From ef063b7fe768692d38cd4ea26bac5a0edaebfe81 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kai Koehne Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2017 10:37:46 +0200 Subject: Fix class name in standalone documentation This amends change 13294ce605751babad0687e63c033436d129e3d2 Change-Id: I1e819a5d952329985741a558aef47e50a4bd5e7e Reviewed-by: Milian Wolff --- examples/webchannel/standalone/doc/src/standalone.qdoc | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/examples/webchannel/standalone/doc/src/standalone.qdoc b/examples/webchannel/standalone/doc/src/standalone.qdoc index 0d030bf..6777492 100644 --- a/examples/webchannel/standalone/doc/src/standalone.qdoc +++ b/examples/webchannel/standalone/doc/src/standalone.qdoc @@ -64,13 +64,13 @@ \section1 Communicating with a Remote Client - The C++ application sets up a QWebChannel instance and publishes a \c Dialog object over it. + The C++ application sets up a QWebChannel instance and publishes a \c Core object over it. For the remote client side, \l {standalone/index.html}{index.html} is opened. Both show a dialog with the list of received messages and an input box to send messages to the other end. - The \c Dialog emits the \c Dialog::sendText() signal when the user sends a message. The signal + The \c Core emits the \c Core::sendText() signal when the user sends a message. The signal automatically gets propagated to the HTML client. When the user enters a message on the HTML - side, \c Dialog::receiveText() is called. + side, \c Core::receiveText() is called. All communication between the HTML client and the C++ server is done over a WebSocket. The C++ side instantiates a QWebSocketServer and wraps incoming QWebSocket connections -- cgit v1.2.1