diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc | 106 |
1 files changed, 89 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc b/tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc index e2f670c..482af46 100644 --- a/tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc +++ b/tools/qdoc3/doc/qdoc-manual.qdoc @@ -78,10 +78,10 @@ \endlist \o \l{QDoc Configuration} \list - \o \l{General Variables} + \o \l{General Configuration Variables} \o \l{Creating Help Project Files} - \o \l{C++ Specific Variables} - \o \l{HTML Specific Variables} + \o \l{C++ Specific Configuration Variables} + \o \l{HTML Specific Configuration Variables} \o \l{Supporting Derived Projects} \o \l{QDoc Compatibility} \o \l{qt.qdocconf} @@ -1425,6 +1425,7 @@ \quotefromfile examples/main.cpp + \skipto QApplication \printline QApplication This line includes the QApplication class @@ -1652,6 +1653,7 @@ can press and release. \quotefromfile examples/main.cpp + \skipto QApplication \skipline QApplication \printline QPushButton @@ -6974,7 +6976,7 @@ \page 21-0-qdoc-configuration.html \previouspage Title Commands \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents - \nextpage General Variables + \nextpage General Configuration Variables \title QDoc Configuration @@ -7094,9 +7096,9 @@ \section2 Categories \list - \o \l {General Variables} - \o \l {C++ Specific Variables} - \o \l {HTML Specific Variables} + \o \l {General Configuration Variables} + \o \l {C++ Specific Configuration Variables} + \o \l {HTML Specific Configuration Variables} \endlist \section1 Configuration File Examples @@ -7133,7 +7135,7 @@ \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents \nextpage Creating Help Project Files - \title General Variables + \title General Configuration Variables With the general QDoc configuration variables, you can define where QDoc will find the various source files it needs to generate @@ -7215,7 +7217,7 @@ QDoc originally used a hard-coded value of four spaces for code indentation to ensure that code snippets could be easily distinguished from surrounding text. Since we can use - \l{HTML Specific Variables#HTML.stylesheets}{stylesheets} to + \l{HTML Specific Configuration Variables#HTML.stylesheets}{stylesheets} to adjust the appearance of certain types of HTML elements, this level of indentation is not always required. @@ -7572,7 +7574,7 @@ \code header.fileextensions += *.H \endcode - + \warning The above assignment may not work as described. See also \l headerdirs. @@ -7730,6 +7732,27 @@ bold font, and that \\raisedaster renders a '*'. \row + \o \bold naturallanguage \target naturallanguage + \o \bold {The \c naturallanguage variable specifies the natural + language used for the documentation generated by qdoc.} + + For example: + + \code + naturallanguage = zh-Hans + \endcode + + By default, the natural language is \c en for compatibility + with legacy documentation. + + qdoc will add the natural language information to the HTML + it generates, using the \c lang and \c xml:lang attributes. + + See also \l sourceencoding, \l outputencoding, + \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/#C_7}{C.7. The lang and xml:lang Attributes} and + \l{http://www.w3.org/TR/i18n-html-tech-lang/#ri20040429.113217290}{Best Practice 13: Using Hans and Hant codes}. + + \row \o \bold outputdir \target outputdir \o \bold {The \c outputdir variable specifies the directory where QDoc will put the generated documentation.} @@ -7754,6 +7777,31 @@ directory, all files from the previous run will be lost. \row + \o \bold outputencoding \target outputencoding + \o \bold {The \c outputencoding variable specifies the encoding + used for the documentation generated by qdoc.} + + For example: + + \code + outputencoding = UTF-8 + \endcode + + By default, the output encoding is \c ISO-8859-1 (Latin1) for + compatibility with legacy documentation. When generating + documentation for some languages, particularly non-European + languages, this is not sufficient and an encoding such as UTF-8 + is required. + + qdoc will encode HTML using this encoding and generate the + correct declarations to indicate to browsers which encoding + is being used. The \l naturallanguage configuration variable + should also be specified to provide browsers with a complete + set of character encoding and language information. + + See also \l outputencoding and \l naturallanguage. + + \row \o \bold outputformats \target outputformats \o \bold {The \c outputformats variable specifies the format of the generated documentation.} @@ -7831,6 +7879,30 @@ See also \l sources and \l sources.fileextensions. \row + \o \bold sourceencoding \target sourceencoding + \o \bold {The \c sourceencoding variable specifies the encoding + used for the source code and documentation.} + + For example: + + \code + sourceencoding = UTF-8 + \endcode + + By default, the source encoding is \c ISO-8859-1 (Latin1) for + compatibility with legacy documentation. For some languages, + particularly non-European languages, this is not sufficient + and an encoding such as UTF-8 is required. + + Although qdoc will use the encoding to read source and + documentation files, limitations of C++ compilers may prevent + you from using non-ASCII characters in source code comments. + In cases like these, it is possible to write API documentation + completely in documentation files. + + See also \l naturallanguage and \l outputencoding. + + \row \o \bold sources \target sources \o \bold {The \c sources variable allows you to specify individual source files in addition to those located in the @@ -7973,9 +8045,9 @@ /*! \page 22-creating-help-project-files.html - \previouspage General Variables + \previouspage General Configuration Variables \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents - \nextpage C++ Specific Variables + \nextpage C++ Specific Configuration Variables \title Creating Help Project Files @@ -8023,9 +8095,9 @@ \page 23-qdoc-configuration-cppvariables.html \previouspage Creating Help Project Files \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents - \nextpage HTML Specific Variables + \nextpage HTML Specific Configuration Variables - \title C++ Specific Variables + \title C++ Specific Configuration Variables The C++ specific configuration variables are provided to avoid erroneous documentation due to non-standard C++ constructs. @@ -8159,11 +8231,11 @@ /*! \page 24-qdoc-configuration-htmlvariables.html - \previouspage C++ Specific Variables + \previouspage C++ Specific Configuration Variables \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents \nextpage Supporting Derived Projects - \title HTML Specific Variables + \title HTML Specific Configuration Variables The HTML specific configuration variables define the generated documentation's style, or define the contents of the @@ -8289,7 +8361,7 @@ /*! \page 25-qdoc-configuration-derivedprojects.html - \previouspage HTML Specific Variables + \previouspage HTML Specific Configuration Variables \contentspage QDoc Manual - Table of Contents \nextpage QDoc Compatibility |