From 359640943bcf155faa9a067dde9e00a123276290 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Timothy Pearson Date: Mon, 13 Feb 2012 17:43:39 -0600 Subject: Automated update from Qt3 --- doc/object.doc | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/object.doc') diff --git a/doc/object.doc b/doc/object.doc index 4ff1e98af..cd8ffb279 100644 --- a/doc/object.doc +++ b/doc/object.doc @@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ single-threaded application without blocking the user interface. class Mandelbrot : public QObject { - Q_OBJECT // required for signals/slots + TQ_OBJECT // required for signals/slots public: Mandelbrot( QObject *parent=0, const char *name ); ... @@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ functions in use: \code class MyClass : public QObject { - Q_OBJECT + TQ_OBJECT public: MyClass( QObject * parent=0, const char * name=0 ); ~MyClass(); @@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ final class declaration including the property related declarations: \code class MyClass : public QObject { - Q_OBJECT + TQ_OBJECT Q_PROPERTY( Priority priority READ priority WRITE setPriority ) Q_ENUMS( Priority ) public: @@ -650,7 +650,7 @@ Qt's moc (Meta Object Compiler) provides a clean way to go beyond the compiled language's facilities. It does so by generating additional C++ code which can be compiled by any standard C++ compiler. The moc reads C++ source files. If it finds one or more class -declarations that contain the "Q_OBJECT" macro, it produces another C++ +declarations that contain the "TQ_OBJECT" macro, it produces another C++ source file which contains the meta object code for those classes. The C++ source file generated by the moc must be compiled and linked with the implementation of the class (or it can be -- cgit v1.2.3