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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/html/objecttrees.html')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/html/objecttrees.html | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/html/objecttrees.html b/doc/html/objecttrees.html index a7ea7c3ac..fb1aa594a 100644 --- a/doc/html/objecttrees.html +++ b/doc/html/objecttrees.html @@ -33,16 +33,16 @@ body { background: #ffffff; color: black; } -<p> <a href="qobject.html">TQObjects</a> organize themselves in object trees. -When you create a <a href="qobject.html">TQObject</a> with another object as parent, it's added to -the parent's <a href="qobject.html#children">children()</a> list, and +<p> <a href="ntqobject.html">TQObjects</a> organize themselves in object trees. +When you create a <a href="ntqobject.html">TQObject</a> with another object as parent, it's added to +the parent's <a href="ntqobject.html#children">children()</a> list, and is deleted when the parent is. It turns out that this approach fits -the needs of GUI objects very well. For example, a <a href="qaccel.html">TQAccel</a> (keyboard +the needs of GUI objects very well. For example, a <a href="ntqaccel.html">TQAccel</a> (keyboard accelerator) is a child of the relevant window, so when the user closes that window, the accelerator is deleted too. -<p> The static function <a href="qobject.html#objectTrees">TQObject::objectTrees</a>() provides access to all +<p> The static function <a href="ntqobject.html#objectTrees">TQObject::objectTrees</a>() provides access to all the root objects that currently exist. -<p> <a href="qwidget.html">TQWidget</a>, the base class of everything that appears on the screen, +<p> <a href="ntqwidget.html">TQWidget</a>, the base class of everything that appears on the screen, extends the parent-child relationship. A child normally also becomes a child widget, i.e. it is displayed in its parent's coordinate system and is graphically clipped by its parent's boundaries. For example, @@ -52,10 +52,10 @@ we'd want, because the buttons and label are children of the message box. <p> You can also delete child objects yourself, and they will remove themselves from their parents. For example, when the user removes a -toolbar it may lead to the application deleting one of its <a href="qtoolbar.html">TQToolBar</a> -objects, in which case the tool bar's <a href="qmainwindow.html">TQMainWindow</a> parent would +toolbar it may lead to the application deleting one of its <a href="ntqtoolbar.html">TQToolBar</a> +objects, in which case the tool bar's <a href="ntqmainwindow.html">TQMainWindow</a> parent would detect the change and reconfigure its screen space accordingly. -<p> The debugging functions <a href="qobject.html#dumpObjectTree">TQObject::dumpObjectTree</a>() and <a href="qobject.html#dumpObjectInfo">TQObject::dumpObjectInfo</a>() are often useful when an application looks or +<p> The debugging functions <a href="ntqobject.html#dumpObjectTree">TQObject::dumpObjectTree</a>() and <a href="ntqobject.html#dumpObjectInfo">TQObject::dumpObjectInfo</a>() are often useful when an application looks or acts strangely. <p> <!-- eof --> |