X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/12646a5ae2b43a1954c8bd962328268ae564f1f6..93c4157c6cf8603eaba7ebbbc3b1e7bd303d8241:/docs/tech/tn0003.txt?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/docs/tech/tn0003.txt b/docs/tech/tn0003.txt index 7aab63066f..8965f44405 100644 --- a/docs/tech/tn0003.txt +++ b/docs/tech/tn0003.txt @@ -14,7 +14,8 @@ If adding to the existing manual in docs/latex/wx, you need to create a new .tex file, e.g. myclass.tex, and add it to the list of classes in classes.tex (in strict alphabetical order). You may also want to write a separate topic file, e.g. tmyclass.tex, -and add the entry to topics.tex. +and add the entry to topics.tex. Also, if applicable, and an entry +to category.tex. If compiling a separate manual, copy an existing set of files from the wxWindows manual or a contribution. Contribution documentation @@ -45,10 +46,20 @@ For Word RTF: tex2rtf manual.tex manual.rtf -rtf -twice +If you wish to have a GUI display show the status of what is happening +as the conversion is happening, use the '-interactive' command line +parameter, and then choose FILE|GO from the menu. For example: + + tex2rtf manual.tex manual.rtf -rtf -twice -interactive + +NOTE: You must be using the latest tex2rtf which was released with +v2.2.0 of wxWindows to use the -interactive switch + If you wish to generate documentation for wxHTML Help Viewer (or Windows HTML Help), set htmlWorkshopFiles to true in your tex2rtf.ini file. See also the wxHTML Notes section in the -wxWindows manual. +wxWindows manual. To futher speed-up HTML help books loading +in your application, you may use hhp2cached (utils/hhp2cached). src/msw/makefile.vc contains targets for generating various formats of documentation. You may like to do something similar if @@ -75,6 +86,17 @@ DO: format and running through the Windows help compiler to check for missing labels, etc. +- quote all '_' characters with a '\' character (e.g. "MY\_PROGRAM" + unless the '_' is inside a comment or a \begin{verbatim} ... + \end{verbatim} block + +- check that your changes/additions to any TEX documentation + compiles before checking it in! Use the '-checkcurleybrace' + and '-checksyntax' commandline parameters (or the OPTIONS menu + if running in GUI mode) to check for some of the more common + mistakes. See TROUBLESHOOTING below for more details + + DON'T: - use jargon, such as 'gonna', or omit the definite article. @@ -89,13 +111,30 @@ DON'T: - leave multiple consecutive blank lines, or blank lines between \items in a list. +- use \verb$....$ syntax. Instead use \tt{....} syntax + +- add the following tokens anywhere except on a line by themselves: + \begin{verbatim} + \begin{toocomplex} + \end{verbatim} + \end{toocomplex} + \verb + \begin{comment} + \end{comment} + \verbatiminput + \par + \input + \helpinput + \include + + Troubleshooting =============== Please see the troubleshooting section in the Tex2RTF manual, but here is one important tip: - If you get a "Macro not found: \end{document}" error, + If you get a "Macro not found: \end{document}" error, this is a spurious side-effect of an earlier error, usually an incorrect number of arguments to a command. The location of the true error is then anywhere in the document. @@ -112,6 +151,17 @@ here is one important tip: line comment character (%) to see whether it was that file that caused the problem. + When making changes/additions to the documentation, always use + the '-checkcurleybraces' and '-checksyntax' commandline parameters + (or turn these options on in the GUI version via the OPTIONS menu + choice), BEFORE checking in your changes. These two debugging + options will catch many of the more common mistakes that are made + while writing documents, plus they will catch some of the uses + of TeX that are correct syntax-wise, but that tex2rtf cannot + handle properly, and report the problems (usually along with + a filename and line number that they occur in!) in the programs + output window (GUI mode). + Elements in a class file ======================== @@ -203,3 +253,18 @@ Note the use of \docparam to document parameters; and the fact that several overloaded forms of the same member function are documented within the same \membersection. + +Special forms: + +- for a const member function use \constfunc{} instead of \const + +- for a function without parameters use \func{...}{Function}{\void} + +- but do NOT use \void for functions without return value, just "void" + +- for a virtual/static member function use \func{virtual/static ...} + +- omit the return type for constructors: \func{}{MyClass}{...} + +- use \destruct macro for the destructors \func{}{\destruct{MyClass}}{\void} +