Workshop o mikrokontrolérech na SKSP 2024.
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The documentation system
========================
////
Warning: if you read this file in plain-text, keep in mind the markup
had to be escaped to show in the result as the thing you should type.
You should ignore all backslashes here, or better, read the html
version.
////
The ucw documentation system is based on the
http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/[ASCIIDOC] documentation formatter.
It supports all it's markup, but it was extended slightly.
- <<markup,Markup extensions>>
* <<xrefs,Cross referencing>>
* <<symbols,Symbol formatting>>
- <<extract,Header extraction>>
* <<scomm,Stand-alone comments>>
* <<defcomm,Definition comments>>
- <<generics,Macro generics>>
* <<geext,Generics extraction>>
* <<gelink,Links to generics>>
[[markup]]
Markup extensions
-----------------
[[xrefs]]
Cross referencing
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ASCIIDOC supports creating anchors with `\[[anchor-name]]` and links
to them with `\<<anchor,caption>>`. The extension supports links to
anchor in other files (`\\<<filename:anchor,caption>>`) or to other
files (`\\<<filename:,caption>>`). The `filename` is without any suffix
like `.txt` or `.html`, it is added to the link automatically. The caption
is optional, if you omit it, some reasonable one will be guessed from
the anchor name.
The links support linking to function descriptions (the anchors for
them are generated automatically by <<extract,header extraction>>).
Just write `\<<function(),caption>>` or
`\\<<filename:function(),caption>>`.
[[symbols]]
Symbol formatting
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you talk about function parameter, prefix its name with `@`. It
will be typeset in monospace italic font to mark it visually, like
this: @parameter.
If a word is suffixed by parenthesis without a space (eg. word()), it
is considered to be a function name and is typeset in monospace font.
You can prefix a function name by `@`, which makes it a link to that
function (`\@function()` is equivalent to `\<<function()>>`).
If you write NULL anywhere, it is recognized and typeset in monospace.
[[extract]]
Header extraction
-----------------
Line starting with two exclamation marks, followed by a filename, is a
command to process source file. Special comments and commented
declarations are extracted and included in the place of the command.
The command looks like this:
!!filename
[[scomm]]
Stand-alone comments
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
C comments with tripled asterisks are extracted, the left side
asterisk decoration is removed and the rest is put trough verbatim.
Single-line version looks like
/*** This will be put into documentation. ***/
If you need more than one line, use the same type of comment.
/***
* This is part of documentation too.
* But the asterisks on the left side aren't.
***/
[[defcomm]]
Definition comments
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can write comments documenting specific definition. Definition
comment has the asterisks doubled. The multi-line version must be
directly above the definition, the single-line on the same line right
of the definition or on a line before.
void function(int parameter); /** This is a function. **/
or
/** This is a function. **/
void function(int parameter);
or
/**
* This is a complicated function.
* It takes multiple lines to describe how useful it is.
**/
void function(int parameter);
Each such commented definition is taken and formatted, with the
description attached. It also generates an anchor for the symbol name.
The anchors look like `symboltype_symbolname`. The symbol types are
these:
- `fun` for functions
- `def` for preprocessor macro
- `var` for variable
- `struct` for structure
- `enum` for enumeration
- `type` for a type definition
There is a support for building a page with list of all symbols with
links to them. Look into `ucw/doc/Makefile` to see how to request that.
[[generics]]
Support for macro generics
--------------------------
Some of the headers contain <<generic:,macro generics>>. Since the
preprocessor macros look somewhat weird, the documentation extractor
needs some help to understand them.
[[geext]]
Extraction of generics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When extracting info from some header, the extractor needs to know,
which prefix macros are used in the source file, to distinguish them
from function calls. To inform it about them, append a comma separated
list of such macros to the extraction command, like this:
!!filename PREFIX_MACRO_ONE,PREFIX_MACRO_TWO
Then this will be correctly identified as a structure:
struct PREFIX_MACRO_ONE(struct_name) {
content;
};
[[gelink]]
Links to generics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Since the anchors for them are generated in a complicated manner and
typing them in plain-text would convert them back to the original,
with real parenthesis, there is a special pattern to create the
symbolname part of the anchor. It looks like:
_GENERIC_LINK_|PREFIX_MACRO|symbol_name|
So link to the above structure would look like:
<<struct__GENERIC_LINK_|PREFIX_MACRO_ONE|struct_name|,link text>>
However, this is implemented only in the included header files (if it
is needed, it will be implemented in the top-level documentation files
too).