/******************************************************************************
*
*
*
* Copyright (C) 1997-2015 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.
*
*/
/*!
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Version: $(VERSION)
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Introduction
Doxygen is the de facto standard tool for generating documentation from
annotated C++ sources, but it also supports other popular programming
languages such as C, Objective-C, C#, PHP, Java, Python, IDL
(Corba, Microsoft, and UNO/OpenOffice flavors), Fortran, VHDL and to some extent D.
Doxygen can help you in three ways:
- It can generate an on-line documentation browser (in HTML) and/or an
off-line reference manual (in \LaTeX) from a set
of documented source files.
There is also support for generating output in RTF (MS-Word),
PostScript, hyperlinked PDF, compressed HTML, and Unix man pages.
The documentation is extracted directly from the sources, which
makes it much easier to keep the documentation consistent with the
source code.
- You can \ref extract_all "configure" doxygen to extract the code structure
from undocumented source files. This is very useful to quickly
find your way in large source distributions.
Doxygen can also visualize the relations between the various elements
by means of include dependency graphs, inheritance diagrams,
and collaboration diagrams, which are all generated automatically.
- You can also use doxygen for creating normal documentation (as I did
for the doxygen user manual and web-site).
Doxygen is developed under Mac OS X and Linux, but is set-up to be highly
portable. As a result, it runs on most other Unix flavors as well.
Furthermore, executables for Windows are available.
\n
This manual is divided into three parts, each of which is divided into several sections.
The first part forms a user manual:
- Section \ref install discusses how to
download, compile and install
doxygen for your platform.
- Section \ref starting tells you how to generate your first piece of
documentation quickly.
- Section \ref docblocks demonstrates the various ways that code can
be documented.
- Section \ref markdown show the Markdown formatting supported by doxygen.
- Section \ref lists shows how to create lists.
- Section \ref grouping shows how to group things together.
- Section \ref tables shows how to insert tables in the documentation.
- Section \ref formulas shows how to insert formulas in the documentation.
- Section \ref diagrams describes the diagrams and graphs that doxygen can generate.
- Section \ref preprocessing explains how doxygen deals with macro definitions.
- Section \ref autolink shows how to put links to files, classes,
and members in the documentation.
- Section \ref output shows how to generate the various output formats
supported by doxygen.
- Section \ref searching shows various ways to search in the HTML documentation.
- Section \ref extsearch shows how use the external search and index tools
- Section \ref customize explains how you can customize the output generated
by doxygen.
- Section \ref custcmd show how to define and use custom commands in your comments.
- Section \ref external explains how to let doxygen create links to externally generated documentation.
- Section \ref faq gives answers to frequently asked questions.
- Section \ref trouble tells you what to do when you have problems.
The second part forms a reference manual:
- Section \ref features presents an overview of what doxygen can do.
- Section \ref doxygen_usage shows how to use the \c doxygen program.
- Section \ref doxywizard_usage shows how to use the \c doxywizard program.
- Section \ref config shows how to fine-tune doxygen, so it
generates the documentation you want.
- Section \ref commands shows an overview of the special commands that can be
used within the documentation.
- Section \ref htmlcmds shows an overview of the HTML commands that
can be used within the documentation.
- Section \ref xmlcmds shows an overview of the C# style XML commands that
can be used within the documentation.
- Section \ref emojisup shows an introduction how emoji can be used within
the documentation.
The third part provides information for developers:
- Section \ref arch gives a global overview of how doxygen is internally
structured.
- Section \ref perlmod shows how to use the PerlMod output.
- Section \ref langhowto explains how to add support for new
output languages.
\nDoxygen license
\addindex license
\addindex GPL
Copyright © 1997-2019 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.
User examples
Doxygen supports a number of \ref output "output formats" where HTML is the
most popular one. I've gathered
some nice examples
of real-life projects using doxygen.
These are part of a larger
list of projects
that use doxygen.
If you know other projects, let me
know and I'll add them.
Future work
Although doxygen is successfully used by large number of companies and
open source projects already, there is always room for improvement.
You can submit enhancement requests in
the bug tracker.
Make sure the severity of the bug report is set to "enhancement".
Acknowledgments
\addindex acknowledgments
Thanks go to:
- \addindex Doc++
Malte Zöckler and Roland Wunderling, authors of DOC++.
The first version of doxygen borrowed some code of an old version of DOC++.
Although I have rewritten practically all code since then, DOC++ has still
given me a good start in writing doxygen.
- All people at Qt Software, for creating a beautiful GUI Toolkit
(which is very useful as a Windows/Unix platform abstraction layer :-)
- My brother Frank
for rendering the logos.
- Harm van der Heijden for adding HTML help support.
- Wouter Slegers of
Your Creative Solutions
for registering the www.doxygen.org domain.
- Parker Waechter for adding the RTF output generator.
- Joerg Baumann, for adding conditional documentation blocks,
PDF links, and the configuration generator.
- Tim Mensch for adding the todo command.
- Christian Hammond for redesigning the web-site.
- Ken Wong for providing the HTML tree view code.
- Talin for adding support for C# style comments with XML markup.
- Petr Prikryl for coordinating the internationalization support.
All language maintainers for providing translations into many languages.
- The band Porcupine Tree for
providing hours of great music to listen to while coding.
- many, many others for suggestions, patches and bug reports.
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