structures to and from YAML using traits. The first client will
be the test suite of lld. The documentation will show up at:
http://llvm.org/docs/YamlIO.html
llvm-svn: 170019
Since now we have an autogenerated TOC, a manually written table of all passes
was removed.
Patch by Anthony Mykhailenko with small fixes by me.
llvm-svn: 169867
NOTE: If you have any patches in the works that modify LangRef, you will
need to rewrite the changes to LangRef.html to their equivalents in
LangRef.rst. If you need assistance feel free to contact me.
Since LangRef is mission-critical for the project and "normative", I
have taken extra care to ensure that no content was lost or altered in
the conversion. The content was converted with a tool called `pandoc`,
so there is no chance for a human error like accidentally forgetting a
sentence or whatever. After the initial conversion by `pandoc`, only
changes to the markup were done.
This is just the most literal conversion of the HTML document as
possible. It might be worth exploring some way to chop up this massive
document into separate pages, e.g. something like
`docs/LangRef/Instructions.rst`, `docs/LangRef/Intrinsics.rst`, etc.
with `docs/LangRef.rst` being an "intro/navigation page" of sorts. On
the other hand, that loses the ability to {Ctrl,Cmd}-F for a given term
right from your browser.
IMO, I think our stylesheet needs some work because I find it hard to
tell what level of nesting some of the headings are at (e.g. "is this a
new section or is it a subsection?"). The issue is present on other
pages, but the sheer size and deep section structure of LangRef really
brings this issue out. If there are any web designers out there in the
community it would be awesome if you tried to come up with something
nicer.
llvm-svn: 169596
Sorry for the massive commit, but I just wanted to knock this one down
and it is really straightforward.
There are still a couple trivial (i.e. not related to the content)
things left to fix:
- Use of raw HTML links where :doc:`...` and :ref:`...` could be used
instead. If you are a newbie and want to help fix this it would make
for some good bite-sized patches; more experienced developers should
be focusing on adding new content (to this tutorial or elsewhere, but
please _do not_ waste your time on formatting when there is such dire
need for documentation (see docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst to get
started writing)).
- Highlighting of the kaleidoscope code blocks (currently left as bare
`::`). I will be working on writing a custom Pygments highlighter for
this, mostly as training for maintaining the `llvm` code-block's lexer
in-tree. I want to do this because I am extremely unhappy with how it
just "gives up" on the slightest deviation from the expected syntax
and leaves the whole code-block un-highlighted.
More generally I am looking at writing some Sphinx extensions and
keeping them in-tree as well, to support common use cases that
currently have no good solution (like "monospace text inside a link").
llvm-svn: 169343