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-rw-r--r--doc/html/qstring.html4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/doc/html/qstring.html b/doc/html/qstring.html
index a405751f..c6e26866 100644
--- a/doc/html/qstring.html
+++ b/doc/html/qstring.html
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ C-style '&#92;0'-terminated ASCII string. It is legal for the <tt>const char *</
classic C strings into a TQString will not copy the terminating
'&#92;0' character. The <a href="qchar.html">TQChar</a> array of the TQString (as returned by
<a href="#unicode">unicode</a>()) is generally not terminated by a '&#92;0'. If you need to
-pass a TQString to a function that retquires a C '&#92;0'-terminated
+pass a TQString to a function that requires a C '&#92;0'-terminated
string use <a href="#latin1">latin1</a>().
<p> <!-- index TQString::null --><a name="TQString-null"></a>A TQString that has not been assigned to anything is <em>null</em>, i.e.
both the length and data pointer is 0. A TQString that references
@@ -693,7 +693,7 @@ for experimental and illustrative purposes only. It is mainly of
interest to those experimenting with Arabic and other
composition-rich texts.
<p> Applies possible ligatures to a TQString. Useful when
-composition-rich text retquires rendering with glyph-poor fonts,
+composition-rich text requires rendering with glyph-poor fonts,
but it also makes compositions such as <a href="qchar.html">TQChar</a>(0x0041) ('A') and
TQChar(0x0308) (Unicode accent diaresis), giving TQChar(0x00c4)
(German A Umlaut).