<string>Enter the human readable name of the search provider here.</string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="QLabel" row="6" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>lbCharset</cstring>
</property>
<property name="text">
<string>&Charset:</string>
</property>
<property name="buddy" stdset="0">
<cstring>cbCharset</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string>Select the character set that will be used to encode your search query</string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="QLabel" row="2" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>lbQuery</cstring>
</property>
<property name="text">
<string>Search &URI:</string>
</property>
<property name="buddy" stdset="0">
<cstring>leQuery</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><qt>
Enter the URI that is used to do a search on the search engine here.<br/>The whole text to be searched for can be specified as \{@} or \{0}.<br/>
Recommended is \{@}, since it removes all query variables (name=value) from the resulting string whereas \{0} will be substituted with the unmodified query string.<br/>You can use \{1} ... \{n} to specify certain words from the query and \{name} to specify a value given by 'name=value' in the user query.<br/>In addition it is possible to specify multiple references (names, numbers and strings) at once (\{name1,name2,...,"string"}).<br/>The first matching value (from the left) will be used as substitution value for the resulting URI.<br/>A quoted string can be used as default value if nothing matches from the left of the reference list.
</qt></string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="QLabel" row="0" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>lbName</cstring>
</property>
<property name="text">
<string>Search &provider name:</string>
</property>
<property name="buddy" stdset="0">
<cstring>leName</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string>Enter the human readable name of the search provider here.</string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="KLineEdit" row="5" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>leShortcut</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><qt>
The shortcuts entered here can be used as a pseudo-URI scheme in KDE. For example, the shortcut <b>av</b> can be used as in <b>av</b>:<b>my search</b>
</qt></string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="QLabel" row="4" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>lbShortcut</cstring>
</property>
<property name="text">
<string>UR&I shortcuts:</string>
</property>
<property name="buddy" stdset="0">
<cstring>leShortcut</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><qt>
The shortcuts entered here can be used as a pseudo-URI scheme in KDE. For example, the shortcut <b>av</b> can be used as in <b>av</b>:<b>my search</b>
</qt></string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="KLineEdit" row="3" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>leQuery</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><qt>
Enter the URI that is used to do a search on the search engine here.<br/>The whole text to be searched for can be specified as \{@} or \{0}.<br/>
Recommended is \{@}, since it removes all query variables (name=value) from the resulting string whereas \{0} will be substituted with the unmodified query string.<br/>You can use \{1} ... \{n} to specify certain words from the query and \{name} to specify a value given by 'name=value' in the user query.<br/>In addition it is possible to specify multiple references (names, numbers and strings) at once (\{name1,name2,...,"string"}).<br/>The first matching value (from the left) will be used as substitution value for the resulting URI.<br/>A quoted string can be used as default value if nothing matches from the left of the reference list.
</qt></string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="KComboBox" row="7" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>cbCharset</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string>Select the character set that will be used to encode your search query.</string>