Doxygen
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Doxygen provides a large number of special commands, XML commands, and HTML commands. that can be used to enhance or structure the documentation inside a comment block. If you for some reason have a need to define new commands you can do so by means of an alias definition.
The definition of an alias should be specified in the configuration file using the ALIASES configuration tag.
The simplest form of an alias is a simple substitution of the form
name=value
For example defining the following alias:
ALIASES += sideeffect="\par Side Effects:^^"
will allow you to put the command \sideeffect
(or @sideeffect
) in the documentation, which will result in a user-defined paragraph with heading Side Effects:.
Note that you cannot put \n
's in the value part of an alias to insert newlines (in the resulting output). You can put ^^
in the value part of an alias to insert a newline as if a physical newline was in the original file.
Note when you need a literal {
or }
or ,
in the value part of an alias you have to escape them by means of a backslash (\
), this can lead to conflicts with the commands \{
and \}
for these it is advised to use the version @{
and @}
or use a double escape (\\{
and \\}
)
Also note that you can redefine existing special commands if you wish.
Some commands, such as \xrefitem are designed to be used in combination with aliases.
Aliases can also have one or more arguments. In the alias definition you then need to specify the number of arguments between curly braces. In the value part of the definition you can place \x
markers, where 'x
' represents the argument number starting with 1.
Here is an example of an alias definition with a single argument:
ALIASES += l{1}="\ref \1"
Inside a comment block you can use it as follows
/** See \l{SomeClass} for more information. */
which would be the same as writing
/** See \ref SomeClass for more information. */
Note that you can overload an alias by a version with multiple arguments, for instance:
ALIASES += l{1}="\ref \1" ALIASES += l{2}="\ref \1 \"\2\""
Note that the quotes inside the alias definition have to be escaped with a backslash.
With these alias definitions, we can write
/** See \l{SomeClass,Some Text} for more information. */
inside the comment block and it will expand to
/** See \ref SomeClass "Some Text" for more information. */
where the command with a single argument would still work as shown before.
Aliases can also be expressed in terms of other aliases, e.g. a new command \reminder
can be expressed as a \xrefitem via an intermediate \xreflist
command as follows:
ALIASES += xreflist{3}="\xrefitem \1 \"\2\" \"\3\" " ALIASES += reminder="\xreflist{reminders,Reminder,Reminders}"
Note that if for aliases with more than one argument a comma is used as a separator, if you want to put a comma inside the command, you will need to escape it with a backslash, i.e.
\l{SomeClass,Some text\, with an escaped comma}
given the alias definition of \l
in the example above.
You can use commands as arguments of aliases, including commands defined using aliases.
As an example consider the following alias definitions
ALIASES += Bold{1}="<b>\1</b>" ALIASES += Emph{1}="<em>\1</em>"
Inside a comment block you can now use:
/** This is a \Bold{bold \Emph{and} Emphasized} text fragment. */
which will expand to
/** This is a <b>bold <em>and</em> Emphasized</b> text fragment. */