The use of "Country" is misleading as some entries in the enumeration
are not countries (eg, HongKong), for all that most are. The Unicode
Consortium's Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR, from which QLocale's
data is taken) calls these territories, so introduce territory-based
names and prepare to deprecate the country-based ones in due course.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QLocale] QLocale now has Territory as an alias for
its Country enumeration, and associated territory-based names to match
its country-named methods, to better match the usage in relevant
standards. The country-based names shall in due course be deprecated
in favor of the territory-based names.
Fixes: QTBUG-91686
Change-Id: Ia1ae1ad7323867016186fb775c9600cd5113aa42
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Add a almost trivial benchmark for QString::number(int).
Change-Id: Ice67eaf28e8d7b235fd5ec5e0b87b3b9053ae61e
Reviewed-by: Karsten Heimrich <karsten.heimrich@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
QString::toUpper() now insists we use its return, so the benchmark
won't compile unless we do so. Also document the helper macro used by
the tests, to explain why it's even there at all.
Change-Id: I830f121d92867bcd09277ecdeb1c764413b34fa6
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Andrei Golubev <andrei.golubev@qt.io>