QRegularExpression: fix documentation due to qdoc changes

Removes the usage of various qdoc macros which are now deprecated.

Change-Id: I74fa70f8d2a2a1bff57cdb2bcc14a31a7198dea0
Reviewed-by: Casper van Donderen <casper.vandonderen@nokia.com>
This commit is contained in:
Giuseppe D'Angelo 2012-03-03 12:41:13 +00:00 committed by Qt by Nokia
parent 76d0df1b0a
commit 02d947524d

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@ -73,21 +73,21 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
strings and texts. This is useful in many contexts, e.g.,
\table
\row \i Validation
\i A regexp can test whether a substring meets some criteria,
\row \li Validation
\li A regexp can test whether a substring meets some criteria,
e.g. is an integer or contains no whitespace.
\row \i Searching
\i A regexp provides more powerful pattern matching than
\row \li Searching
\li A regexp provides more powerful pattern matching than
simple substring matching, e.g., match one of the words
\e{mail}, \e{letter} or \e{correspondence}, but none of the
words \e{email}, \e{mailman}, \e{mailer}, \e{letterbox}, etc.
\row \i Search and Replace
\i A regexp can replace all occurrences of a substring with a
\row \li Search and Replace
\li A regexp can replace all occurrences of a substring with a
different substring, e.g., replace all occurrences of \e{&}
with \e{\&amp;} except where the \e{&} is already followed by
an \e{amp;}.
\row \i String Splitting
\i A regexp can be used to identify where a string should be
\row \li String Splitting
\li A regexp can be used to identify where a string should be
split apart, e.g. splitting tab-delimited strings.
\endtable
@ -99,12 +99,12 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
Good references about regular expressions include:
\list
\o \e {Mastering Regular Expressions} (Third Edition) by Jeffrey E. F.
\li \e {Mastering Regular Expressions} (Third Edition) by Jeffrey E. F.
Friedl, ISBN 0-596-52812-4;
\o the \l{http://pcre.org/pcre.txt} {pcrepattern(3)} man page, describing
\li the \l{http://pcre.org/pcre.txt} {pcrepattern(3)} man page, describing
the pattern syntax supported by PCRE (the reference implementation of
Perl-compatible regular expressions);
\o the \l{http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html} {Perl's regular expression
\li the \l{http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html} {Perl's regular expression
documentation} and the \l{http://perldoc.perl.org/perlretut.html} {Perl's
regular expression tutorial}.
\endlist
@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
supports Unicode. For an overview of the regular expression syntax
supported by QRegularExpression, please refer to the aforementioned
pcrepattern(3) man page. A regular expression is made up of two things: a
\bold{pattern string} and a set of \bold{pattern options} that change the
\b{pattern string} and a set of \b{pattern options} that change the
meaning of the pattern string.
You can set the pattern string by passing a string to the QRegularExpression
@ -307,9 +307,9 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
to do so we must distinguish three cases:
\list
\o the input cannot possibly match the regular expression;
\o the input does match the regular expression;
\o the input does not match the regular expression right now,
\li the input cannot possibly match the regular expression;
\li the input does match the regular expression;
\li the input does not match the regular expression right now,
but it will if more charaters will be added to it.
\endlist
@ -653,7 +653,7 @@ QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
\value ExtendedPatternSyntaxOption
Any whitespace in the pattern string which is not escaped and outside a
character class is ignored. Moreover, an unescaped sharp (\bold{#})
character class is ignored. Moreover, an unescaped sharp (\b{#})
outside a character class causes all the following characters, until
the first newline (included), to be ignored. This can be used to
increase the readability of a pattern string as well as put comments