Test more methods.
Document what the existing test covers.
Use the right #include for QDate.
Change-Id: I051542c244e5bc381aafa3ae38144e246919db7a
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@kdab.com>
Aside from the start-date and the end-date, and a variant with a
time-zone, the lists various tests were building were all built the
same way; so pack that up as a pair of functions (one without
time-zone, one with) to save duplication. Make the list in each
function const, ready for conversion of foreach loops to ranged for.
In the process, replace QList with QVector, reserve space before we
populate and use auto for the now-const list variables it's saved in.
Change-Id: I7d8cce459a4d6111cd645e8d3966ad769ab7e201
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@kdab.com>
Multiplying a Julian Day number by the number of milliseconds per day
does not get you a time since the start of 1970; it gets you a time
since the start of the Julian Day number system, which was several
millennia earlier.
Change-Id: Ic90a6c3de445baf9cfd30f28dd847f146e6a7adf
Reviewed-by: David Faure <david.faure@kdab.com>
We'll be adding calendar code here as well, and tools/ was getting
rather crowded, so it looks like time to move out a reasonably
coherent sub-bundle of it all.
Change-Id: I7e8030f38c31aa307f519dd918a43fc44baa6aa1
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>