qt5base-lts/util/local_database
John Layt 48e2c3ac33 QTimeZone - Define new class and api
Implement the new QTimeZone class based on the Olsen Time Zone ID's.

This is the base implementation and does not include the Platform
backends which are implemented separately.

This change does include a default UTC backed to be used if no Platform
backend is available, i.e. if QT_NO_SYSTEMLOCALE is set and ICU is not
configured.  This backend also provides a default set of time zones in
the standard "UTC+00:00" offset format that are guaranteed to always
exist regardless of the Platform backend.

This change includes conversion functions between the Olsen ID's and
Windows ID's using a conversion table based on Unicode CLDR data.
This is implemented for all platforms for scenarios such as a Linux
program needing to communicate with a Windows Exchange Server using
the Windows ID.

The CLDR conversion table is included under the UNICODE license, see
http://unicode.org/copyright.html for details.

[ChangeLog][QtCore][QTimeZone] Added new QTimeZone class to support
time tone calculations using the host platform time zone database
and the Olsen time zone ID's.

Change-Id: Ibb417d08cf2663a0979d2be855d2c6ad6ad01509
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
2013-09-22 22:21:15 +02:00
..
testlocales Update copyright year in Digia's license headers 2013-01-18 09:07:35 +01:00
cldr2qlocalexml.py Update copyright year in Digia's license headers 2013-01-18 09:07:35 +01:00
cldr2qtimezone.py QTimeZone - Define new class and api 2013-09-22 22:21:15 +02:00
dateconverter.py Update copyright year in Digia's license headers 2013-01-18 09:07:35 +01:00
enumdata.py Update QLocale locale database up to CLDR 23.1 2013-08-12 23:05:59 +02:00
formattags.txt
qlocalexml2cpp.py Update QLocale data to CLDRv23 2013-04-01 12:03:55 +02:00
README
xpathlite.py Fix minor typos in docs, printed messages & comments 2013-01-28 18:12:41 +01:00

local_database is used to generate qlocale data from the Common Locale Data Repository (The database for localized names (like date formats, country names etc)).