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author | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2012-01-11 17:04:48 -0600 |
---|---|---|
committer | Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> | 2012-01-11 17:04:48 -0600 |
commit | c10392c542fae6d9011f20071f780597fe691f2f (patch) | |
tree | db6128f144c84a5de6458497f96ed332c6aa929a | |
parent | c63eb55e806c5e0dc4c43be128ef71e640562ade (diff) | |
download | tde-packaging-c10392c542fae6d9011f20071f780597fe691f2f.tar.gz tde-packaging-c10392c542fae6d9011f20071f780597fe691f2f.zip |
Remove duplicated manpages on Debian and Ubuntu
36 files changed, 0 insertions, 1224 deletions
diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 0959a2df1..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,57 +0,0 @@ -.TH "createcw" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -createcw \- custom widget description creater for Qt Designer -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -createcw <\fIfilename.cw\fP> -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -This small application makes it much easier to create -custom widget descriptions for the Qt Designer. Using -them you can use custom widgets in the Qt Designer -including their signals, slots and properties. - -To do that normally you would have to enter all that -information in the custom widget dialog in the Qt -Designer for each widget. But this small tool can create -for you these description files for your custom widgets -which you then can simply import into the Qt Designer. So -you can use your custom widgets without any additional -work in your forms in the Qt Designer then. - -To do that you have to modify the sourcecode (main.cpp) a -bit and recompile it afterwards. - -STEP1: Include header files of the widgets for which a -description should be created here. If you have a widget -which is defined in the file mycustomwidget.h in -/home/joedeveloper/src, write here - -#include "/home/joedeveloper/src/mycustomwidget.h" - -STEP2: Instantiate all widgets for which a description -should be created here and add them to the list wl. If -your custom widget is e.g. called MyCustomWidget you -would write here - - Widget w; - w.w = new MyCustomWidget( 0, 0 ); - w.include = "mycustomwidget.h"; - w.location = "global"; - wl.append( w ); - -After that compile the program, link it with your custom -widget (library or object file) and run it like this: - - (unix): ./createcw mywidgets.cw - (win32): createcw mywidgets.cw - -After that you can import this description file into the -Qt Designer using the Custom\-Widget Dialog (See -Tools\->Custom\->Edit Custom Widgets... in the Qt Designer) -and use these custom widget there in your forms. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -Troll Tech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 4151e94a7..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,54 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt-designer" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt\-designer \- Visual user interface designer for Qt. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Designer simplifies the process of designing and -creating graphical user interfaces (GUI) using the -award\-winning Qt toolkit. Qt Designer is easy to learn. -There are tutorials, walkthrough examples and the -reference documentation accelerating you through the -learning phase. After that, Qt Designer greatly reduces -the time and effort needed to develop even the most -complex dialogs with an easy\-to\-use GUI and an integrated -help system. - - Qt Designer provides a rich set of features aimed at -making the creation of dialogs as easy and smooth as -possible without reducing the power of Qt. It offers all -the strength of the Qt layout system with a well\-designed -user interface. This, combined with the Qt Designer's -undo/redo system makes it simple to try different -arrangements of the widgets until the result satisfies -you. - - Using Qt Designer's convenient property editor along -with the dynamic Qt property system it is easy to set the -initial state of your widgets. Special editors for some -widgets (like listboxes, comboboxes, etc.) allow you to -fill these widgets with content without writing any code. -Using the object hierarchy view, the parent\-child -relationship between the widgets of a dialog can be -understood at a glance. - - Integrating dialogs into a Qt project is straightforward -thanks to the User Interface Compiler (UIC), which -generates C++ code from the XML dialog description on the -fly. The programmer can easily extend the functionality -of the generated classes by subclassing without touching -generated code at all or running the risk of loosing -their changes. -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI/usr/share/qt/tools/designer/*\fP -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the Qt base directory. On Debian systems this -should be set to /usr/share/qt. The /usr/bin/designer -wrapper script takes care of this. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index f1d3a87d5..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,25 +0,0 @@ -.TH "findtr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -findtr \- Extracts information about text to be translated -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Extracts information about text to be translated. It -recognizes the tr() constructs described above and -produces a file in ".po" format, a simple text format -that your translation team will copy and edit. For -example, the base .po file might be myapp.po and -translated versions of the file would then be -myapp_de.po, myapp_fr.po, and myapp_ja.po for -translations in German, French and Japanese respectively. - - findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po - copy myapp.po myapp_de.po - edit myapp_de.po -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a0f99133b..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -.TH LINGUIST 1 "28 August 2004" -.SH "NAME" -linguist \- Translation tool for Qt. - -.SH "SYNPOSIS" -.B linguist -[ -.I TRANSLATION -] - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.B Qt Linguist -is a tool for adding translations to Qt applications. It -introduces the concept of a translation "context" which -means a group of phrases that appear together on the -screen e.g. in the same menu or dialog. - -The only parameter accepted on the command line is -.I TRANSLATION -wich is the name of the translation file you wish to open. - -.SH FILES -.I ~/.qt/qt_designerrc -.RS -Per user configuration file. - -.SH SEE ALSO -.B Qt Linguist -is too complex to be described completely in the "man" page -format. If your system is properly configured, you can access -the full documentation within -.B Qt Linguist -under the Help menu. - -.SH AUTHOR -This manual page was written by Jeremy Laine <jeremy.laine@m4x.org>, -for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 37ddcfd4f..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "makeqpf" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -makeqpf \- Create qpf files from TTF and BDF files. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Prerendered Font (QPF) is a light\-weight non\-scalable -font format specific to Qt/Embedded. makeqpf is a tool -that assists producing QPF files from TTF and BDF files. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI$(QTDIR)/etc/fonts/fontdir\fP -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 9ed2a9f25..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -.TH "mergetr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -mergetr \- Merge changes in translations -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -When the texts in your program change as it is developed, -a the base .po file can be regenerated using findtr, -then mergetr can be used to merge the changes into the -other .po files: - - mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_fr.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_ja.po myapp.po - - -The translation team then edits the new .po files to -translate the new or changed texts. When texts change, -the old text is included in the .po file as a comment to -guide the new translation (no "fuzzy" matching is done). -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7d22bbb96..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "msg2qm" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -msg2qm \- Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary format. -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary -format (".qm" Qt message files). The Qt message files -are platform and locale independent, containing -translations in Unicode and various hash tables to -provide fast look\-up. - - msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm - msg2qm myapp_fr.po myapp_fr.qm - msg2qm myapp_ja.po myapp_ja.qm - - -In your application, use QTranslator::load() to load -translation files appropriate for the user's language. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 352921be8..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt20fix" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt20fix \- Helps clean namespace when porting an app from Qt1 to Qt2 -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -qt20fix myapp.cpp - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt 2.x is namespace\-clean, unlike 1.x. Qt now uses very -few global identifiers. Identifiers like red, blue, -LeftButton, AlignRight, Key_Up, Key_Down, NoBrush etc. -are now part of a special class Qt (defined in -qnamespace.h), which is inherited by most Qt classes. -Member functions of classes that inherit from QWidget, -etc. are totally unaffected, but code that is not in -functions of classes inherited from Qt, you must qualify -these identifiers like this: Qt::red, Qt::LeftButton, -Qt::AlignRight, etc. - -The qt/bin/qt20fix script helps to fix the code that -needs adaption, though most code does not need changing. - -Compiling with \-DQT1COMPATIBILITY will help you get going -with Qt 2.x \- it allows all the old "dirty namespace" -identifiers from Qt 1.x to continue working. Without it, -you'll get compile errors that can easily be fixed by -searching this page for the clean identifiers. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7e03bf49b..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,17 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qtconfig" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qtconfig \- Configuration tool for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -QConfig allows for GUI based configuration of Qt and - other Qt based sources. - -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the base Qt dir -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 89a91cf2a..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,66 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qvfb" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qvfb \- Virtual framebuffer for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The virtual framebuffer allows Qt/Embedded programs to be -developed on your desktop machine, without switching -between consoles and X11. - -Start a Qt/Embedded master application (i.e., construct -QApplication with QApplication::GuiServer flag or use the -\-qws command line parameter). You will need to specify to -the server that you wish to use the virtual framebuffer -driver, e.g.: - - widgets \-qws \-display QVFb:0 - -You may prefer to set the QWS_DISPLAY environment -variable to be QVFb:0. - -qvfb supports the following command line options: - - \-width width: the width of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 240). - \-height height: the height of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 320). - \-depth depth: the depth of the virtual framebuffer (1, 8 - or 32; default: 8). - \-nocursor: do not display the X11 cursor