diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt b/doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt index a1c9ab460..65e4e5d63 100644 --- a/doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt +++ b/doc/man/man3/qvalidator.3qt @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ If the built-in validators aren't sufficient, you can subclass QValidator. The c .PP validate() must be implemented by every subclass. It returns Invalid, Intermediate or Acceptable depending on whether its argument is valid (for the subclass's definition of valid). .PP -These three states retquire some explanation. An Invalid string is \fIclearly\fR invalid. Intermediate is less obvious: the concept of validity is slippery when the string is incomplete (still being edited). QValidator defines Intermediate as the property of a string that is neither clearly invalid nor acceptable as a final result. Acceptable means that the string is acceptable as a final result. One might say that any string that is a plausible intermediate state during entry of an Acceptable string is Intermediate. +These three states require some explanation. An Invalid string is \fIclearly\fR invalid. Intermediate is less obvious: the concept of validity is slippery when the string is incomplete (still being edited). QValidator defines Intermediate as the property of a string that is neither clearly invalid nor acceptable as a final result. Acceptable means that the string is acceptable as a final result. One might say that any string that is a plausible intermediate state during entry of an Acceptable string is Intermediate. .PP Here are some examples: .IP |