From 16a9dc214150b4531759b2ca43a2abb4f3cf7d99 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lars Knoll Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 12:04:53 +0100 Subject: update documentation We are at Unicode 5.1, not 4.0 Tell about N'Ko support. Reviewed-by: Gunnar --- doc/src/internationalization/i18n.qdoc | 5 +++-- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/src/internationalization/i18n.qdoc b/doc/src/internationalization/i18n.qdoc index 2d1b8cc..ecc25fe 100644 --- a/doc/src/internationalization/i18n.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/internationalization/i18n.qdoc @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ \o Greek \o Hebrew \o Thai and Lao - \o All scripts in Unicode 4.0 that do not require special processing + \o All scripts in Unicode 5.1 that do not require special processing \endlist On Windows, Unix/X11 with FontConfig (client side font support) @@ -112,6 +112,7 @@ \o Tamil \o Telugu \o Tibetan + \o N'Ko \endlist Many of these writing systems exhibit special features: @@ -181,7 +182,7 @@ \section2 Use QString for All User-Visible Text - Since QString uses the Unicode 4.0 encoding internally, every + Since QString uses the Unicode 5.1 encoding internally, every language in the world can be processed transparently using familiar text processing operations. Also, since all Qt functions that present text to the user take a QString as a parameter, -- cgit v0.12