in the - framebuffer window. - \-qwsdisplay :id the Qt/Embedded display id to provide - (default: 0). - - Virtual Framebuffer Design - -The virtual framebuffer emulates a framebuffer using a -shared memory region (the virtual frame buffer) and a -utility to display the framebuffer in a window (qvfb). -The regions of the display that have changed are updated -periodically, so you will see discrete snapshots of the -framebuffer rather than each individual drawing -operation. For this reason drawing problems such as -flickering may not be apparent until the program is run -using a real framebuffer. - -The target refresh rate can be set via the "View|Refresh -Rate" menu item. This will cause qvfb to check for -updated regions more tquickly. The rate is a target only. -If little drawing is being done, the framebuffer will not -show any updates between drawing events. If an -application is displaying an animation the updates will -be frequent, and the application and qvfb will compete -for processor time. - -Mouse and keyboard events are passed to the Qt/Embedded -master process via named pipes. - -The virtual framebuffer is a development tool only. No -security issues have been considered in the virtual -framebuffer design. It should be avoided in a production -environment; QT_NO_QWS_VFB should always be defined in -production libraries. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a9b262f10..000000000 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qembed" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qembed \- Converts arbitrary files into C++ code. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The QEmbed tool, found in qt/tools/qembed, converts -arbitrary files into C++ code. This is useful for -including image files and other resources directly into -your application rather than loading the data from -external files. - -QEmbed can also generate uncompressed versions of images -that can be included directly into your application, -thus avoiding both the external file and the need to -parse the image file format. This is useful for small -images such as icons for which compression is not a -great gain. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules index 9de2ec9df..df3786fb1 100755 --- a/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules +++ b/debian/lenny/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules @@ -413,25 +413,16 @@ binary-arch: build install mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant-tqt3 mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist-tqt3 - install -D debian/maintain/man/designer.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-designer/usr/share/man/man1/designer-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/moc.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/moc-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/uic.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/uic-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lrelease.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lrelease-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lupdate.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lupdate-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-qtconfig/usr/share/man/man1/qtconfig-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/share/man/man1/linguist-tqt3.1 dh_link -ptqt3-designer usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-designer/html dh_link -ptqt3-assistant usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-assistant/html dh_link -ptqt3-linguist usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-linguist/html dh_link -ptqt3-dev-tools usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-dev-tools/html - # install the manpages we have - dh_installman -ptqt3-designer debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-compat debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-embedded debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 - # copy README.Debian for a in libtqt3-mt-dev libtqt3-mt tqt3-doc; do install -D `pwd`/debian/README.Debian `pwd`/debian/"$$a"/usr/share/doc/"$$a"/README.Debian; done diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 0959a2df1..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,57 +0,0 @@ -.TH "createcw" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -createcw \- custom widget description creater for Qt Designer -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -createcw <\fIfilename.cw\fP> -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -This small application makes it much easier to create -custom widget descriptions for the Qt Designer. Using -them you can use custom widgets in the Qt Designer -including their signals, slots and properties. - -To do that normally you would have to enter all that -information in the custom widget dialog in the Qt -Designer for each widget. But this small tool can create -for you these description files for your custom widgets -which you then can simply import into the Qt Designer. So -you can use your custom widgets without any additional -work in your forms in the Qt Designer then. - -To do that you have to modify the sourcecode (main.cpp) a -bit and recompile it afterwards. - -STEP1: Include header files of the widgets for which a -description should be created here. If you have a widget -which is defined in the file mycustomwidget.h in -/home/joedeveloper/src, write here - -#include "/home/joedeveloper/src/mycustomwidget.h" - -STEP2: Instantiate all widgets for which a description -should be created here and add them to the list wl. If -your custom widget is e.g. called MyCustomWidget you -would write here - - Widget w; - w.w = new MyCustomWidget( 0, 0 ); - w.include = "mycustomwidget.h"; - w.location = "global"; - wl.append( w ); - -After that compile the program, link it with your custom -widget (library or object file) and run it like this: - - (unix): ./createcw mywidgets.cw - (win32): createcw mywidgets.cw - -After that you can import this description file into the -Qt Designer using the Custom\-Widget Dialog (See -Tools\->Custom\->Edit Custom Widgets... in the Qt Designer) -and use these custom widget there in your forms. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -Troll Tech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 4151e94a7..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,54 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt-designer" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt\-designer \- Visual user interface designer for Qt. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Designer simplifies the process of designing and -creating graphical user interfaces (GUI) using the -award\-winning Qt toolkit. Qt Designer is easy to learn. -There are tutorials, walkthrough examples and the -reference documentation accelerating you through the -learning phase. After that, Qt Designer greatly reduces -the time and effort needed to develop even the most -complex dialogs with an easy\-to\-use GUI and an integrated -help system. - - Qt Designer provides a rich set of features aimed at -making the creation of dialogs as easy and smooth as -possible without reducing the power of Qt. It offers all -the strength of the Qt layout system with a well\-designed -user interface. This, combined with the Qt Designer's -undo/redo system makes it simple to try different -arrangements of the widgets until the result satisfies -you. - - Using Qt Designer's convenient property editor along -with the dynamic Qt property system it is easy to set the -initial state of your widgets. Special editors for some -widgets (like listboxes, comboboxes, etc.) allow you to -fill these widgets with content without writing any code. -Using the object hierarchy view, the parent\-child -relationship between the widgets of a dialog can be -understood at a glance. - - Integrating dialogs into a Qt project is straightforward -thanks to the User Interface Compiler (UIC), which -generates C++ code from the XML dialog description on the -fly. The programmer can easily extend the functionality -of the generated classes by subclassing without touching -generated code at all or running the risk of loosing -their changes. -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI/usr/share/qt/tools/designer/*\fP -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the Qt base directory. On Debian systems this -should be set to /usr/share/qt. The /usr/bin/designer -wrapper script takes care of this. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index f1d3a87d5..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,25 +0,0 @@ -.TH "findtr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -findtr \- Extracts information about text to be translated -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Extracts information about text to be translated. It -recognizes the tr() constructs described above and -produces a file in ".po" format, a simple text format -that your translation team will copy and edit. For -example, the base .po file might be myapp.po and -translated versions of the file would then be -myapp_de.po, myapp_fr.po, and myapp_ja.po for -translations in German, French and Japanese respectively. - - findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po - copy myapp.po myapp_de.po - edit myapp_de.po -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a0f99133b..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -.TH LINGUIST 1 "28 August 2004" -.SH "NAME" -linguist \- Translation tool for Qt. - -.SH "SYNPOSIS" -.B linguist -[ -.I TRANSLATION -] - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.B Qt Linguist -is a tool for adding translations to Qt applications. It -introduces the concept of a translation "context" which -means a group of phrases that appear together on the -screen e.g. in the same menu or dialog. - -The only parameter accepted on the command line is -.I TRANSLATION -wich is the name of the translation file you wish to open. - -.SH FILES -.I ~/.qt/qt_designerrc -.RS -Per user configuration file. - -.SH SEE ALSO -.B Qt Linguist -is too complex to be described completely in the "man" page -format. If your system is properly configured, you can access -the full documentation within -.B Qt Linguist -under the Help menu. - -.SH AUTHOR -This manual page was written by Jeremy Laine <jeremy.laine@m4x.org>, -for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 37ddcfd4f..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "makeqpf" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -makeqpf \- Create qpf files from TTF and BDF files. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Prerendered Font (QPF) is a light\-weight non\-scalable -font format specific to Qt/Embedded. makeqpf is a tool -that assists producing QPF files from TTF and BDF files. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI$(QTDIR)/etc/fonts/fontdir\fP -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 9ed2a9f25..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -.TH "mergetr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -mergetr \- Merge changes in translations -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -When the texts in your program change as it is developed, -a the base .po file can be regenerated using findtr, -then mergetr can be used to merge the changes into the -other .po files: - - mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_fr.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_ja.po myapp.po - - -The translation team then edits the new .po files to -translate the new or changed texts. When texts change, -the old text is included in the .po file as a comment to -guide the new translation (no "fuzzy" matching is done). -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7d22bbb96..