Guillaume Friloux <guillaume.friloux@asp64.com>
Jonas M. Gastal <jgastal@profusion.mobi>
Raphael Kubo da Costa <rakuco@freebsd.org>
+Jérôme Pinot <ngc891@gmail.com>
*
* Elements of this list are members of the structs stored in the list
*
- * Advantages over @ref Eina_List and @ref Eina_Inlist:
+ * Advantages over @ref Eina_List and @ref Eina_Inlist :
* - uses less memory (two machine words per item)
* - allows removing items without knowing which list they're in using O(1) time
* - no need to keep updating the head pointer as the list is changed
* @skip int
* @until eina_init
*
- * We then create the array much like we did on @ref eina_inarray_example_01:
+ * We then create the array much like we did on @ref eina_inarray_example_01 :
* @until inarray_new
*
* The point were this example significantly differs from the first eina inline
* It may be the case that someone needs to have some inlist nodes added to a
* @ref Eina_List too. If this happens, the inlist nodes can be added to the
* @ref Eina_List without any problems. This example demonstrates this case:
- * @ref inlist_02_example_page
+ * @ref eina_inlist_02_example_page
*
* It's also possible to have some data that is part of two different inlists.
* If this is the case, then it won't be possible to use the convenience macros
* to both of the lists. It will be necessary to create a new set of macros that
* will allow access to the second list node info. An example for this usage can
* be found here:
- * @ref inlist_03_example_page
+ * @ref eina_inlist_03_example_page
*
* List of examples:
* @li @ref eina_inlist_01_example_page
typedef enum _Eina_Simple_XML_Type
{
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_OPEN = 0, /*!< <tag attribute="value"> */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_OPEN_EMPTY, /*!< <tag attribute="value" /> */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_CLOSE, /*!< </tag> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_OPEN = 0, /*!< \<tag attribute="value"\> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_OPEN_EMPTY, /*!< \<tag attribute="value" /\> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_CLOSE, /*!< \</tag\> */
EINA_SIMPLE_XML_DATA, /*!< tag text data */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_CDATA, /*!< <![CDATA[something]]> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_CDATA, /*!< \<![CDATA[something]]\> */
EINA_SIMPLE_XML_ERROR, /*!< error contents */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_PROCESSING, /*!< <?xml ... ?> <?php .. ?> */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_DOCTYPE, /*!< <!DOCTYPE html */
- EINA_SIMPLE_XML_COMMENT, /*!< <!-- something --> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_PROCESSING, /*!< \<?xml ... ?\> \<?php .. ?\> */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_DOCTYPE, /*!< \<!DOCTYPE html */
+ EINA_SIMPLE_XML_COMMENT, /*!< \<!-- something --\> */
EINA_SIMPLE_XML_IGNORED /*!< whatever is ignored by parser, like whitespace */
} Eina_Simple_XML_Type;
*
* This is an example that illustrates how Eina_Tiler works for a given set of
* rectangles. The rectangles must be given in the command line in the form:
- * <width>x<height>+<x offset>+<y offset>
+ * \<width\>x\<height\>+\<x offset\>+\<y offset\>
* The example will show two panels, the first(input) will show the given
* rectangles(in different colors) and in the seconds(output) it will show the
* rectangles given by the tiler. The rectangles will be added one by one every
*
* Next we have setting, this however requires not one but rather two functions,
* the reason for this is because to be able to receive arguments of any type
- * eina value uses @ref https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Variadic_functions "variadic
- * functions", so we need a function to get the argument from a va_list and
- * another to actually to the setting.
+ * eina value uses <a href="https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Variadic_functions">
+ * variadic functions</a>, so we need a function to get the argument from a
+ * va_list and another to actually to the setting.
*
* Lets first look at the pset function which sets the received value to a
* pointer: