Since we also license under GPL-3.0 WITH Qt-GPL-exception-1.0,
this applies only to a hypothetical newer version of GPL, that doesn't
exist yet. If such a version emerges, we can still decide to relicense...
While at it, replace (deprecated) GPL-3.0 with more explicit GPL-3.0-only
Change was done by running
find . -type f -exec perl -pi -e "s/LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GPL-3.0\+ OR GPL-3.0 WITH Qt-GPL-exception-1.0/LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GPL-3.0-only WITH Qt-GPL-exception-1.0/g" {} \;
Change-Id: I5097e6ce8d10233993ee30d7e25120e2659eb10b
Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
Replace the current license disclaimer in files by
a SPDX-License-Identifier.
Task-number: QTBUG-67283
Change-Id: I708fd1f9f2b73d60f57cc3568646929117825813
Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
We should never actually write default values into the settings, because
- if the default value changes in a later Qt Creator version, the new
default should automatically take effect if the user didn't change the
value
- it senselessly grows the settings file
Add a QtcSettings class that extends QSettings by a
"setValueWithDefault" method, which does not write default values to the
settings, and actually removes the settingskey if the user switches back
to the default.
Use it at the places where we already do this manually.
Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-24762
Change-Id: Ia76414cb21e8521f3aeed1e37b43ae4fb3393ea3
Reviewed-by: Alessandro Portale <alessandro.portale@qt.io>