From 95d83cb1b68cc4a415d5d80859b4e74472ad7112 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Casper van Donderen Date: Thu, 1 Mar 2012 15:28:31 +0100 Subject: Remove the usage of deprecated qdoc macros. QDoc now has support for Doxygen style commands for italics, bold and list items. This change applies that change in QDoc to the actual documentation. Task-number: QTBUG-24578 Change-Id: I519bf9c29b14092e3ab6067612f42bf749eeedf5 Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll --- src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp') diff --git a/src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp b/src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp index e2efaa3639..b31ef3e5e9 100644 --- a/src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp +++ b/src/corelib/tools/qlinkedlist.cpp @@ -65,16 +65,16 @@ const QLinkedListData QLinkedListData::shared_null = { functionality. Here's an overview: \list - \i For most purposes, QList is the right class to use. Its + \li For most purposes, QList is the right class to use. Its index-based API is more convenient than QLinkedList's iterator-based API, and it is usually faster than QVector because of the way it stores its items in memory (see \l{Algorithmic Complexity} for details). It also expands to less code in your executable. - \i If you need a real linked list, with guarantees of \l{constant + \li If you need a real linked list, with guarantees of \l{constant time} insertions in the middle of the list and iterators to items rather than indexes, use QLinkedList. - \i If you want the items to occupy adjacent memory positions, + \li If you want the items to occupy adjacent memory positions, use QVector. \endlist -- cgit v1.2.3