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "msg2qm" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -msg2qm \- Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary format. -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary -format (".qm" Qt message files). The Qt message files -are platform and locale independent, containing -translations in Unicode and various hash tables to -provide fast look\-up. - - msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm - msg2qm myapp_fr.po myapp_fr.qm - msg2qm myapp_ja.po myapp_ja.qm - - -In your application, use QTranslator::load() to load -translation files appropriate for the user's language. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 352921be8..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt20fix" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt20fix \- Helps clean namespace when porting an app from Qt1 to Qt2 -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -qt20fix myapp.cpp - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt 2.x is namespace\-clean, unlike 1.x. Qt now uses very -few global identifiers. Identifiers like red, blue, -LeftButton, AlignRight, Key_Up, Key_Down, NoBrush etc. -are now part of a special class Qt (defined in -qnamespace.h), which is inherited by most Qt classes. -Member functions of classes that inherit from QWidget, -etc. are totally unaffected, but code that is not in -functions of classes inherited from Qt, you must qualify -these identifiers like this: Qt::red, Qt::LeftButton, -Qt::AlignRight, etc. - -The qt/bin/qt20fix script helps to fix the code that -needs adaption, though most code does not need changing. - -Compiling with \-DQT1COMPATIBILITY will help you get going -with Qt 2.x \- it allows all the old "dirty namespace" -identifiers from Qt 1.x to continue working. Without it, -you'll get compile errors that can easily be fixed by -searching this page for the clean identifiers. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7e03bf49b..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,17 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qtconfig" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qtconfig \- Configuration tool for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -QConfig allows for GUI based configuration of Qt and - other Qt based sources. - -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the base Qt dir -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 89a91cf2a..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,66 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qvfb" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qvfb \- Virtual framebuffer for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The virtual framebuffer allows Qt/Embedded programs to be -developed on your desktop machine, without switching -between consoles and X11. - -Start a Qt/Embedded master application (i.e., construct -QApplication with QApplication::GuiServer flag or use the -\-qws command line parameter). You will need to specify to -the server that you wish to use the virtual framebuffer -driver, e.g.: - - widgets \-qws \-display QVFb:0 - -You may prefer to set the QWS_DISPLAY environment -variable to be QVFb:0. - -qvfb supports the following command line options: - - \-width width: the width of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 240). - \-height height: the height of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 320). - \-depth depth: the depth of the virtual framebuffer (1, 8 - or 32; default: 8). - \-nocursor: do not display the X11 cursor in the - framebuffer window. - \-qwsdisplay :id the Qt/Embedded display id to provide - (default: 0). - - Virtual Framebuffer Design - -The virtual framebuffer emulates a framebuffer using a -shared memory region (the virtual frame buffer) and a -utility to display the framebuffer in a window (qvfb). -The regions of the display that have changed are updated -periodically, so you will see discrete snapshots of the -framebuffer rather than each individual drawing -operation. For this reason drawing problems such as -flickering may not be apparent until the program is run -using a real framebuffer. - -The target refresh rate can be set via the "View|Refresh -Rate" menu item. This will cause qvfb to check for -updated regions more tquickly. The rate is a target only. -If little drawing is being done, the framebuffer will not -show any updates between drawing events. If an -application is displaying an animation the updates will -be frequent, and the application and qvfb will compete -for processor time. - -Mouse and keyboard events are passed to the Qt/Embedded -master process via named pipes. - -The virtual framebuffer is a development tool only. No -security issues have been considered in the virtual -framebuffer design. It should be avoided in a production -environment; QT_NO_QWS_VFB should always be defined in -production libraries. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a9b262f10..000000000 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qembed" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qembed \- Converts arbitrary files into C++ code. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The QEmbed tool, found in qt/tools/qembed, converts -arbitrary files into C++ code. This is useful for -including image files and other resources directly into -your application rather than loading the data from -external files. - -QEmbed can also generate uncompressed versions of images -that can be included directly into your application, -thus avoiding both the external file and the need to -parse the image file format. This is useful for small -images such as icons for which compression is not a -great gain. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules index 9de2ec9df..df3786fb1 100755 --- a/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules +++ b/debian/squeeze/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules @@ -413,25 +413,16 @@ binary-arch: build install mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant-tqt3 mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist-tqt3 - install -D debian/maintain/man/designer.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-designer/usr/share/man/man1/designer-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/moc.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/moc-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/uic.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/uic-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lrelease.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lrelease-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lupdate.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lupdate-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-qtconfig/usr/share/man/man1/qtconfig-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/share/man/man1/linguist-tqt3.1 dh_link -ptqt3-designer usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-designer/html dh_link -ptqt3-assistant usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-assistant/html dh_link -ptqt3-linguist usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-linguist/html dh_link -ptqt3-dev-tools usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-dev-tools/html - # install the manpages we have - dh_installman -ptqt3-designer debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-compat debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-embedded debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 - # copy README.Debian for a in libtqt3-mt-dev libtqt3-mt tqt3-doc; do install -D `pwd`/debian/README.Debian `pwd`/debian/"$$a"/usr/share/doc/"$$a"/README.Debian; done diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 0959a2df1..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,57 +0,0 @@ -.TH "createcw" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -createcw \- custom widget description creater for Qt Designer -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -createcw <\fIfilename.cw\fP> -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -This small application makes it much easier to create -custom widget descriptions for the Qt Designer. Using -them you can use custom widgets in the Qt Designer -including their signals, slots and properties. - -To do that normally you would have to enter all that -information in the custom widget dialog in the Qt -Designer for each widget. But this small tool can create -for you these description files for your custom widgets -which you then can simply import into the Qt Designer. So -you can use your custom widgets without any additional -work in your forms in the Qt Designer then. - -To do that you have to modify the sourcecode (main.cpp) a -bit and recompile it afterwards. - -STEP1: Include header files of the widgets for which a -description should be created here. If you have a widget -which is defined in the file mycustomwidget.h in -/home/joedeveloper/src, write here - -#include "/home/joedeveloper/src/mycustomwidget.h" - -STEP2: Instantiate all widgets for which a description -should be created here and add them to the list wl. If -your custom widget is e.g. called MyCustomWidget you -would write here - - Widget w; - w.w = new MyCustomWidget( 0, 0 ); - w.include = "mycustomwidget.h"; - w.location = "global"; - wl.append( w ); - -After that compile the program, link it with your custom -widget (library or object file) and run it like this: - - (unix): ./createcw mywidgets.cw - (win32): createcw mywidgets.cw - -After that you can import this description file into the -Qt Designer using the Custom\-Widget Dialog (See -Tools\->Custom\->Edit Custom Widgets... in the Qt Designer) -and use these custom widget there in your forms. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -Troll Tech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 4151e94a7..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/designer.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,54 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt-designer" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt\-designer \- Visual user interface designer for Qt. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Designer simplifies the process of designing and -creating graphical user interfaces (GUI) using the -award\-winning Qt toolkit. Qt Designer is easy to learn. -There are tutorials, walkthrough examples and the -reference documentation accelerating you through the -learning phase. After that, Qt Designer greatly reduces -the time and effort needed to develop even the most -complex dialogs with an easy\-to\-use GUI and an integrated -help system. - - Qt Designer provides a rich set of features aimed at -making the creation of dialogs as easy and smooth as -possible without reducing the power of Qt. It offers all -the strength of the Qt layout system with a well\-designed -user interface. This, combined with the Qt Designer's -undo/redo system makes it simple to try different -arrangements of the widgets until the result satisfies -you. - - Using Qt Designer's convenient property editor along -with the dynamic Qt property system it is easy to set the -initial state of your widgets. Special editors for some -widgets (like listboxes, comboboxes, etc.) allow you to -fill these widgets with content without writing any code. -Using the object hierarchy view, the parent\-child -relationship between the widgets of a dialog can be -understood at a glance. - - Integrating dialogs into a Qt project is straightforward -thanks to the User Interface Compiler (UIC), which -generates C++ code from the XML dialog description on the -fly. The programmer can easily extend the functionality -of the generated classes by subclassing without touching -generated code at all or running the risk of loosing -their changes. -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI/usr/share/qt/tools/designer/*\fP -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the Qt base directory. On Debian systems this -should be set to /usr/share/qt. The /usr/bin/designer -wrapper script takes care of this. