diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc | 11 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc b/src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc index 799f578d6e..25fc6eaab7 100644 --- a/src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc +++ b/src/quick/doc/src/concepts/positioning/topic.qdoc @@ -42,11 +42,11 @@ positioning with coordinate bindings, and layouts. Items can be positioned manually. If the user-interface is going to be static, manual positioning provides the most efficient form of positioning. -In any user-interface, the visual elements exist at a particular location in +In any user-interface, the visual types exist at a particular location in the screen coordinates at any instant in time. While fluidly animated and dynamic user-interfaces are a major focus of Qt Quick, statically-positioned user interfaces are still a viable option. What's more, if the position of -those elements does not change, it can often be more performant to specify +those types does not change, it can often be more performant to specify the position manually than to use the more dynamic positioning methods documented in proceeding sections. @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ There are many well-known layouts which work well in user-interfaces, such as grids and lists, rows and columns. Qt Quick supports these sort of pre-defined layouts, which can often be more performant to draw than anchor or binding-based layouts. See the documentation on -\l{qtquick-positioning-layouts.html}{layout elements} for more +\l{qtquick-positioning-layouts.html}{layout types} for more information about utilizing pre-defined layouts. @@ -153,8 +153,8 @@ information about utilizing pre-defined layouts. \section1 Right-To-Left Support The directionality of the written form of a language often has a great impact -on how the visual elements of a user-interface should be positioned. Qt Quick -supports right-to-left positioning of elements through the predefined-layouts +on how the visual types of a user-interface should be positioned. Qt Quick +supports right-to-left positioning of types through the predefined-layouts as well as right-to-left text layouts. Please see the documentation about @@ -163,4 +163,3 @@ Please see the documentation about */ - |