/****************************************************************************** * * * * Copyright (C) 1997-2014 by Dimitri van Heesch. * * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its * documentation under the terms of the GNU General Public License is hereby * granted. No representations are made about the suitability of this software * for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty. * See the GNU General Public License for more details. * * Documents produced by Doxygen are derivative works derived from the * input used in their production; they are not affected by this license. * */ /*! \page customize Customizing the output \tableofcontents Doxygen provides various levels of customization. The section \ref minor_tweaks "Minor Tweaks" discusses what to do if you want to do minor tweaking to the look and feel of the output. The section \ref layout "Layout" show how to reorder and hide certain information on a page. The section \ref xmlgenerator "XML output" show how to generate whatever output you want based on the XML output produced by doxygen. \section minor_tweaks Minor Tweaks The next subsections describe some aspects that can be tweaked with little effort. \subsection minor_tweaks_colors Overall Color To change the overall color of the HTML output doxygen provides three options - \ref cfg_html_colorstyle_hue "HTML_COLORSTYLE_HUE" - \ref cfg_html_colorstyle_sat "HTML_COLORSTYLE_SAT" - \ref cfg_html_colorstyle_gamma "HTML_COLORSTYLE_GAMMA" to change the hue, saturation, and gamma correction of the colors respectively. For your convenience the GUI frontend \ref doxywizard_usage "Doxywizard" has a control that allows you to see the effect of changing the values of these options on the output in real time. \subsection minor_tweaks_treeview Navigation By default doxygen shows navigation tabs on top of every HTML page, corresponding with the following settings: - \ref cfg_disable_index "DISABLE_INDEX" = \c NO - \ref cfg_generate_treeview "GENERATE_TREEVIEW" = \c NO you can switch to an interactive navigation tree as sidebar using - \ref cfg_disable_index "DISABLE_INDEX" = \c YES - \ref cfg_generate_treeview "GENERATE_TREEVIEW" = \c YES or even have both forms of navigation: - \ref cfg_disable_index "DISABLE_INDEX" = \c NO - \ref cfg_generate_treeview "GENERATE_TREEVIEW" = \c YES if you already use an external index (i.e. have one of the following options enabled \ref cfg_generate_htmlhelp "GENERATE_HTMLHELP", \ref cfg_generate_eclipsehelp "GENERATE_ECLIPSEHELP", \ref cfg_generate_qhp "GENERATE_QHP", or \ref cfg_generate_docset "GENERATE_DOCSET") then you can also disable all indices, like so: - \ref cfg_disable_index "DISABLE_INDEX" = \c YES - \ref cfg_generate_treeview "GENERATE_TREEVIEW" = \c NO \subsection minor_tweaks_dynsection Dynamic Content To make the HTML output more interactive, doxygen provides a number of options that are disabled by default: - enabling \ref cfg_html_dynamic_sections "HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS" will make doxygen hide certain content (like graphs) in the HTML by default, and let the reader expand these sections on request. - enabling \ref cfg_have_dot "HAVE_DOT" along with \ref cfg_interactive_svg "INTERACTIVE_SVG" while setting \ref cfg_dot_image_format "DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT" to \c svg, will make doxygen produce SVG images that will allow the user to zoom and pan (this only happens when the size of the images exceeds a certain size). \subsection minor_tweaks_header_css Header, Footer, and Stylesheet changes To tweak things like fonts or colors, margins, or other look \& feel aspects of the HTML output in detail, you can create a different cascading style sheet. You can also let doxygen use a custom header and footer for each HTML page it generates, for instance to make the output conform to the style used on the rest of your web site. To do this first run doxygen as follows: \verbatim doxygen -w html header.html footer.html customdoxygen.css \endverbatim This will create 3 files: - header.html is a HTML fragment which doxygen normally uses to start a HTML page. Note that the fragment ends with a body tag and that is contains a couple of commands of the form \$word. These will be replaced by doxygen on the fly. - footer.html is a HTML fragment which doxygen normally uses to end a HTML page. Also here special commands can be used. This file contain the link to www.doxygen.org and the body and html end tags. - customdoxygen.css is the default cascading style sheet used by doxygen. It is recommended only to look into this file and overrule some settings you like by putting them in a separate stylesheets and referencing those extra files via \ref cfg_html_extra_stylesheet "HTML_EXTRA_STYLESHEET". You should edit these files and then reference them from the config file. - \ref cfg_html_header "HTML_HEADER" = \c header.html - \ref cfg_html_footer "HTML_FOOTER" = \c footer.html - \ref cfg_html_extra_stylesheet "HTML_EXTRA_STYLESHEET" = \c my_customdoxygen.css \note it is not longer recommended to use \ref cfg_html_stylesheet "HTML_STYLESHEET", as it make it difficult to upgrade to a newer version of doxygen. Use \ref cfg_html_extra_stylesheet "HTML_EXTRA_STYLESHEET" instead. See the documentation of the \ref cfg_html_header "HTML_HEADER" tag for more information about the possible meta commands you can use inside your custom header. \note You should not put the style sheet in the HTML output directory. Treat it as a source file. Doxygen will copy it for you. \note If you use images or other external content in a custom header you need to make sure these end up in the HTML output directory yourself, for instance by writing a script that runs doxygen can then copies the images to the output. \warning The structure of headers and footers may change after upgrading to a newer version of doxygen, so if you are using a custom header or footer, it might not produce valid output anymore after upgrading. \section layout Changing the layout of pages In some cases you may want to change the way the output is structured. A different style sheet or custom headers and footers do not help in such case. The solution doxygen provides is a layout file, which you can modify and doxygen will use to control what information is presented, in which order, and to some extent also how information is presented. The layout file is an XML file. The default layout can be generated by doxygen using the following command: \verbatim doxygen -l \endverbatim optionally the name of the layout file can be specified, if omitted \c DoxygenLayout.xml will be used. The next step is to mention the layout file in the config file \verbatim LAYOUT_FILE = DoxygenLayout.xml \endverbatim To change the layout all you need to do is edit the layout file. The toplevel structure of the file looks as follows: \verbatim ... ... ... ... ... ... \endverbatim The root element of the XML file is \c doxygenlayout, it has an attribute named \c version, which will be used in the future to cope with changes that are not backward compatible. The first section, identified by the \c navindex element, represents the layout of the navigation tabs displayed at the top of each HTML page. At the same time it also controls the items in the navigation tree in case \ref cfg_generate_treeview "GENERATE_TREEVIEW" is enabled. Each tab is represented by a \c tab element in the XML file. You can hide tabs by setting the \c visible attribute to \c no. You can also override the default title of a tab by specifying it as the value of the \c title attribute. If the title field is the empty string (the default) then doxygen will fill in an appropriate language specific title. You can reorder the tabs by moving the tab elements in the XML file within the \c navindex element and even change the tree structure. Do not change the value of the \c type attribute however. Only a fixed set of types are supported, each representing a link to a specific index. You can also add custom tabs using a type with name "user". Here is an example that shows how to add a tab with title "Google" pointing to www.google.com: \verbatim ... ... \endverbatim The url field can also be a relative URL. If the URL starts with \@ref the link will point to a documented entities, such as a class, a function, a group, or a related page. Suppose we have defined a page using \@page with label mypage, then a tab with label "My Page" to this page would look as follows: \verbatim ... ... \endverbatim You can also group tabs together in a custom group using a tab with type "usergroup". The following example puts the above tabs in a user defined group with title "My Group": \verbatim ... ... \endverbatim Groups can be nested to form a hierarchy. By default a usergroup entry in the navigation tree is a link to a landing page with the contents of the group. You can link to a different page using the `url` attribute just like you can for the `` element and prevent any link using `url="[none]"`, i.e. \verbatim ... \endverbatim The elements after \c navindex represent the layout of the different pages generated by doxygen: - The \c class element represents the layout of all pages generated for documented classes, structs, unions, and interfaces. - The \c namespace element represents the layout of all pages generated for documented namespaces (and also Java packages). - The \c file element represents the layout of all pages generated for documented files. - The \c group element represents the layout of all pages generated for documented groups (or modules). - The \c directory element represents the layout of all pages generated for documented directories. Each XML element within one of the above page elements represents a certain piece of information. Some pieces can appear in each type of page, others are specific for a certain type of page. Doxygen will list the pieces in the order in which they appear in the XML file. The following generic elements are possible for each page:
\c briefdescription
Represents the brief description on a page.
