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-rw-r--r--doc/man/man3/tqstringlist.3qt10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/man/man3/tqstringlist.3qt b/doc/man/man3/tqstringlist.3qt
index c1da5978..891227c7 100644
--- a/doc/man/man3/tqstringlist.3qt
+++ b/doc/man/man3/tqstringlist.3qt
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ All the functions in this class are reentrant when TQt is built with thread supp
.PP
\fC#include <ntqstringlist.h>\fR
.PP
-Inherits QValueList<TQString>.
+Inherits TQValueList<TQString>.
.PP
.SS "Public Members"
.in +1c
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ Inherits QValueList<TQString>.
.BI "\fBQStringList\fR ( const QStringList & l )"
.br
.ti -1c
-.BI "\fBQStringList\fR ( const QValueList<TQString> & l )"
+.BI "\fBQStringList\fR ( const TQValueList<TQString> & l )"
.br
.ti -1c
.BI "\fBQStringList\fR ( const TQString & i )"
@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ Inherits QValueList<TQString>.
.SH DESCRIPTION
The QStringList class provides a list of strings.
.PP
-It is used to store and manipulate strings that logically belong together. Essentially QStringList is a QValueList of TQString objects. Unlike QStrList, which stores pointers to characters, QStringList holds real TQString objects. It is the class of choice whenever you work with Unicode strings. QStringList is part of the TQt Template Library.
+It is used to store and manipulate strings that logically belong together. Essentially QStringList is a TQValueList of TQString objects. Unlike QStrList, which stores pointers to characters, QStringList holds real TQString objects. It is the class of choice whenever you work with Unicode strings. QStringList is part of the TQt Template Library.
.PP
Like TQString itself, QStringList objects are implicitly shared, so passing them around as value-parameters is both fast and safe.
.PP
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ Creates an empty string list.
.SH "QStringList::QStringList ( const QStringList & l )"
Creates a copy of the list \fIl\fR. This function is very fast because QStringList is implicitly shared. In most situations this acts like a deep copy, for example, if this list or the original one or some other list referencing the same shared data is modified, the modifying list first makes a copy, i.e. copy-on-write. In a threaded environment you may require a real deep copy
.
-.SH "QStringList::QStringList ( const QValueList<TQString> & l )"
+.SH "QStringList::QStringList ( const TQValueList<TQString> & l )"
Constructs a new string list that is a copy of \fIl\fR.
.SH "QStringList::QStringList ( const TQString & i )"
Constructs a string list consisting of the single string \fIi\fR. Longer lists are easily created as follows:
@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ Sorts the list of strings in ascending case-sensitive order.
.PP
Sorting is very fast. It uses the TQt Template Library's efficient HeapSort implementation that has a time complexity of O(n*log n).
.PP
-If you want to sort your strings in an arbitrary order consider using a QMap. For example you could use a QMap<TQString,TQString> to create a case-insensitive ordering (e.g. mapping the lowercase text to the text), or a QMap<int,TQString> to sort the strings by some integer index, etc.
+If you want to sort your strings in an arbitrary order consider using a TQMap. For example you could use a TQMap<TQString,TQString> to create a case-insensitive ordering (e.g. mapping the lowercase text to the text), or a TQMap<int,TQString> to sort the strings by some integer index, etc.
.PP
Example: themes/themes.cpp.
.SH "QStringList QStringList::split ( const QRegExp & sep, const TQString & str, bool allowEmptyEntries = FALSE )\fC [static]\fR"