* function.
*
* Instead, do the following:
- * |[
+ * |[<!-- language="C" -->
* time_t ttime;
* GTime gtime;
*
* @str: string to parse
*
* Parses a user-inputted string @str, and try to figure out what date it
- * represents, taking the <link linkend="setlocale">current locale</link>
- * into account. If the string is successfully parsed, the date will be
- * valid after the call. Otherwise, it will be invalid. You should check
- * using g_date_valid() to see whether the parsing succeeded.
+ * represents, taking the [current locale][setlocale] into account. If the
+ * string is successfully parsed, the date will be valid after the call.
+ * Otherwise, it will be invalid. You should check using g_date_valid()
+ * to see whether the parsing succeeded.
*
* This function is not appropriate for file formats and the like; it
* isn't very precise, and its exact behavior varies with the locale.
* the user's current timezone.
*
* To set the value of a date to the current day, you could write:
- * |[
+ * |[<!-- language="C" -->
* g_date_set_time_t (date, time (NULL));
* ]|
*
* @date: valid #GDate
*
* Generates a printed representation of the date, in a
- * <link linkend="setlocale">locale</link>-specific way.
+ * [locale][setlocale]-specific way.
* Works just like the platform's C library strftime() function,
* but only accepts date-related formats; time-related formats
* give undefined results. Date must be valid. Unlike strftime()