/******************************************************************************
*
*
*
* Copyright (C) 1997-2002 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
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/*! \page docblocks Documenting the code
\subsection specialblock Special documentation blocks
A special documentation block is a C or C++ comment block with some
additional markings, so doxygen knows it is a piece of documentation that
needs to end up in the generated documentation.
For each code item there are two types of descriptions, which together
form the documentation: a \e brief description and \e detailed
description, both are optional.
Having more than one brief or detailed description however, is
not allowed.
As the name suggest, a brief description is
a short one-liner, whereas the detailed description provides longer,
more detailed documentation.
There are several ways to mark a comment block as a detailed description:
- You can use the JavaDoc style, which consist of a C-style comment
block starting with two *'s, like this:
\verbatim
/**
* ... text ...
*/
\endverbatim
- or you can use the Qt style and add an exclamation mark (!)
after the opening of a C-style comment block, as shown in this example:
\verbatim
/*!
* ... text ...
*/
\endverbatim
In both cases the intermediate *'s are optional, so
\verbatim
/*!
... text ...
*/
\endverbatim
is also valid.
- A third alternative is to use a block of at least two C++ comment
lines, where the first starts with an additional slash or an
exclamation mark. Here are examples of the two cases:
\verbatim
///
// ... text ...
//
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
//!
// ... text ...
//
\endverbatim
-
One could also repeat the special markers for each line as shown in
the following examples:
\verbatim
///
/// ... text ....
///
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
//!
//! ... text ...
//!
\endverbatim
For the brief description there are also several posibilities:
- One could use the \ref cmdbrief "\brief" command with one of the
above comment blocks. This command ends at the end of a paragraph,
so the detailed description follows after an empty line.
Here is an example:
\verbatim
/*! \brief Brief description.
* Brief description continued.
*
* Detailed description starts here.
*/
\endverbatim
- If \ref cfg_javadoc_autobrief "JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF" is set to YES in the configuration file,
then using JavaDoc style comment
blocks will automatically start a brief description which ends at the
first dot. Here is an example:
\verbatim
/** Brief description which ends at this dot. Details follow
* here.
*/
\endverbatim
- A third option is to use a special C++ style comment which does not
span more than one line. Here are two examples:
\verbatim
/// Brief description.
/** Detailed description. */
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
//! Brief descripion.
//! Detailed description
//! starts here.
\endverbatim
Note the blank line in the last example, which is required to separate the
brief description from the block containing the detailed description.
As you can see doxygen is quite flexible. The following however is
not legal
\verbatim
//! Brief description, which is
//! really a detailed description since it spans multiple lines.
/*! Oops, another detailed description!
*/
\endverbatim
because doxygen only allows one brief and one detailed description.
Furthermore, if there is one brief description before a declaration
and one before a definition of a code item, only the one before
the \e declaration will be used. If the same situation occurs for a
detailed description, the one before the \e definition is preferred
and the one before the declaration will be ignored.
Here is an example of a documented piece of C++ code using the Qt style:
\verbinclude qtstyle.cpp
\htmlonly
Click here
for the corresponding HTML documentation that is generated by doxygen.
\endhtmlonly
The one-line comments contain a brief description,
whereas the multi-line comment blocks contain a more detailed description.
The brief descriptions are included in the member overview of a
class, namespace or file and are printed using a small italic font
(this description can be hidden by setting
\ref cfg_brief_member_desc "BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC" to \c NO in
the config file). By default the brief descriptions become the first
sentence of the detailed descriptions
(but this can be changed by setting the \ref cfg_repeat_brief "REPEAT_BRIEF"
tag to \c NO). Both the brief and the detailed descriptions are optional
for the Qt style.
By default a JavaDoc style documentation block behaves the same way as a
Qt style documentation block. This is not according the JavaDoc specification
however, where the first sentence of the documentation block is automatically
treated as a brief description. To enable this behaviour you should set
\ref cfg_javadoc_autobrief "JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF" to YES in the configuration
file. If you enable this option and want to put a dot in the middle of a
sentence without ending it, you should put a backslash and a space after it.
Here is an example:
\verbatim
/** Brief description (e.g.\ using only a few words). Details follow. */
\endverbatim
Here is the same piece of code as shown above, this time documented using the
JavaDoc style and \ref cfg_javadoc_autobrief "JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF" set to YES:
\verbinclude jdstyle.cpp
\htmlonly
Click here
for the corresponding HTML documentation that is generated by doxygen.
