Use QStringRef::isNull instead of QStringRef::string() for validation. Non-NULL str.string() may yet leave us with a useless str.unicode(), which is the actual problem here; whereas !str.isNull() does really confirm that str.unicode() is sensible. Such test prevents situation like: const QString a; QString b; b.append(a); // b.isNull() == true b.append(QStringRef(&a)); // b.isNull() == false Auto test updated: create QStringRef from QString directly, without any condition. Change-Id: I082cd58ef656d8a53e3c1223aca01feea82fffb9 Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@kdab.com> |
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| .. | ||
| animation | ||
| codecs | ||
| global | ||
| io | ||
| itemmodels | ||
| json | ||
| kernel | ||
| mimetypes | ||
| plugin | ||
| statemachine | ||
| thread | ||
| tools | ||
| xml | ||
| corelib.pro | ||