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authorDavid Boddie <david.boddie@nokia.com>2010-09-08 11:05:15 (GMT)
committerDavid Boddie <david.boddie@nokia.com>2010-09-08 11:05:15 (GMT)
commitff91468e5672e850c5587e51568c22f5ef13d30a (patch)
tree40c841d6489c277c10afc6e3b1943094a4fd1485
parente032a0730ad752d0855c281f61799ae89fb36ead (diff)
parenteb07b8c1a9dc18e0d280604e9095be07b93538bf (diff)
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Merge commit 'refs/merge-requests/2468' of git://gitorious.org/qt/qt into integration
-rw-r--r--src/corelib/tools/qbytearray.cpp41
1 files changed, 29 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/src/corelib/tools/qbytearray.cpp b/src/corelib/tools/qbytearray.cpp
index 8d38e4c..033da90 100644
--- a/src/corelib/tools/qbytearray.cpp
+++ b/src/corelib/tools/qbytearray.cpp
@@ -850,7 +850,7 @@ QByteArray::Data QByteArray::shared_empty = { Q_BASIC_ATOMIC_INITIALIZER(1),
This operation takes \l{constant time}, because QByteArray is
\l{implicitly shared}. This makes returning a QByteArray from a
function very fast. If a shared instance is modified, it will be
- copied (copy-on-write), and that takes \l{linear time}.
+ copied (copy-on-write), taking \l{linear time}.
\sa operator=()
*/
@@ -1186,10 +1186,18 @@ void QByteArray::chop(int n)
Example:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qbytearray.cpp 12
- This operation is typically very fast (\l{constant time}),
- because QByteArray preallocates extra space at the end of the
- character data so it can grow without reallocating the entire
- data each time.
+ Note: QByteArray is an \l{implicitly shared} class. Consequently,
+ if \e this is an empty QByteArray, then \e this will just share
+ the data held in \a ba. In this case, no copying of data is done,
+ taking \l{constant time}. If a shared instance is modified, it will
+ be copied (copy-on-write), taking \l{linear time}.
+
+ If \e this is not an empty QByteArray, a deep copy of the data is
+ performed, taking \l{linear time}.
+
+ This operation typically does not suffer from allocation overhead,
+ because QByteArray preallocates extra space at the end of the data
+ so that it may grow without reallocating for each append operation.
\sa append(), prepend()
*/
@@ -1474,7 +1482,12 @@ QByteArray QByteArray::nulTerminated() const
Note: QByteArray is an \l{implicitly shared} class. Consequently,
if \e this is an empty QByteArray, then \e this will just share
- the data held in \a ba. In this case, no copying of data is done.
+ the data held in \a ba. In this case, no copying of data is done,
+ taking \l{constant time}. If a shared instance is modified, it will
+ be copied (copy-on-write), taking \l{linear time}.
+
+ If \e this is not an empty QByteArray, a deep copy of the data is
+ performed, taking \l{linear time}.
\sa append(), insert()
*/
@@ -1547,14 +1560,18 @@ QByteArray &QByteArray::prepend(char ch)
This is the same as insert(size(), \a ba).
- This operation is typically very fast (\l{constant time}),
- because QByteArray preallocates extra space at the end of the
- character data so it can grow without reallocating the entire
- data each time.
-
Note: QByteArray is an \l{implicitly shared} class. Consequently,
if \e this is an empty QByteArray, then \e this will just share
- the data held in \a ba. In this case, no copying of data is done.
+ the data held in \a ba. In this case, no copying of data is done,
+ taking \l{constant time}. If a shared instance is modified, it will
+ be copied (copy-on-write), taking \l{linear time}.
+
+ If \e this is not an empty QByteArray, a deep copy of the data is
+ performed, taking \l{linear time}.
+
+ This operation typically does not suffer from allocation overhead,
+ because QByteArray preallocates extra space at the end of the data
+ so that it may grow without reallocating for each append operation.
\sa operator+=(), prepend(), insert()
*/