\endhtmlonly
Unlike most other documentation systems, doxygen also allows you to put
the documentation of members (including global functions) in front of
the \e definition. This way the documentation can be placed in the source
file instead of the header file. This keeps the header file compact, and allows the
implementer of the members more direct access to the documentation.
As a compromise the brief description could be placed before the
declaration and the detailed description before the member definition.
\subsection memberdoc Documenting members afterwards
If you want to document the members of a file, struct, union, class, or enum,
and you want to put the documentation for these members inside the compound,
it is sometimes desired to place the documentation block after the member
instead of before. For this purpose you should put an additional \< marker
in the comment block.
Here are some examples:
\verbatim
int var; /*!< Detailed description after the member */
\endverbatim
This block can be used to put a Qt style detailed
documentation block \e after a member. Other ways to do the
same are:
\verbatim
int var; /**< Detailed description after the member */
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
int var; //!< Detailed description after the member
//!<
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
int var; ///< Detailed description after the member
///<
\endverbatim
Most often one only wants to put a brief description after a member.
This is done as follows:
\verbatim
int var; //!< Brief description after the member
\endverbatim
or
\verbatim
int var; ///< Brief description after the member
\endverbatim
Note that these blocks have the same structure and meaning as the
special comment blocks in the previous section
only the \< indicates that the member is
located in front of the block instead of after the block.
Here is an example of the use of these comment blocks:
\verbinclude afterdoc.h
\htmlonly
Click here
for the corresponding HTML documentation that is generated by doxygen.
\endhtmlonly
\warning These blocks can only be used to document \e members and \e parameters.
They cannot be used to document files, classes, unions, structs,
groups, namespaces and enums themselves. Furthermore, the structural
commands mentioned in the next section
(like \\class
) are ignored inside these comment blocks.
\subsection structuralcommands Documentation at other places
So far we have assumed that the documentation blocks are always located in
front of the declaration or definition of a file, class or namespace or in
front or after one of its members.
Although this is often comfortable, there may sometimes be reasons to put the
documentation somewhere else. For documenting a file this is even
required since there is no such thing as "in front of a file".
Doxygen allows you to put your documentation blocks practically
anywhere (the exception is inside the body of a function or inside a
normal C style comment block).
The price you pay for not putting the
documentation block before (or after) an item is the need to put a
structural command inside the documentation block, which leads to some
duplication of information.
Structural commands (like all other commands) start with a backslash
(\\), or an at-sign (\@) if you prefer JavaDoc style,
followed by a command name and one or more parameters.
For instance, if you want to document the class \c Test in the example
above, you could have also put the following documentation block somewhere
in the input that is read by doxygen:
\verbatim
/*! \class Test
\brief A test class.
A more detailed class description.
*/
\endverbatim
Here the special command \c \class is used to indicate that the
comment block contains documentation for the class \c Test.
Other structural commands are:
- \c \struct to document a C-struct.
- \c \union to document a union.
- \c \enum to document an enumeration type.
- \c \fn to document a function.
- \c \var to document a variable or typedef or enum value.
- \c \def to document a \#define.
- \c \file to document a file.
- \c \namespace to document a namespace.
- \c \package to document a Java package.
- \c \interface to document an IDL interface.
See section \ref commands for detailed information about these and many other
commands.
To document a member of a C++ class, you must also document the class
itself. The same holds for namespaces. To document a global C function,
typedef, enum or preprocessor definition you must first document the file
that contains it (usually this will be a header file, because that file
contains the information that is exported to other source files).
Let's repeat that, because it is often overlooked:
to document global objects (functions, typedefs, enum, macros, etc), you
must document the file in which they are defined. In other words,
there must at least be a \verbatim /*! \file */ \endverbatim
or a \verbatim /** @file */ \endverbatim line in this file.
Here is an example of a C header named \c structcmd.h that is documented
using structural commands:
\verbinclude structcmd.h
\htmlonly
Click here
for the corresponding HTML documentation that is generated by doxygen.
\endhtmlonly
Because each comment block in the example above contains a structural command, all
the comment blocks could be moved to another location or input file
(the source file for instance), without affecting the generated
documentation. The disadvantage of this approach is that prototypes are
duplicated, so all changes have to be made twice! Because of this you
should first consider if this is really needed, and avoid structural
commands if possible. I often receive examples that contain \\fn command
in comment blocks which are place in front of a function. This is clearly
a case where the \\fn command is redundant and will only lead to problems.
\htmlonly
Go to the next section or return to the
index.
\endhtmlonly
*/