Doxygen
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Markdown support was introduced in doxygen version 1.8.0. It is a plain text formatting syntax written by John Gruber, with the following underlying design goal:
The design goal for Markdown's formatting syntax is to make it as readable as possible. The idea is that a Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain text, without looking like it's been marked up with tags or formatting instructions. While Markdown's syntax has been influenced by several existing text-to-HTML filters, the single biggest source of inspiration for Markdown's syntax is the format of plain text email.
In the next section the standard Markdown features are briefly discussed. The reader is referred to the Markdown site for more details.
Some enhancements were made, for instance PHP Markdown Extra, and GitHub flavored Markdown. The section Markdown Extensions discusses the extensions that doxygen supports.
Finally section Doxygen specifics discusses some specifics for doxygen's implementation of the Markdown standard.
Even before doxygen had Markdown support it supported the same way of paragraph handling as Markdown: to make a paragraph you just separate consecutive lines of text by one or more blank lines.
An example:
Here is text for one paragraph. We continue with more text in another paragraph.
Just like Markdown, doxygen supports two types of headers
Level 1 or 2 headers can be made as the follows
This is a level 1 header ======================== This is a level 2 header ------------------------
A header is followed by a line containing only ='s or -'s. Note that the exact amount of ='s or -'s is not important as long as there are at least two.
Alternatively, you can use #'s at the start of a line to make a header. The number of #'s at the start of the line determines the level (up to 6 levels are supported). You can end a header by any number of #'s.
Here is an example:
# This is a level 1 header ### This is level 3 header #######
Block quotes can be created by starting each line with one or more >'s, similar to what is used in text-only emails.
> This is a block quote > spanning multiple lines
Lists and code blocks (see below) can appear inside a quote block. Quote blocks can also be nested.
Note that doxygen requires that you put a space after the (last) > character to avoid false positives, i.e. when writing
0 if OK\n >1 if NOK
the second line will not be seen as a block quote.
Simple bullet lists can be made by starting a line with -, +, or *.
- Item 1 More text for this item. - Item 2 + nested list item. + another nested item. - Item 3
List items can span multiple paragraphs (if each paragraph starts with the proper indentation) and lists can be nested. You can also make a numbered list like so
1. First item. 2. Second item.
Make sure to also read Lists Extensions for doxygen specifics.
Preformatted verbatim blocks can be created by indenting each line in a block of text by at least 4 extra spaces
This a normal paragraph This is a code block We continue with a normal paragraph again.
Doxygen will remove the mandatory indentation from the code block. Note that you cannot start a code block in the middle of a paragraph (i.e. the line preceding the code block must be empty).
See section Code Block Indentation for more info how doxygen handles indentation as this is slightly different than standard Markdown.
A horizontal ruler will be produced for lines containing at least three or more hyphens, asterisks, or underscores. The line may also include any amount of whitespace.
Examples:
- - - ______
Note that using asterisks in comment blocks does not work. See Use of asterisks for details.
To emphasize a text fragment you start and end the fragment with an underscore or star. Using two stars or underscores will produce strong emphasis.
Examples:
single asterisks* _single underscores_ double asterisks** __double underscores__
See section Emphasis limits for more info how doxygen handles emphasis spans slightly different than standard Markdown.
To indicate a span of code, you should wrap it in backticks (`). Unlike code blocks, code spans appear inline in a paragraph. An example:
Use the `printf()` function.
To show a literal backtick inside a code span use double backticks, i.e.
To assign the output of command `ls` to `var` use ``var=`ls```.
See section Code Spans Limits for more info how doxygen handles code spans slightly different than standard Markdown.
Doxygen supports both styles of make links defined by Markdown: inline and reference.
For both styles the link definition starts with the link text delimited by [square brackets].
For an inline link the link text is followed by a URL and an optional link title which together are enclosed in a set of regular parenthesis. The link title itself is surrounded by quotes.
Examples:
[The link text](http://example.net/) [The link text](http://example.net/ "Link title") [The link text](/relative/path/to/index.html "Link title") [The link text](somefile.html)
In addition doxygen provides a similar way to link a documented entity:
[The link text](@ref MyClass)
Instead of putting the URL inline, you can also define the link separately and then refer to it from within the text.
The link definition looks as follows:
[link name]: http://www.example.com "Optional title"
Instead of double quotes also single quotes or parenthesis can be used for the title part.
Once defined, the link looks as follows
[link text][link name]
If the link text and name are the same, also
[link name][]
or even
[link name]
can be used to refer to the link. Note that the link name matching is not case sensitive as is shown in the following example:
I get 10 times more traffic from [Google] than from [Yahoo] or [MSN]. [google]: http://google.com/ "Google" [yahoo]: http://search.yahoo.com/ "Yahoo Search" [msn]: http://search.msn.com/ "MSN Search"
Link definitions will not be visible in the output.
Like for inline links doxygen also supports @ref inside a link definition:
[myclass]: @ref MyClass "My class"
Markdown syntax for images is similar to that for links. The only difference is an additional ! before the link text.
Examples:
![Caption text](/path/to/img.jpg) ![Caption text](/path/to/img.jpg "Image title") ![Caption text][img def] ![img def] [img def]: /path/to/img.jpg "Optional Title"
Also here you can use @ref to link to an image:
![Caption text](@ref image.png) ![img def] [img def]: @ref image.png "Caption text"
The caption text is optional.
To create a link to an URL or e-mail address Markdown supports the following syntax:
<http://www.example.com> <https://www.example.com> <ftp://www.example.com> <mailto:address@example.com> <address@example.com>
Note that doxygen will also produce the links without the angle brackets.
Doxygen supports a special link marker [TOC]
which can be placed in a page to produce a table of contents at the start of the page, listing all sections.
Note that using [TOC]
is the same as using a \tableofcontents command.
Of the features defined by "Markdown Extra" is support for simple tables:
A table consists of a header line, a separator line, and at least one row line. Table columns are separated by the pipe (|) character.
Here is an example:
First Header | Second Header ------------- | ------------- Content Cell | Content Cell Content Cell | Content Cell
which will produce the following table:
First Header | Second Header |
---|---|
Content Cell | Content Cell |
Content Cell | Content Cell |
Column alignment can be controlled via one or two colons at the header separator line:
| Right | Center | Left | | ----: | :----: | :---- | | 10 | 10 | 10 | | 1000 | 1000 | 1000 |
which will look as follows:
Right | Center | Left |
---|---|---|
10 | 10 | 10 |
1000 | 1000 | 1000 |
For more complex tables in doxygen please have a look at: Including tables
Another feature defined by "Markdown Extra" is support for fenced code blocks:
A fenced code block does not require indentation, and is defined by a pair of "fence lines". Such a line consists of 3 or more tilde (~) characters on a line. The end of the block should have the same number of tildes. Here is an example:
This is a paragraph introducing: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a one-line code block ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By default the output is the same as for a normal code block.
For languages supported by doxygen you can also make the code block appear with syntax highlighting. To do so you need to indicate the typical file extension that corresponds to the programming language after the opening fence. For highlighting according to the Python language for instance, you would need to write the following:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~{.py} # A class class Dummy: pass ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
which will produce:
and for C you would write:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~{.c} int func(int a,int b) { return a*b; } ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
which will produce:
The curly braces and dot are optional by the way.
Another way to denote fenced code blocks is to use 3 or more backticks (```):
``` also a fenced code block ```
Standard Markdown has no support for labeling headers, which is a problem if you want to link to a section.
PHP Markdown Extra allows you to label a header by adding the following to the header
Header 1 {#labelid} ======== ## Header 2 ## {#labelid2}
To link to a section in the same comment block you can use
[Link text](#labelid)
to link to a section in general, doxygen allows you to use @ref
[Link text](@ref labelid)
Note this only works for the headers of level 1 to 4.
Even though doxygen tries to following the Markdown standard as closely as possible, there are couple of deviation and doxygen specifics additions.
Doxygen can process files with Markdown formatting. For this to work the extension for such a file should be .md
or .markdown
(see EXTENSION_MAPPING if your Markdown files have a different extension, and use md
as the name of the parser). Each file is converted to a page (see the page command for details).
By default the name and title of the page are derived from the file name. If the file starts with a level 1 header however, it is used as the title of the page. If you specify a label for the header (as shown in Header Id Attributes) doxygen will use that as the page name.
If the label is called index
or mainpage
doxygen will put the documentation on the front page (index.html
).
Here is an example of a file README.md
that will appear as the main page when processed by doxygen:
My Main Page {#mainpage} ============ Documentation that will appear on the main page
If a page has a label you can link to it using @ref as is shown above. To refer to a markdown page without such label you can simple use the file name of the page, e.g.
See [the other page](other.md) for more info.
Markdown is quite strict in the way it processes block-level HTML:
block-level HTML elements — e.g.
<div>
,<table>
,<pre>
,<p>
, etc. — must be separated from surrounding content by blank lines, and the start and end tags of the block should not be indented with tabs or spaces.
Doxygen does not have this requirement, and will also process Markdown formatting inside such HTML blocks. The only exception is <pre>
blocks, which are passed untouched (handy for ASCII art).
Doxygen will not process Markdown formatting inside verbatim or code blocks, and in other sections that need to be processed without changes (for instance formulas or inline dot graphs).
Markdown allows both a single tab or 4 spaces to start a code block. Since doxygen already replaces tabs by spaces before doing Markdown processing, the effect will only be same if TAB_SIZE in the config file has been set to 4. When it is set to a higher value spaces will be present in the code block. A lower value will prevent a single tab to be interpreted as the start of a code block.
With Markdown any block that is indented by 4 spaces (and 8 spaces inside lists) is treated as a code block. This indentation amount is absolute, i.e. counting from the start of the line.
Since doxygen comments can appear at any indentation level that is required by the programming language, it uses a relative indentation instead. The amount of indentation is counted relative to the preceding paragraph. In case there is no preceding paragraph (i.e. you want to start with a code block), the minimal amount of indentation of the whole comment block is used as a reference.
In most cases this difference does not result in different output. Only if you play with the indentation of paragraphs the difference is noticeable:
text text text code
In this case Markdown will put the word code in a code block, whereas doxygen will treat it as normal text, since although the absolute indentation is 4, the indentation with respect to the previous paragraph is only 1.
Note that list markers are not counted when determining the relative indent:
1. Item1 More text for item1 2. Item2 Code block for item2
For Item1 the indentation is 4 (when treating the list marker as whitespace), so the next paragraph "More text..." starts at the same indentation level and is therefore not seen as a code block.
Unlike standard Markdown, doxygen will not touch internal underscores or stars, so the following will appear as-is:
a_nice_identifier
Furthermore, a *
or _
only starts an emphasis if
<{([,:;
An emphasis ends if
({[<=+-\@
Lastly, the span of the emphasis is limited to a single paragraph.
Note that unlike standard Markdown, doxygen leaves the following untouched.
A `cool' word in a `nice' sentence.
In other words; a single quote cancels the special treatment of a code span wrapped in a pair of backtick characters. This extra restriction was added for backward compatibility reasons.
With Markdown two lists separated by an empty line are joined together into a single list which can be rather unexpected and many people consider it to be a bug. Doxygen, however, will make two separate lists as you would expect.
Example:
- Item1 of list 1 - Item2 of list 1 1. Item1 of list 2 2. Item2 of list 2
With Markdown the actual numbers you use to mark the list have no effect on the HTML output Markdown produces. I.e. standard Markdown treats the following as one list with 3 numbered items:
1. Item1 1. Item2 1. Item3
Doxygen however requires that the numbers used as marks are in strictly ascending order, so the above example would produce 3 lists with one item. An item with an equal or lower number than the preceding item, will start a new list. For example:
1. Item1 of list 1 3. Item2 of list 1 2. Item1 of list 2 4. Item2 of list 2
will produce:
Historically doxygen has an additional way to create numbered lists by using -#
markers:
-# item1 -# item2
Special care has to be taken when using *'s in a comment block to start a list or make a ruler.
Doxygen will strip off any leading *'s from the comment before doing Markdown processing. So although the following works fine
/** A list: * * item1 * * item2 */
When you remove the leading *'s doxygen will strip the other stars as well, making the list disappear!
Rulers created with *'s will not be visible at all. They only work in Markdown files.
To avoid that a stray * or _ matches something many paragraphs later, and shows everything in between with emphasis, doxygen limits the scope of a * and _ to a single paragraph.
For a code span, between the starting and ending backtick only two new lines are allowed.
Also for links there are limits; the link text, and link title each can contain only one new line, the URL may not contain any newlines.
When doxygen parses the source code it first extracts the comments blocks, then passes these through the Markdown preprocessor. The output of the Markdown preprocessing consists of text with special commands and HTML commands. A second pass takes the output of the Markdown preprocessor and converts it into the various output formats.
During Markdown preprocessing no errors are produced. Anything that does not fit the Markdown syntax is simply passed on as-is. In the subsequent parsing phase this could lead to errors, which may not always be obvious as they are based on the intermediate format.
To see the result after Markdown processing you can run doxygen with the -d Markdown
option. It will then print each comment block before and after Markdown processing.