diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp | 13 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp b/src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp index 51db081..f0f901e 100644 --- a/src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp +++ b/src/corelib/io/qsettings.cpp @@ -2319,6 +2319,10 @@ void QConfFileSettingsPrivate::ensureSectionParsed(QConfFile *confFile, stored in the following registry path: \c{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\WOW6432node}. + On BlackBerry only a single file is used (see \l{Platform Limitations}). + If the file format is NativeFormat, this is "Settings/MySoft/Star Runner.conf" + in the application's home directory. + If the file format is IniFormat, the following files are used on Unix and Mac OS X: @@ -2343,6 +2347,10 @@ void QConfFileSettingsPrivate::ensureSectionParsed(QConfFile *confFile, %COMMON_APPDATA% path is usually \tt{C:\\Documents and Settings\\All Users\\Application Data}. + On BlackBerry only a single file is used (see \l{Platform Limitations}). + If the file format is IniFormat, this is "Settings/MySoft/Star Runner.ini" + in the application's home directory. + On Symbian, the following files are used for both IniFormat and NativeFormat (in this example, we assume that the application is installed on the \c e-drive and its Secure ID is \c{0xECB00931}): @@ -2363,7 +2371,7 @@ void QConfFileSettingsPrivate::ensureSectionParsed(QConfFile *confFile, environments. The paths for the \c .ini and \c .conf files can be changed using - setPath(). On Unix and Mac OS X, the user can override them by by + setPath(). On Unix and Mac OS X, the user can override them by setting the \c XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable; see setPath() for details. @@ -2514,7 +2522,8 @@ void QConfFileSettingsPrivate::ensureSectionParsed(QConfFile *confFile, allowed to read or write outside of this sandbox. This involves the following limitations: \list - \o As there is only a single scope the scope is simply ignored. + \o As there is only a single scope the scope is simply ignored, + i.e. there is no difference between SystemScope and UserScope. \o The \l{Fallback Mechanism} is not applied, i.e. only a single location is considered. \o It is advised against setting and using custom file paths. |