
Thanks for the response. Are you going to submit this as a boost tool? I am not extremely familiar with the whole documentation generation aspect of boost, so I am not sure how this would fit in. If you are planning to submit this, I suggest you: * Pay careful attention to anyone who responds to this mail who knows more about how the doc gen stuff works * "Go the last mile"- i.e. do whatever extra work needed to fully integrate this tool based on the feedback and thoughts you get (i.e. don't expect someone to do it for you) Maybe if you ran doxygen on boost, and then ran your tool on that and put it up on a web server somewhere, you could post a link here and people could see "the big picture". hope that helps in some way Brian :)
-----Original Message----- From: boost-bounces@lists.boost.org [mailto:boost-bounces@lists.boost.org] On Behalf Of Narech Koumar Sent: Thursday, June 09, 2005 1:57 PM To: boost@lists.boost.org Subject: Re: [boost] [Ann]: Dox - a C++ documentation tool
Hi,
disadvantage: long emails trying to decide which theme to standardize on (grin)
:)
Advantage- looks cleaner than doxygen.
Glad you like it!
QUESTION:
What tools do you depend on for the program to work? I.e. tcl, perl
etc.
What are the external dependancies?
The only external dependency is Doxygen, which is included within the distros. Naturally, under unix you need a shell (ie bash), under NT cmd.exe . Finally a web browser is required in order to be able to read the generated docs :) . That's all.
Sincerely,
- NK _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe & other changes: http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost