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1 Adding wxWindows class documentation
2 ====================================
3
4 This note is aimed at people wishing to add documentation for a
5 class to either the main wxWindows manual, or to their own
6 manual.
7
8 wxWindows uses Tex2RTF to process Latex-like input files (.tex)
9 and output in HTML, WinHelp RTF and Word RTF. Tex2RTF is provided
10 in the wxWindows distribution and in the CVS archive, under
11 utils/tex2rtf. Please start by perusing the Tex2RTF manual.
12
13 If adding to the existing manual in docs/latex/wx, you need to
14 create a new .tex file, e.g. myclass.tex, and add it to the
15 list of classes in classes.tex (in strict alphabetical order).
16 You may also want to write a separate topic file, e.g. tmyclass.tex,
17 and add the entry to topics.tex.
18
19 If compiling a separate manual, copy an existing set of files from the
20 wxWindows manual or a contribution. Contribution documentation
21 normally goes in the contrib/docs hierarchy, with the source
22 going in a latex/mycontrib subdirectory.
23
24 You can generate a first pass at the myclass.tex file by
25 compiling and running HelpGen (utils/helpgen).
26
27 Running Tex2RTF
28 ===============
29
30 See the Tex2RTF documentation, but here are some forms:
31
32 For HTML:
33
34 tex2rtf manual.tex manual.htm -html -twice
35
36 Use of -twice allows Tex2RTF to resolve references. Note that
37 if both filenames are given (first two parameters on the command
38 line) then Tex2RTF will run in non-interactive mode.
39
40 For WinHelp RTF:
41
42 tex2rtf manual.tex manual.rtf -winhelp -twice
43
44 For Word RTF:
45
46 tex2rtf manual.tex manual.rtf -rtf -twice
47
48 If you wish to have a GUI display show the status of what is happening
49 as the conversion is happening, use the '-interactive' command line
50 parameter, and then choose FILE|GO from the menu. For example:
51
52 tex2rtf manual.tex manual.rtf -rtf -twice -interactive
53
54 NOTE: You must be using the latest tex2rtf which was released with
55 v2.2.0 of wxWindowsto use the -interactive switch
56
57 If you wish to generate documentation for wxHTML Help Viewer
58 (or Windows HTML Help), set htmlWorkshopFiles to true in your
59 tex2rtf.ini file. See also the wxHTML Notes section in the
60 wxWindows manual. To futher speed-up HTML help books loading
61 in your application, you may use hhp2cached (utils/hhp2cached).
62
63 src/msw/makefile.vc contains targets for generating various
64 formats of documentation. You may like to do something similar if
65 writing your own manual.
66
67 Important Dos and Don'ts
68 ========================
69
70 DO:
71
72 - put a space (or \rtfsp) at the end of a line or start of a line where
73 a command ends or starts the line. Otherwise, spaces will be
74 omitted in Word or WinHelp RTF. For example:
75
76 See \helpref{wxBitmap::wxBitmap}{wxbitmapconstr}\rtfsp
77 for a list of possible values.
78
79 - leave a blank line at the end of the class file. This is
80 important, or the Word RTF table of contents will be messed up.
81
82 - leave a blank line between a heading and the next paragraph.
83
84 - test your changes, preferably converting the manual to WinHelp
85 format and running through the Windows help compiler to check
86 for missing labels, etc.
87
88 DON'T:
89
90 - use jargon, such as 'gonna', or omit the definite article.
91 The manual is intended to be a fluent, English document and
92 not a collection of rough notes.
93
94 - use non-alphanumeric characters in labels.
95
96 - use incompatible Latex syntax, such as {\it \bf word} (use a pair
97 of braces for each formatting command).
98
99 - leave multiple consecutive blank lines, or blank lines between
100 \items in a list.
101
102 Troubleshooting
103 ===============
104
105 Please see the troubleshooting section in the Tex2RTF manual, but
106 here is one important tip:
107
108 If you get a "Macro not found: \end{document}" error,
109 this is a spurious side-effect of an earlier error, usually an
110 incorrect number of arguments to a command. The location of the
111 true error is then anywhere in the document.
112
113 To home in on the error, try putting \begin{comment}...\end{comment}
114 around much of the document, and then move the \begin{comment}
115 line down until the error manifests itself again. Note that
116 you can abort Tex2RTF after the syntax error stage by clicking
117 on the close button, so you don't have to wait while the whole
118 document is processed.
119
120 Before looking at a file in detail, you can comment out the
121 \input{myclass.tex} line in classes.tex using the single
122 line comment character (%) to see whether it was that file that
123 caused the problem.
124
125 Elements in a class file
126 ========================
127
128 Start off with:
129
130 \section{\class{wxMyClass}}\label{wxmyclass}
131
132 (note that labels can only go on sections such as \chapter,
133 \section, \subsection, \membersection, but not on \wxheading, for
134 example.)
135
136 Describe the class briefly.
137
138 Then there are several \wxheading sections:
139
140 \wxheading{Derived from}
141
142 List the base classes, with line breaks following each one (\\)
143 except the last.
144
145 \wxheading{Include files}
146
147 List the relevant include files, for example:
148
149 <wx/myclass.h>
150
151 \wxheading{Predefined objects}
152
153 List any predefined objects, such as:
154
155 {\bf wxNullMyClass}
156
157 \wxheading{See also}
158
159 List any relevant classes or topics, using \helpref.
160
161 \latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}}
162
163 This generates the required heading for the member definitions.
164 Put the constructors first, then in alphabetical order, the other
165 members.
166
167 Here's an example of documentation for a member function:
168
169 --------------------:x-----------------------
170
171 \membersection{wxBitmap::Create}\label{wxbitmapcreate}
172
173 \func{virtual bool}{Create}{\param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ height},
174 \param{int}{ depth = -1}}
175
176 Creates a fresh bitmap. If the final argument is omitted, the display depth of
177 the screen is used.
178
179 \func{virtual bool}{Create}{\param{void*}{ data}, \param{int}{ type},
180 \param{int}{ width}, \param{int}{ height}, \param{int}{ depth = -1}}
181
182 Creates a bitmap from the given data, which can be of arbitrary type.
183
184 \wxheading{Parameters}
185
186 \docparam{width}{The width of the bitmap in pixels.}
187
188 \docparam{height}{The height of the bitmap in pixels.}
189
190 \docparam{depth}{The depth of the bitmap in pixels. If this is -1, the screen depth is used.}
191
192 \docparam{data}{Data whose type depends on the value of {\it type}.}
193
194 \docparam{type}{A bitmap type identifier - see \helpref{wxBitmap::wxBitmap}{wxbitmapconstr} for a list
195 of possible values.}
196
197 \wxheading{Return value}
198
199 TRUE if the call succeeded, FALSE otherwise.
200
201 \wxheading{Remarks}
202
203 The first form works on all platforms. The portability of the second form depends on the
204 type of data.
205
206 \wxheading{See also}
207
208 \helpref{wxBitmap::wxBitmap}{wxbitmapconstr}
209
210 --------------------:x-----------------------
211
212 Note the use of \docparam to document parameters; and the fact
213 that several overloaded forms of the same member function are
214 documented within the same \membersection.
215