diff options
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | src/doxy/formatting.dox | 35 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/doxy/groups.dox | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/doxy/main.dox | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/doxy/streams.dox | 13 |
4 files changed, 47 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/src/doxy/formatting.dox b/src/doxy/formatting.dox new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7b440cb --- /dev/null +++ b/src/doxy/formatting.dox | |||
@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ | |||
1 | /* | ||
2 | * Copyright (C) 2007-2008 Xagasoft, All rights reserved. | ||
3 | * | ||
4 | * This file is part of the libbu++ library and is released under the | ||
5 | * terms of the license contained in the file LICENSE. | ||
6 | */ | ||
7 | |||
8 | /** | ||
9 | *@page howto_formatting Formatting data for streams and the console. | ||
10 | * | ||
11 | * Libbu++ provides a powerful and flexible interface for writing formatted | ||
12 | * data easily to any Stream. This is implemented as a seperate set of | ||
13 | * classes from the basic Stream system in order to simplify both systems and | ||
14 | * provide additional flexibility and organization. | ||
15 | * | ||
16 | *@section secBasics The Basics: Writing to the console (standard i/o) | ||
17 | * Libbu++ provides the global variable Bu::sio already instantiated and ready | ||
18 | * to be used to access the standard input and output via the Bu::Formatter | ||
19 | * class. If you are familiar with the STL cout then you're practically done. | ||
20 | * A quick example may be best. | ||
21 | *@code | ||
22 | #include <bu/sio.h> | ||
23 | using namespace Bu; | ||
24 | |||
25 | int main() | ||
26 | { | ||
27 | int i = 47; | ||
28 | |||
29 | sio << "Hello, world." << sio.nl | ||
30 | << "Here is a number: " << i << sio.nl; | ||
31 | |||
32 | return 0; | ||
33 | } | ||
34 | @endcode | ||
35 | */ | ||
diff --git a/src/doxy/groups.dox b/src/doxy/groups.dox index 9b54950..285923c 100644 --- a/src/doxy/groups.dox +++ b/src/doxy/groups.dox | |||
@@ -6,26 +6,26 @@ | |||
6 | */ | 6 | */ |
7 | 7 | ||
8 | /** | 8 | /** |
9 | *@defgroup Threading | 9 | *@defgroup Threading Threading |
10 | * Threads are awesome. | 10 | * Threads are awesome. |
11 | */ | 11 | */ |
12 | 12 | ||
13 | /** | 13 | /** |
14 | *@defgroup Serving | 14 | *@defgroup Serving Serving |
15 | * Serving data is pretty cool too. | 15 | * Serving data is pretty cool too. |
16 | */ | 16 | */ |
17 | 17 | ||
18 | /** | 18 | /** |
19 | *@defgroup Containers | 19 | *@defgroup Containers Containers |
20 | * Containers for data. | 20 | * Containers for data. |
21 | */ | 21 | */ |
22 | 22 | ||
23 | /** | 23 | /** |
24 | *@defgroup Taf | 24 | *@defgroup Taf Taf |
25 | * Taf is the best! | 25 | * Taf is the best! |
26 | */ | 26 | */ |
27 | 27 | ||
28 | /** | 28 | /** |
29 | *@defgroup Streams | 29 | *@defgroup Streams Streams |
30 | * Streams are for data. | 30 | * Streams are for data. |
31 | */ | 31 | */ |
diff --git a/src/doxy/main.dox b/src/doxy/main.dox index 6030f0c..5e822e1 100644 --- a/src/doxy/main.dox +++ b/src/doxy/main.dox | |||
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@ | |||
18 | * comprehensive guides and API reference, but doesn't yet. For now check out | 18 | * comprehensive guides and API reference, but doesn't yet. For now check out |
19 | * these sections: | 19 | * these sections: |
20 | * - @ref howto_streams | 20 | * - @ref howto_streams |
21 | * - @ref howto_formatting | ||
21 | * - @ref howto_archives | 22 | * - @ref howto_archives |
22 | * - @ref howto_threading | 23 | * - @ref howto_threading |
23 | * - @ref howto_servers | 24 | * - @ref howto_servers |
diff --git a/src/doxy/streams.dox b/src/doxy/streams.dox index 8217210..9655743 100644 --- a/src/doxy/streams.dox +++ b/src/doxy/streams.dox | |||
@@ -44,11 +44,10 @@ | |||
44 | * data. | 44 | * data. |
45 | * | 45 | * |
46 | *@section difference How are libbu++ streams different form stl streams? | 46 | *@section difference How are libbu++ streams different form stl streams? |
47 | * While not globally true, many stl streams are designed for formatting the | 47 | * The most basic difference is that libbu++ streams are geared more towards a |
48 | * data that flows through the stream, that means that when you attempt to | 48 | * lower level feel, giving you easy and more direct access to many features, |
49 | * write a uint32_t into a standard stream it can be difficult to predict what | 49 | * while seperating all of the formatting code used for console I/O and number |
50 | * the result will be, will it be the binary representation or a textual | 50 | * to text conversion, etc, in a seperate place. |
51 | * conversion? | ||
52 | * | 51 | * |
53 | * Libbu++ streams are very direct about how the data is handled. All end-point | 52 | * Libbu++ streams are very direct about how the data is handled. All end-point |
54 | * streams will always handle the data that you provide or request without any | 53 | * streams will always handle the data that you provide or request without any |
@@ -59,8 +58,8 @@ | |||
59 | * easy as possible to write general code that was as easy as possible to | 58 | * easy as possible to write general code that was as easy as possible to |
60 | * extend, and as clear as possible. We have accomplished this by making | 59 | * extend, and as clear as possible. We have accomplished this by making |
61 | * streams simple, yet flexible, with a clear API and a flexible filter system | 60 | * streams simple, yet flexible, with a clear API and a flexible filter system |
62 | * that something geared towards more general formatting, conversion, and | 61 | * that something geared towards more general formatting, conversion can't |
63 | * operator-only access can't touch. | 62 | * touch. |
64 | * | 63 | * |
65 | *@section usage Using streams directly | 64 | *@section usage Using streams directly |
66 | * To create a stream depends on the type of stream that you're interested in, | 65 | * To create a stream depends on the type of stream that you're interested in, |