\c detaileddescription
Represents the detailed description on a page.
\c authorsection
Represents the author section of a page (only used for man pages).
\c memberdecl
Represents the quick overview of members on a page (member declarations). This elements has child elements per type of member list. The possible child elements are not listed in detail in the document, but the name of the element should be a good indication of the type of members that the element represents.
\c memberdef
Represents the detailed member list on a page (member definition). Like the \c memberdecl element, also this element has a number of possible child elements.
The class page has the following specific elements:
\c includes
Represents the include file needed to obtain the definition for this class.
\c inheritancegraph
Represents the inheritance relations for a class. Note that the CLASS_DIAGRAM option determines if the inheritance relation is a list of base and derived classes or a graph.
\c collaborationgraph
Represents the collaboration graph for a class.
\c allmemberslink
Represents the link to the list of all members for a class.
\c usedfiles
Represents the list of files from which documentation for the class was extracted.
The file page has the following specific elements:
\c includes
Represents the list of \#include statements contained in this file.
\c includegraph
Represents the include dependency graph for the file.
\c includedbygraph
Represents the included by dependency graph for the file.
\c sourcelink
Represents the link to the source code of this file.
The group page has a specific \c groupgraph element which represents the graph showing the dependencies between groups. Similarly, the directory page has a specific \c directorygraph element which represents the graph showing the dependencies between the directories based on the \#include relations of the files inside the directories. Some elements have a \c visible attribute which can be used to hide the fragment from the generated output, by setting the attribute's value to "no". You can also use the value of a configuration option to determine the visibility, by using its name prefixed with a dollar sign, e.g. \verbatim ... ... \endverbatim This was mainly added for backward compatibility. Note that the \c visible attribute is just a hint for doxygen. If no relevant information is available for a certain piece it is omitted even if it is set to \c yes (i.e. no empty sections are generated). Some elements have a \c title attribute. This attribute can be used to customize the title doxygen will use as a header for the piece. @warning at the moment you should not remove elements from the layout file as a way to hide information. Doing so can cause broken links in the generated output! \section xmlgenerator Using the XML output If the above two methods still do not provide enough flexibility, you can also use the XML output produced by doxygen as a basis to generate the output you like. To do this set GENERATE_XML to YES. The XML output consists of an index file named \c index.xml which lists all items extracted by doxygen with references to the other XML files for details. The structure of the index is described by a schema file \c index.xsd. All other XML files are described by the schema file named \c compound.xsd. If you prefer one big XML file you can combine the index and the other files using the XSLT file \c combine.xslt. You can use any XML parser to parse the file or use the one that can be found in the \c addon/doxmlparser directory of doxygen source distribution. Look at \c addon/doxmlparser/include/doxmlintf.h for the interface of the parser and in \c addon/doxmlparser/example for examples. The advantage of using the doxmlparser is that it will only read the index file into memory and then only those XML files that you implicitly load via navigating through the index. As a result this works even for very large projects where reading all XML files as one big DOM tree would not fit into memory. See the Breathe project for an example that uses doxygen XML output from Python to bridge it with the Sphinx document generator. \htmlonly Go to the next section or return to the index. \endhtmlonly */