the same shortcut descriptions across all platforms, - and their applications will automatically work as expected on Mac OS X. + OS X can use the same shortcut descriptions across all platforms, + and their applications will automatically work as expected on OS X. \section1 Standard Shortcuts @@ -216,12 +216,12 @@ void Q_GUI_EXPORT qt_set_sequence_auto_mnemonic(bool b) { qt_sequence_no_mnemoni setting up actions in a typical application. The table below shows some common key sequences that are often used for these standard shortcuts by applications on four widely-used platforms. Note - that on Mac OS X, the \uicontrol Ctrl value corresponds to the \uicontrol + that on OS X, the \uicontrol Ctrl value corresponds to the \uicontrol Command keys on the Macintosh keyboard, and the \uicontrol Meta value corresponds to the \uicontrol Control keys. \table - \header \li StandardKey \li Windows \li Mac OS X \li KDE \li GNOME + \header \li StandardKey \li Windows \li OS X \li KDE \li GNOME \row \li HelpContents \li F1 \li Ctrl+? \li F1 \li F1 \row \li WhatsThis \li Shift+F1 \li Shift+F1 \li Shift+F1 \li Shift+F1 \row \li Open \li Ctrl+O \li Ctrl+O \li Ctrl+O \li Ctrl+O @@ -1207,7 +1207,7 @@ QString QKeySequencePrivate::encodeString(int key, QKeySequence::SequenceFormat #if defined(Q_OS_MACX) if (nativeText) { - // On Mac OS X the order (by default) is Meta, Alt, Shift, Control. + // On OS X the order (by default) is Meta, Alt, Shift, Control. // If the AA_MacDontSwapCtrlAndMeta is enabled, then the order // is Ctrl, Alt, Shift, Meta. The macSymbolForQtKey does this swap // for us, which means that we have to adjust our order here. @@ -1490,7 +1490,7 @@ bool QKeySequence::isDetached() const If the key sequence has no keys, an empty string is returned. - On Mac OS X, the string returned resembles the sequence that is + On OS X, the string returned resembles the sequence that is shown in the menu bar. \sa fromString() |