Don't judge other people's writing systems

Pick-to: 6.1 6.0 5.15
Change-Id: Ifb8265bad4c8c96c6b20f957c376cec47e28f666
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
This commit is contained in:
Volker Hilsheimer 2021-04-07 16:50:26 +02:00
parent 1db8b0de0d
commit 2c2b349974

View File

@ -261,9 +261,8 @@ bool QFontMetrics::operator ==(const QFontMetrics &other) const
The ascent of a font is the distance from the baseline to the
highest position characters extend to. In practice, some font
designers break this rule, e.g. when they put more than one accent
on top of a character, or to accommodate an unusual character in
an exotic language, so it is possible (though rare) that this
value will be too small.
on top of a character, or to accommodate a certain character, so it
is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
\sa descent()
*/
@ -298,8 +297,8 @@ int QFontMetrics::capHeight() const
The descent is the distance from the base line to the lowest point
characters extend to. In practice, some font designers break this rule,
e.g. to accommodate an unusual character in an exotic language, so
it is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
e.g. to accommodate a certain character, so it is possible (though
rare) that this value will be too small.
\sa ascent()
*/
@ -1075,9 +1074,8 @@ bool QFontMetricsF::operator ==(const QFontMetricsF &other) const
The ascent of a font is the distance from the baseline to the
highest position characters extend to. In practice, some font
designers break this rule, e.g. when they put more than one accent
on top of a character, or to accommodate an unusual character in
an exotic language, so it is possible (though rare) that this
value will be too small.
on top of a character, or to accommodate a certain character, so
it is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
\sa descent()
*/
@ -1113,8 +1111,8 @@ qreal QFontMetricsF::capHeight() const
The descent is the distance from the base line to the lowest point
characters extend to. (Note that this is different from X, which
adds 1 pixel.) In practice, some font designers break this rule,
e.g. to accommodate an unusual character in an exotic language, so
it is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
e.g. to accommodate a certain character, so it is possible (though
rare) that this value will be too small.
\sa ascent()
*/