From 54853c5f66288a82fc77e4e8c3e01a8565073436 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nico Vertriest Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2014 11:57:14 +0200 Subject: Doc: Use title case in section1 titles MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Using Python script title-cased.py Task-number: QTBUG-41250 Change-Id: I00d3d7a0b30db7304a7904efd6d63abd9a7b493b Reviewed-by: Topi Reiniƶ --- src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream.cpp | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'src/corelib/xml') diff --git a/src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream.cpp b/src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream.cpp index 7e03fd4fb5..94f6a8bcde 100644 --- a/src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream.cpp +++ b/src/corelib/xml/qxmlstream.cpp @@ -325,7 +325,7 @@ QXmlStreamEntityResolver *QXmlStreamReader::entityResolver() const namespace prefixes, you can turn off namespace processing completely with the \l namespaceProcessing property. - \section1 Incremental parsing + \section1 Incremental Parsing QXmlStreamReader is an incremental parser. It can handle the case where the document can't be parsed all at once because it arrives in @@ -349,7 +349,7 @@ QXmlStreamEntityResolver *QXmlStreamReader::entityResolver() const stream reader using addData(). Then you call your custom parsing function that reads the XML events from the reader. - \section1 Performance and memory consumption + \section1 Performance and Memory Consumption QXmlStreamReader is memory-conservative by design, since it doesn't store the entire XML document tree in memory, but only the current -- cgit v1.2.3