SUMMARY="Generate documentation from source code" DESCRIPTION=" Doxygen is the de facto standard tool for generating documentation from \ annotated C++ sources, but it also supports other popular programming \ languages such as C, Objective-C, C#, PHP, Java, Python, IDL (Corba and \ Microsoft flavors), Fortran, VHDL, Tcl, and to some extent D. Doxygen can help you in three ways: 1. It can generate an on-line documentation browser (in HTML) and/or an \ off-line reference manual (in $\mbox{\LaTeX}$) from a set of documented source \ files. There is also support for generating output in RTF (MS-Word), \ PostScript, hyperlinked PDF, compressed HTML, and Unix man pages. The \ documentation is extracted directly from the sources, which makes it much \ easier to keep the documentation consistent with the source code. 2. You can configure doxygen to extract the code structure from undocumented \ source files. This is very useful to quickly find your way in large source \ distributions. Doxygen can also visualize the relations between the various \ elements by means of include dependency graphs, inheritance diagrams, and \ collaboration diagrams, which are all generated automatically. 3. You can also use doxygen for creating normal documentation (as I did for \ the doxygen user manual and web-site). " HOMEPAGE="http://www.doxygen.org" SRC_URI="http://ftp.stack.nl/pub/users/dimitri/doxygen-1.7.4.src.tar.gz" CHECKSUM_MD5="ff908759ff7cd9464424b04ae6c68e48" REVISION="1" STATUS_HAIKU="stable" DEPEND="" BUILD() { cd doxygen-1.7.4 sed -i 's/MAN1DIR = man\/man1/MAN1DIR = documentation\/man\/man1/' Makefile.in ./configure --prefix `finddir B_COMMON_DIRECTORY` make } INSTALL() { cd doxygen-1.7.4 make install } LICENSE="GNU GPL v2" COPYRIGHT="1997-2011 Dimitri van Heesch"