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README
Developers documentation ------------------------ The goal is to provide useful source documentation. Right now this is limited to libgimp since that is the part that is by third-party coders (plug-in developers). Other parts of the code may follow later, but not before libgimp is properly documented. Principle --------- The documentation is extracted out of the source using gtk-doc. We use a combination of comment blocks embedded into the source and additional information added manually into the SGML files. It is planned to extract useful inforamtion about the PDB wrappers out of the PDB (probably using pdbgen). Requirements ------------ GIMP releases will contain a complete set of HTML files and the SGML files to create other formats. You will only need gtk-doc if you want to work on the documentation itself. In that case you will need the following utilities: Perl v5 - the main scripts are in Perl. DocBook DTD v3.0 - This is the DocBook SGML DTD. http://www.ora.com/davenport Jade v1.1 - This is a DSSSL processor for converting SGML to various formats. http://www.jclark.com/jade Modular DocBook Stylesheets (v1.19+ should be OK) This is the DSSSL code to convert DocBook to HTML (and a few other formats). It's used together with jade. http://nwalsh.com/docbook/dsssl gtk-doc - This package automatically generates DocBook documentation for GTK+ and converts the DocBook documentation into HTML (and man pages in future). http://www.gtk.org/rdp/download.html HOWTO ----- Carefully read the README that comes with gtk-doc. Then read it again! The following lines will only give you hints about how our system works. You should have understood the principles of gtk-doc before you touch it. The system is already set up so unless there are substantial changes to the source e.g. new files were added, functions were added, renamed or removed or parameters changed, there is no need to repeat the scan step or rebuild the templates. The Makefile will only work if gtk-doc was successfully found when configure was ran. To rerun the scan step you also need to have gimp installed (the version you are documenting) and the correct version of gimptool should be found in your PATH. If everything was set up correctly running a simple make should do the trick and generate the SGML and HTML files for you. In most cases you will work on the documentation by adding or editing comment blocks in the C source and by editing the template SGML files in the tmpl dir. The following steps should rebuild the documentation after a change: make sgml - Creates the SGML files from the templates found in the tmpl dir and from the comment blocks found in the source. make html - Build HTML pages out of the SGML files. If the source was changed (real changes as described above), you will need to perform the following two steps before you can rebuild the sgml and html files: make scan - Scans the header files and builds and runs a binary that asks the GtkObjects to describe themselves. That way the hierarchy of widgets, arguments and signals are determined. If you have added new objects, you will have to update the MODULE.types files accordingly before you perform this step. make templates - Merges the changes into the templates. This will output warnings about any declarations which have been added/removed. Update the MODULE-sections.txt to include the new functions etc. in the appropriate sections, and delete ones which are no longer available. Run "make templates" again until there are no warnings output. More information ---------------- Using the system as described above, you can write documentation without any knowledge of SGML and DocBook, but when editing the templates you will sometimes want to do a little extra structuring or markup. The best source for information about DocBook seems to be "DocBook: The Definitive Guide" which is available online at http://www.docbook.org/tdg/html/.