> Op 12/01/2016 om 16:17 schreef Gian Maxera: > >> On 12 Jan 2016, at 15:11, André Somers <an...@familiesomers.nl> wrote: > >> > >> Op 12/01/2016 om 15:57 schreef Jason H: > >>> There are a few things I'd like to add to the documentation, but the > >>> barrier to entry is too high. > >>> I'm wondering if we could allow comments by users (or those with > >>> bugreports account, or has an an account and is authorized) to be able to > >>> comment on the online help? I found the PHP comments helpful, when they > >>> were not completely off-base (let's face it, it's PHP :-)) > >>> > >>> It would also be cool is QtCreator could fetch these (assuming it ends up > >>> happening) > >> This functionality used to exist, but it was scrapped when the move to the > >> new website happened. There was lots of valuable contents there, and I > >> know I for one was quite pissed off that my contributions there were no > >> longer available. So, it is unfortunate, but don't count on this happening > >> any time soon. > > I use a lot Qt Assistant … so, never knew such comments were on the old > > website. > > > > I really like the idea to see the comments on Qt Assistant … I hope in the > > future there will be a way to see user’s comments directly into Qt > > Assistant… but it’s not easy. How can you manage multi-languages ? > > > > > I filed a feature request for that a couple of years ago too (I also > prefer the offline documentation), but as the web version got scrapped, > I believe this request also got closed. > > For handling multi-languages: you don't. The Qt documentation is in > English, just as the API itself. Why would you support comments in other > languages? If people can read the documentation to begin with, they can > also read comments in English.
Not exactly correct. See top of: https://wiki.qt.io/Qt_Coding_Style _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest