/****************************************************************************** * * $Id$ * * Copyright (C) 1997-1999 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. * * All output generated with Doxygen is not covered by this license. * */ /*! \page faq Frequently Asked Questions <ol> <li><b>How do get information on the index page in HTML?</b> <p> You should use the \\mainpage command inside a comment block like this: \verbatim /*! \mainpage My Personal Index Page * * \section intro Introduction * * This is the introduction. * * \section install Installation * * \subsection step1 Step 1: Opening the box * * etc... */ \endverbatim <li><b>How can I avoid that some code fragment is parsed by Doxyen?</b> <p> You can use Doxygen's preprocessor for this: If you put \verbatim #ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS /* code that must be skipped by Doxygen */ #endif /* DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS */ \endverbatim around the blocks that should be hidden and put: \verbatim PREDEFINED = DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS \endverbatim in the config file then all blocks should be skipped by Doxygen as long as <code>PREPROCESSING = YES</code>. <li><b>How can I make doxygen ignore nasty macro's? </b> Look at section \ref preprocessing for the answer. <li><b>How can I change what's after the <code>#include</code> in class documentation?</b> You can document your class like \verbatim /*! \class MyClassName include.h path/include.h * * Docs for MyClassName */ \endverbatim To make doxygen put <br><br> <code> #include <path/include.h> </code> in the documentation of the class MyClassName regardless of the name of the actual header file in which the definition of MyClassName is contained. <li><b>How can I use tag files in combination with compressed HTML</b> If you want to refer from one compressed HTML file \c a.chm to another compressed HTML file called \c b.chm, the link in \c a.chm must have the following format: \verbatim <a href="b.chm::/file.html"> \endverbatim Unfortunately this only works if both compressed HTML files are in the same directory. As a result you must rename the generated \c index.chm files for all projects into something unique and put all \c .chm files in one directory. Suppose you have a project \e a referring to a project \e b using tag file \c b.tag, then you could rename the \c index.chm for project \e a into \c a.chm and the \c index.chm for project \e b into \c b.chm. In the configuration file for project \e a you write: \verbatim TAGFILES = b.tag=b.chm:: \endverbatim or you can use \c installdox to set the links as follows: \verbatim installdox -lb.tag@b.chm:: \endverbatim </ol> */