From d41d76ca38a22092137219042062f5a9dc4a36de Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Jonas M. Gastal" Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2012 16:18:28 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] efl: Modified section names as doxygen reuses titles for same named sections in different pages. SVN revision: 81279 --- src/lib/ecore/Ecore.h | 10 +++++----- src/lib/eet/Eet.h | 24 ++++++++++++------------ src/lib/eina/Eina.h | 6 +++--- src/lib/evas/Evas.h | 26 +++++++++++++------------- 4 files changed, 33 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/lib/ecore/Ecore.h b/src/lib/ecore/Ecore.h index 1826505..b39c850 100644 --- a/src/lib/ecore/Ecore.h +++ b/src/lib/ecore/Ecore.h @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Please see the @ref authors page for contact details. - @section intro Introduction + @section ecore_main_intro Introduction Ecore is a library of convenience functions. A brief explanation of how to use it can be found in @ref Ecore_Main_Loop_Page. @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ For more info on Ecore usage, there are these @ref ecore_examples. - @section compiling How to compile using Ecore? + @section ecore_main_compiling How to compile using Ecore? pkgconfig (.pc) files are installed for every ecore module. Thus, to compile using any of them, you can use something like the following: @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ gcc *.c $(pkg-config ecore ecore-$x ecore-$y [...] --cflags --libs) @endverbatim - @section install How is it installed? + @section ecore_main_install How is it installed? Suggested configure options for ecore for a Linux desktop X display with OpenGL and Software support, communication (networking) and @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ sudo make install /** * @page Ecore_Main_Loop_Page The Ecore Main Loop * - * @section intro What is Ecore? + * @section Ecore_Main_Loop_Page_intro What is Ecore? * * Ecore is a clean and tiny event loop library with many modules to do lots of * convenient things for a programmer, to save time and effort. It's small and @@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ sudo make install * * * - * @section work How does Ecore work? + * @section Ecore_Main_Loop_Page_work How does Ecore work? * * Ecore is very easy to learn and use. All the function calls are designed to * be easy to remember, explicit in describing what they do, and heavily diff --git a/src/lib/eet/Eet.h b/src/lib/eet/Eet.h index d925bc5..2a2fc78 100644 --- a/src/lib/eet/Eet.h +++ b/src/lib/eet/Eet.h @@ -12,14 +12,14 @@ @section toc Table of Contents - @li @ref intro - @li @ref example - @li @ref compiling - @li @ref install - @li @ref next_steps - @li @ref intro_example + @li @ref eet_main_intro + @li @ref eet_main_example + @li @ref eet_main_compiling + @li @ref eet_main_install + @li @ref eet_main_next_steps + @li @ref eet_main_intro_example - @section intro What is Eet? + @section eet_main_intro What is Eet? It is a tiny library designed to write an arbitrary set of chunks of data to a file and optionally compress each chunk (very much like a zip file) @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ encoded in a platform independent way and can be written and read by any architecture. - @section example A simple example on using Eet + @section eet_main_example A simple example on using Eet Here is a simple example on how to use Eet to save a series of strings to a file and load them again. The advantage of using Eet over just @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ @include eet-basic.c - @section compiling How to compile using Eet ? + @section eet_main_compiling How to compile using Eet ? Eet is a library your application links to. The procedure for this is very simple. You simply have to compile your application with the appropriate @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ is only guaranteed to make Eet add it's own requirements. - @section install How is it installed? + @section eet_main_install How is it installed? Simple: @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ make install @endverbatim - @section next_steps Next Steps + @section eet_main_next_steps Next Steps After you understood what Eet is and installed it in your system you should proceed understanding the programming interface. We'd recommend @@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ parse your data structures automatically. Just create your descriptors and let Eet do the work for you. - @section intro_example Introductory Examples + @section eet_main_intro_example Introductory Examples @ref eet_examples diff --git a/src/lib/eina/Eina.h b/src/lib/eina/Eina.h index ab0ae27..49e5773 100644 --- a/src/lib/eina/Eina.h +++ b/src/lib/eina/Eina.h @@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ * * @defgroup Eina_Containers_Group Containers * - * @section Intro Introduction + * @section eina_main_Intro Introduction * Containers are data types that hold data and allow iteration over * their elements with an @ref Eina_Iterator_Group, or eventually an * @ref Eina_Accessor_Group. @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ * of this is that they @b don't check the validity of data structures given to * them(@ref Eina_Magic_Group). * - * @section Choice Choosing container type + * @section eina_main_Choice Choosing container type * * The choice of which container to use in each situation is very important in * achieving good performance and readable code. The most common container types @@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ * @warning These are general considerations, every situation is different, * don't follow these recommendations blindly. * - * @section Creation Creating custom container types + * @section eina_main_Creation Creating custom container types * * @note Before creating a custom container check if one of the existing ones * doesn't suit your needs. For example, while there is no stack type @ref diff --git a/src/lib/evas/Evas.h b/src/lib/evas/Evas.h index 5eb75b8..8e59b8e 100644 --- a/src/lib/evas/Evas.h +++ b/src/lib/evas/Evas.h @@ -11,15 +11,15 @@ @section toc Table of Contents - @li @ref intro - @li @ref work - @li @ref compiling - @li @ref install - @li @ref next_steps - @li @ref intro_example + @li @ref evas_main_intro + @li @ref evas_main_work + @li @ref evas_main_compiling + @li @ref evas_main_install + @li @ref evas_main_next_steps + @li @ref evas_main_intro_example - @section intro What is Evas? + @section evas_main_intro What is Evas? Evas is a clean display canvas API for several target display systems that can draw anti-aliased text, smooth super and sub-sampled scaled @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ back-ends, letting it display on several display systems, making it portable for cross-device and cross-platform development. - @subsection intro_not_evas What Evas is not? + @subsection evas_main_intro_not_evas What Evas is not? Evas is not a widget set or widget toolkit, however it is their base. See Elementary (http://docs.enlightenment.org/auto/elementary/) @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ Ecore_Evas (http://docs.enlightenment.org/auto/ecore/). - @section work How does Evas work? + @section evas_main_work How does Evas work? Evas is a canvas display library. This is markedly different from most display and windowing systems as a canvas is structural and is also a @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ scrollbars, sliders, push buttons etc. - @section compiling How to compile using Evas ? + @section evas_main_compiling How to compile using Evas ? Evas is a library your application links to. The procedure for this is very simple. You simply have to compile your application with the @@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ example is only guaranteed to make Evas add it's own requirements. - @section install How is it installed? + @section evas_main_install How is it installed? Simple: @@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ make install @endverbatim - @section next_steps Next Steps + @section evas_main_next_steps Next Steps After you understood what Evas is and installed it in your system you should proceed understanding the programming interface for all @@ -265,7 +265,7 @@ ends to be a widget, providing some intelligence (thus the name) to Evas objects -- like a button or check box, for example. - @section intro_example Introductory Example + @section evas_main_intro_example Introductory Example @include evas-buffer-simple.c */ -- 2.7.4