The CLDR data contains eight locales with numeric territory codes, 001
for World, 150 for Europe and 419 for Latin America. The last was
already known in our enumdata.py, but as "Latin America and The
Caribbean", which is not supported by the CLDR, so I've amended it
while adding the other two. This gives us support for Esperanto and
Yiddish (among others).
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QLocale] Added support for World and Europe as
(numeric) "country" codes ("territory" in CLDR terms), thereby
enabling support for Yiddish and Esperanto, among other locales using
such codes.
Task-number: QTBUG-57802
Change-Id: Ibb1180fb720743a3a0589527649d10f3c9cd123d
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
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| auto | ||
| baselineserver | ||
| benchmarks | ||
| global | ||
| manual | ||
| shared | ||
| testserver | ||
| README | ||
| tests.pro | ||
README
This directory contains autotests and benchmarks based on Qt Test. In order
to run the autotests reliably, you need to configure a desktop to match the
test environment that these tests are written for.
Linux X11:
* The user must be logged in to an active desktop; you can't run the
autotests without a valid DISPLAY that allows X11 connections.
* The tests are run against a KDE3 or KDE4 desktop.
* Window manager uses "click to focus", and not "focus follows mouse". Many
tests move the mouse cursor around and expect this to not affect focus
and activation.
* Disable "click to activate", i.e., when a window is opened, the window
manager should automatically activate it (give it input focus) and not
wait for the user to click the window.