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index f1d3a87d5..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,25 +0,0 @@ -.TH "findtr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -findtr \- Extracts information about text to be translated -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Extracts information about text to be translated. It -recognizes the tr() constructs described above and -produces a file in ".po" format, a simple text format -that your translation team will copy and edit. For -example, the base .po file might be myapp.po and -translated versions of the file would then be -myapp_de.po, myapp_fr.po, and myapp_ja.po for -translations in German, French and Japanese respectively. - - findtr *.cpp *.h >myapp.po - copy myapp.po myapp_de.po - edit myapp_de.po -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a0f99133b..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -.TH LINGUIST 1 "28 August 2004" -.SH "NAME" -linguist \- Translation tool for Qt. - -.SH "SYNPOSIS" -.B linguist -[ -.I TRANSLATION -] - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.B Qt Linguist -is a tool for adding translations to Qt applications. It -introduces the concept of a translation "context" which -means a group of phrases that appear together on the -screen e.g. in the same menu or dialog. - -The only parameter accepted on the command line is -.I TRANSLATION -wich is the name of the translation file you wish to open. - -.SH FILES -.I ~/.qt/qt_designerrc -.RS -Per user configuration file. - -.SH SEE ALSO -.B Qt Linguist -is too complex to be described completely in the "man" page -format. If your system is properly configured, you can access -the full documentation within -.B Qt Linguist -under the Help menu. - -.SH AUTHOR -This manual page was written by Jeremy Laine <jeremy.laine@m4x.org>, -for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 37ddcfd4f..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "makeqpf" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -makeqpf \- Create qpf files from TTF and BDF files. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt Prerendered Font (QPF) is a light\-weight non\-scalable -font format specific to Qt/Embedded. makeqpf is a tool -that assists producing QPF files from TTF and BDF files. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "FILES" -.LP -\fI$(QTDIR)/etc/fonts/fontdir\fP -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 9ed2a9f25..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -.TH "mergetr" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -mergetr \- Merge changes in translations -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -When the texts in your program change as it is developed, -a the base .po file can be regenerated using findtr, -then mergetr can be used to merge the changes into the -other .po files: - - mergetr myapp_de.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_fr.po myapp.po - mergetr myapp_ja.po myapp.po - - -The translation team then edits the new .po files to -translate the new or changed texts. When texts change, -the old text is included in the .po file as a comment to -guide the new translation (no "fuzzy" matching is done). -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7d22bbb96..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ -.TH "msg2qm" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -msg2qm \- Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary format. -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP - -Converts translated .po files to a Qt\-specific binary -format (".qm" Qt message files). The Qt message files -are platform and locale independent, containing -translations in Unicode and various hash tables to -provide fast look\-up. - - msg2qm myapp_de.po myapp_de.qm - msg2qm myapp_fr.po myapp_fr.qm - msg2qm myapp_ja.po myapp_ja.qm - - -In your application, use QTranslator::load() to load -translation files appropriate for the user's language. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 352921be8..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qt20fix" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qt20fix \- Helps clean namespace when porting an app from Qt1 to Qt2 -.SH "SYNTAX" -.LP -qt20fix myapp.cpp - -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -Qt 2.x is namespace\-clean, unlike 1.x. Qt now uses very -few global identifiers. Identifiers like red, blue, -LeftButton, AlignRight, Key_Up, Key_Down, NoBrush etc. -are now part of a special class Qt (defined in -qnamespace.h), which is inherited by most Qt classes. -Member functions of classes that inherit from QWidget, -etc. are totally unaffected, but code that is not in -functions of classes inherited from Qt, you must qualify -these identifiers like this: Qt::red, Qt::LeftButton, -Qt::AlignRight, etc. - -The qt/bin/qt20fix script helps to fix the code that -needs adaption, though most code does not need changing. - -Compiling with \-DQT1COMPATIBILITY will help you get going -with Qt 2.x \- it allows all the old "dirty namespace" -identifiers from Qt 1.x to continue working. Without it, -you'll get compile errors that can easily be fixed by -searching this page for the clean identifiers. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 7e03bf49b..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,17 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qtconfig" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qtconfig \- Configuration tool for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -QConfig allows for GUI based configuration of Qt and - other Qt based sources. - -.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" -.LP -.TP -\fBQTDIR\fP -Specifies the base Qt dir -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 deleted file mode 100644 index 89a91cf2a..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,66 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qvfb" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qvfb \- Virtual framebuffer for Qt -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The virtual framebuffer allows Qt/Embedded programs to be -developed on your desktop machine, without switching -between consoles and X11. - -Start a Qt/Embedded master application (i.e., construct -QApplication with QApplication::GuiServer flag or use the -\-qws command line parameter). You will need to specify to -the server that you wish to use the virtual framebuffer -driver, e.g.: - - widgets \-qws \-display QVFb:0 - -You may prefer to set the QWS_DISPLAY environment -variable to be QVFb:0. - -qvfb supports the following command line options: - - \-width width: the width of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 240). - \-height height: the height of the virtual framebuffer - (default: 320). - \-depth depth: the depth of the virtual framebuffer (1, 8 - or 32; default: 8). - \-nocursor: do not display the X11 cursor in the - framebuffer window. - \-qwsdisplay :id the Qt/Embedded display id to provide - (default: 0). - - Virtual Framebuffer Design - -The virtual framebuffer emulates a framebuffer using a -shared memory region (the virtual frame buffer) and a -utility to display the framebuffer in a window (qvfb). -The regions of the display that have changed are updated -periodically, so you will see discrete snapshots of the -framebuffer rather than each individual drawing -operation. For this reason drawing problems such as -flickering may not be apparent until the program is run -using a real framebuffer. - -The target refresh rate can be set via the "View|Refresh -Rate" menu item. This will cause qvfb to check for -updated regions more tquickly. The rate is a target only. -If little drawing is being done, the framebuffer will not -show any updates between drawing events. If an -application is displaying an animation the updates will -be frequent, and the application and qvfb will compete -for processor time. - -Mouse and keyboard events are passed to the Qt/Embedded -master process via named pipes. - -The virtual framebuffer is a development tool only. No -security issues have been considered in the virtual -framebuffer design. It should be avoided in a production -environment; QT_NO_QWS_VFB should always be defined in -production libraries. -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 deleted file mode 100644 index a9b262f10..000000000 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -.TH "qembed" "1" "3.0.3" "Troll Tech AS, Norway." "" -.SH "NAME" -.LP -qembed \- Converts arbitrary files into C++ code. -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.LP -The QEmbed tool, found in qt/tools/qembed, converts -arbitrary files into C++ code. This is useful for -including image files and other resources directly into -your application rather than loading the data from -external files. - -QEmbed can also generate uncompressed versions of images -that can be included directly into your application, -thus avoiding both the external file and the need to -parse the image file format. This is useful for small -images such as icons for which compression is not a -great gain. - - -.SH "SYNTAX" -qembed [ \fIgeneral\-files\fP ] <[ \fI\-\-images image\-files \fP]> -.br - -general\-files - These files can be any type of file. -\-\-images image\-files - These files must be in image formats supported by Qt. - -.SH "AUTHORS" -.LP -TrollTech <http://www.trolltech.com/> diff --git a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules index 9de2ec9df..df3786fb1 100755 --- a/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules +++ b/ubuntu/maverick/dependencies/tqt3/debian/rules @@ -413,25 +413,16 @@ binary-arch: build install mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant `pwd`/debian/tqt3-assistant/usr/bin/assistant-tqt3 mv `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/bin/linguist-tqt3 - install -D debian/maintain/man/designer.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-designer/usr/share/man/man1/designer-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/moc.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/moc-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/uic.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/uic-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lrelease.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lrelease-tqt3.1 install -D doc/man/man1/lupdate.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-dev-tools/usr/share/man/man1/lupdate-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/qtconfig.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-qtconfig/usr/share/man/man1/qtconfig-tqt3.1 - install -D debian/maintain/man/linguist.1 `pwd`/debian/tqt3-linguist/usr/share/man/man1/linguist-tqt3.1 dh_link -ptqt3-designer usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-designer/html dh_link -ptqt3-assistant usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-assistant/html dh_link -ptqt3-linguist usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-linguist/html dh_link -ptqt3-dev-tools usr/share/tqt3/doc/html usr/share/doc/tqt3-dev-tools/html - # install the manpages we have - dh_installman -ptqt3-designer debian/maintain/man/createcw.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-compat debian/maintain/man/qt20fix.1 debian/maintain/man/mergetr.1 debian/maintain/man/findtr.1 debian/maintain/man/msg2qm.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools-embedded debian/maintain/man/makeqpf.1 debian/maintain/man/qvfb.1 - dh_installman -ptqt3-dev-tools debian/maintain/man/tqembed.1 - # copy README.Debian for a in libtqt3-mt-dev libtqt3-mt tqt3-doc; do install -D `pwd`/debian/README.Debian `pwd`/debian/"$$a"/usr/share/doc/"$$a"/README.Debian; done |