From 3015f695f4d2a2a776cf4bc85121ebc051706351 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bea Lam Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2010 11:10:44 +1000 Subject: Doing "import foo.qml" doesn't work in QML anymore Task-number: QTBUG-13042 (cherry picked from commit 1f515224d52c9a33b46bbf926e82d5c2df1a84e4) --- doc/src/getting-started/gettingstartedqml.qdoc | 10 ++++------ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/src/getting-started/gettingstartedqml.qdoc b/doc/src/getting-started/gettingstartedqml.qdoc index 885e6ce..a19d281 100644 --- a/doc/src/getting-started/gettingstartedqml.qdoc +++ b/doc/src/getting-started/gettingstartedqml.qdoc @@ -224,15 +224,13 @@ \code import Qt 4.7 \\import the main Qt QML module import "folderName" \\import the contents of the folder - import "Button.qml" \\import a QML file - import "NewButton.qml" as ButtonModule \\import a QML file and give it a name import "script.js" as Script \\import a Javascript file and name it as Script \endcode - To use the \c Button element in \c FileMenu.qml, we need to import \c Button.qml. - The syntax shown above, shows how to use the \c import keyword. However, the - \c {import Button.qml} is not necessary; qmlviewer will import all the contents - of the current directory. We can directly create a \c Button element by declaring + The syntax shown above shows how to use the \c import keyword. This is required to + use JavaScript files, or QML files that are not within the same directory. Since + \c Button.qml is in the same directory as \c FileMenu.qml, we do not need to import + the \c Button.qml file to use it. We can directly create a \c Button element by declaring \c Button{}, similar to a \c Rectangle{} declaration. \code -- cgit v0.12