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author | Timothy Pearson <[email protected]> | 2011-11-14 22:33:41 -0600 |
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committer | Timothy Pearson <[email protected]> | 2011-11-14 22:33:41 -0600 |
commit | 0f92dd542b65bc910caaf190b7c623aa5158c86a (patch) | |
tree | 120ab7e08fa0ffc354ef58d100f79a33c92aa6e6 /doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html | |
parent | d796c9dd933ab96ec83b9a634feedd5d32e1ba3f (diff) | |
download | tqt3-0f92dd542b65bc910caaf190b7c623aa5158c86a.tar.gz tqt3-0f92dd542b65bc910caaf190b7c623aa5158c86a.zip |
Fix native TQt3 accidental conversion to tquit
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html b/doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html index 2c5b94982..f3b9b7558 100644 --- a/doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html +++ b/doc/html/qhebrewcodec.html @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ a newline character ('\n'). Note that these newline characters change the reordering behaviour of the algorithm, since the bidi reordering only takes place within one line of text, whereas line breaks are determined in visual order. -<p> Visually ordered Hebrew is still used tquite often in some places, +<p> Visually ordered Hebrew is still used quite often in some places, mainly in email communication (since most email programs still don't understand logically ordered Hebrew) and on web pages. The use on web pages is rapidly decreasing, due to the availability of |