Adding wxWidgets class documentation ==================================== This note is aimed at people wishing to add documentation for a class to either the main wxWidgets manual, or to their own manual. wxWidgets uses Doxygen to process header input files with embedded documentation in the form of C++ comments and output in HTML, and XML (Doxygen itself can also output Latex, manpages, RTF, PDF etc). See http://www.doxygen.org for more info about Doxygen. If you want to add documentation of a new class/function to the existing manual in docs/doxygen, you need to create a new .h file, e.g. myclass.h, under the interface folder, which contains the public interface of the new class/function in C++ syntax. The documentation can then be added in form of Doxygen comments to the header file. You may also want to write a separate topic file, e.g. docs/doxygen/overviews/myclass.h, and add the entry to docs/doxygen/mainpages/topics.h. If applicable, also add an entry to one of the docs/doxygen/mainpages/cat_*.h files. You can generate a first raw version of myclass.h simply taking its "real" header and removing all the private and protected sections and in general removing everything the user "shouldn't know": i.e. all things which are implementation details. Running Doxygen =============== First, make sure you have a recent version of Doxygen installed in your system (you'll need Doxygen >= 1.5.7). On Unix: 1) run wxWidgets/docs/doxygen/regen.sh [format-to-generate] On Windows: 1) cd wxWidgets/docs/doxygen 2) run regen.bat [format-to-generate] If you don't specify which format to [re]generate, all output formats will be enabled. Possible values for [format-to-generate] are: "html", "chm", "latex", "xml" and "all". The output of Doxygen is all placed in the wxWidgets/docs/doxygen/out folder. Important Dos and Don'ts ======================== DO: - Doxygen supports both commands in the form \command and @command; all wxWidgets documentation uses the @command form. Follow strictly this rule. - strive to use dedicated Doxygen commands for e.g. notes, lists, sections, etc. The "Special commands" page: http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/commands.html is your friend! It's also very important to make a consistent use of the ALIASES defined by wxWidgets' Doxyfile. Open that file for more info. - when you write true, false and NULL with their C++ semantic meaning, then use the @true, @false and @NULL commands. - separate different paragraphs with an empty comment line. This is important otherwise Doxygen puts everything in the same paragraph making the result less readable. - leave a blank comment line between a @section, @subsection, @page and the next paragraph. - test your changes, both reading the generated HTML docs and by looking at the "doxygen.log" file produced (which will warn you about any eventual mistake found in the comments). - quote all the following characters prefixing them with a "@" char: @ $ \ & < > # % unless they appear inside a @code or @verbatim section (you can also use HTML-style escaping, e.g. & rather than @ escaping) - when using a Doxygen alias like @itemdef{}, you need to escape the comma characters which appear on the first argument, otherwise Doxygen will interpret them as the marker of the end of the first argument and the beginning of the second argument's text. E.g. if you want to define the item "wxEVT_MACRO(id, func)" you need to write: @itemdef{wxEVT_MACRO(id\, func), This is the description of the macro} Also note that you need to escape only the commas of the first argument's text; second argument can have up to 10 commas unescaped (see the Doxyfile for the trick used to implement this). - for linking use one of: => the @ref command to refer to topic overviews; => the () suffix to refer to function members of the same class you're documenting or to refer to global functions or macros; => the classname:: operator to refer to functions of classes different from the one you're documenting; => the :: prefix to refer to global variables (e.g. ::wxEmptyString). Class names are auto-linked by Doxygen without the need of any explicit command. DON'T: - use jargon, such as 'gonna', or omit the definite article. The manual is intended to be a fluent, English document and not a collection of rough notes. - use non-alphanumeric characters in link anchors. - use Doxygen @b @c @e commands when referring to more than a single word; in that case you need to use the ..., ..., ... HTML-style tags instead - use HTML style tags for creation of tables or lists. Use wx aliases instead like @beginTable, @row2col, @row3col, @endTable and @beginDefList, @itemdef, @endDefList, etc. See the Doxyfile.inc for more info. Documentation comment for a class ================================= Start off with: /** @class wxMyClass ...here goes the description... @beginEventTable @event{EVT_SOME_EVENT(id, func)}: Description for EVT_SOME_EVENT. @endEventTable @beginStyleTable @style{wxSOME_STYLE}: Description for wxSOME_STYLE. ... @endStyleTable @beginExtraStyleTable @style{wxSOME_EXTRA_STYLE}: Description for wxSOME_EXTRA_STYLE. ... @endExtraStyleTable @library{wxbase} @category{cat_shortcut} @nativeimpl{wxgtk, wxmsw, ...} @onlyfor{wxgtk, wxmsw, ...} @appearance{button.png} @stdobjects ...here goes the list of predefined instances... @see ...here goes the see-also list... you can make references to topic overviews or other manual pages using the @ref command */ Note that everything *except* the @class, @library and @category commands are optionals. Also note that if you use @section and @subsection in the class description (at the beginning), you should use as the section's anchor name "xxxx_yyyy" where "xxxx" is the class name without the initial "wx" in lowercase and "yyyy" is a lowercase word which uniquely identifies that section. E.g.: /** @class wxMyClass This class does not exist really and is only used as an example of best documentation practices. @section myclass_special Special functions of this class This section describes the functions whose usage is reserved for wxWidgets internal mechanisms... etc etc... @section myclass_custom Customizing wxMyClass What if you want to customize this powerful class? First you should do this and that, etc etc... @library{wxbase} @category{misc} @see wxMyOtherClass */ Documentation comment for a function ==================================== Start off with: /** ...here goes the description of the function.... @param param1 ...here goes the description for the first parameter of this function @param param2 ...here goes the description for the second parameter of this function ... @return ...here goes the description of what the function returns... @note ...here go any eventual notes about this function... @remarks ...here go any eventual remarks about this function... @see ...here goes the see-also list... */ Note that the @return, @note, @remarks, @see commands are optional. The @param command has an optional attribute specifying the direction of the attribute. Possible values are "in" and "out". E.g. /** * Copies bytes from a source memory area to a destination memory area, * where both areas may not overlap. * @param[out] dest The memory area to copy to. * @param[in] src The memory area to copy from. * @param[in] n The number of bytes to copy. * @param[in,out] pmisc Used both as input and as output. */ void func(void *dest, const void *src, size_t n, void *pmisc); Documentation comment for a topic overview ========================================== Topic overviews are stored inside the docs/doxygen/overviews folder and are completely placed inside a single comment block in the form of: /*! @page overview_tname wxSomeStuff overview This page provides an overview of the wxSomeStuff and related classes. .... @li @ref overview_tname_intro @li @ref overview_tname_details ...