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-rw-r--r--doc/xml-sax-walkthrough.doc22
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/doc/xml-sax-walkthrough.doc b/doc/xml-sax-walkthrough.doc
index 97b8e0d61..74a8a013e 100644
--- a/doc/xml-sax-walkthrough.doc
+++ b/doc/xml-sax-walkthrough.doc
@@ -61,11 +61,11 @@ The element names are indented corresponding to their nesting level.
As mentioned in \link xml.html#sax2Intro Introduction to SAX2 \endlink
we have to implement the functions of the handler classes that we are
interested in. In our case these are only three:
-\l QXmlContentHandler::startDocument(),
-\l QXmlContentHandler::startElement() and
-\l QXmlContentHandler::endElement().
+\l TQXmlContentHandler::startDocument(),
+\l TQXmlContentHandler::startElement() and
+\l TQXmlContentHandler::endElement().
-For this purpose we use a subclass of the \l QXmlDefaultHandler (remember
+For this purpose we use a subclass of the \l TQXmlDefaultHandler (remember
that the special handler classes are all abstract and the default handler class
provides an implementation that does not change the parsing behavior):
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ Even the implementation is straight-forward:
\skipto include
\printuntil ntqstring.h
-First we overload \l QXmlContentHandler::startDocument() with a non-empty version.
+First we overload \l TQXmlContentHandler::startDocument() with a non-empty version.
\printline startDocument
\printuntil }
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ reporting an error.
Because we want to be informed when the parser comes
accross a start tag of an element and subsequently print it out, we
-have to overload \l QXmlContentHandler::startElement().
+have to overload \l TQXmlContentHandler::startElement().
\printline startElement
\printuntil }
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ Finally we return TRUE in order to let the parser continue without
errors.
The last functionality we need to add is the parser's behaviour when an
-end tag occurs. This means overloading \l QXmlContentHandler::endElement().
+end tag occurs. This means overloading \l TQXmlContentHandler::endElement().
\printline endElement
\printuntil }
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ The next step is to create an instance of the \e StructureParser.
\printline setContentHandler
After that we set up the reader. As our \e StructureParser
-class deals with \l QXmlContentHandler functionality only
+class deals with \l TQXmlContentHandler functionality only
we simply register it as the content handler of our choice.
\printuntil for
@@ -149,10 +149,10 @@ we simply register it as the content handler of our choice.
Successively we deal with all files given as command line arguments.
\printline xmlFile
-\printline QXmlInputSource
+\printline TQXmlInputSource
Then we create a
-\l QXmlInputSource for the XML file to be parsed.
+\l TQXmlInputSource for the XML file to be parsed.
\printline parse
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ It will however refuse to produce the correct result if you e.g. insert
a whitespace between a < and the element name in your test-XML file.
To prevent such annoyances
you should always install an error handler with \l
-QXmlReader::setErrorHandler(). This allows you to report
+TQXmlReader::setErrorHandler(). This allows you to report
parsing errors to the user.