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Please review the following information to ensure ** the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 requirements ** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl-1.3.html. ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \previouspage external-tool-spec.html \page qtcreator-documentation.html \nextpage coding-style.html \title Writing Documentation When you add plugins or contribute new features to \QC, you probably want other people to know about them and to be able to use them. Therefore, you should also contribute documentation for them. Follow the guidelines in this section to make sure that your documentation fits in well with the rest of the \QC documentation. When you contribute a plugin, you should write documentation both for the developers who use \QC and for the ones who develop it. Write the following user documentation for addition to the \QC Manual: \list \li Overview topic, which describes the purpose of your plugin from the viewpoint of \QC users \li Procedure topics, which describe how to use your plugin as part of \QC \li Reference topics, which contain information that developers occasionally need to look up (optional) \endlist Write the following developer documentation for addition to the Extending \QC Manual: \list \li Overview topic, which describes the architecture and use cases for your plugin from the viewpoint of \QC developers \li API documentation, which is generated from code comments \endlist \section1 Configuring the Documentation Project \QC documentation is written by using QDoc. For more information about using QDoc, see the \l{http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qdoc-index.html}{QDoc Manual}. QDoc finds the new topics automatically, when you place them as \c {.qdoc} files in the correct folder. However, to make the topics accessible to readers, you must also add them to the table of contents (\c {doc\src\qtcreator-toc.qdoc}) and fix the next page and previous page links to them from other topics. \section2 Creating Folders and Files These instructions apply only to the \QC Manual. Add API documentation directly to the code source files. However, you can write an API overview also as a separate \c {.qdoc} file. Create a subfolder for your documentation in the \QC project folder in the \c {doc\src} folder. Create a separate file for each topic. The easiest way is probably to copy an existing file, save it as a new file, and modify it. This way, you already have samples of the necessary bits and pieces in place, such as topic start and end commands, copyright statement, links to next and previous topics, and topic title. \section2 Integrating Topics to Documentation You must integrate your new topics to the \QC Manual and Extending \QC Manual by adding links to them to the table of contents and to other relevant topics. To link to the topic, you can use the topic title. For example: \code \l{Integrating Topics to Documentation} \endcode This does not work if topic titles are not unique. Also, if you change the title, the link breaks. You can avoid this risk by adding the \c {\target} command to your topic and then linking to the target. \section2 Updating Next and Previous Links When you add new topics to a document, you must also change the navigation links of the topics around them. This is very error prone when done manually, and therefore we have a script called \c {fixnavi.pl} for it. For the script to work, you must add the \c {\nextpage} and \c {\previouspage} commands to the topic, with dummy values (for example, \c {\nextpage=anything.html}). \note The script creates the links according to the TOC in the topic set as the value of the \c indexTitle configuration parameter (\c {doc\src\qtcreator-toc.qdoc}). If your topics are not listed in the TOC, the script removes the \c {\nextpage} and \c {\previouspage} commands from them. To run the script, you must have Perl installed. If you build Qt yourself, you should already have it. Otherwise, download and install \l{http://www.perl.org/}{Perl}. To run the script, enter the following command in the doc folder: \list \li nmake fixnavi (on Windows) \li make fixnavi (on Linux) \endlist \section1 Writing Text Follow the guidelines for \l{http://wiki.qt.io/Writing_Qt_Documentation}{writing Qt documentation}. The documentation must be grammatically correct English and use the standard form of written language. Do not use dialect or slang words. Use idiomatic language, that is, expressions that are characteristic for English. If possible, ask a native English speaker for a review. \section2 Capitalizing Headings Use the book title capitalization style for all titles and section headings (\c {\title}, \c {\section1}, \c {\section2}, and so on). For more information, see \l{Using Book Style Capitalization}. \section1 Using Images You can illustrate your documentation by using screen shots, diagrams, and other images. Use the \c {\image} and \c {\inlineimage} QDoc commands to refer to images from the text. You do not need to add paths to image names. For example: \code \image riot.png \endcode \section2 Taking Screen Shots \QC has the native look and feel on Windows, Linux, and \macos, and therefore, screen shots can end up looking very different, depending on who takes them and which system they use. To try to preserve a consistent look and feel in the \QC Manual, observe the guidelines listed in this section when taking screen shots. To make the images look similar regardless of the operating system they were taken on, you are asked to adjust their size to 75%. This makes the screen shots hard to read, but they are provided more as reassurance for users that they are in the correct place in the UI than as an actual source of information. To make sure that no important information is lost, always place example values also in the text. \list \li Use the screen resolution of 1024x768 (this is available on all screens). \li Use the aspect ratio of 4:3. \li Open the application in the maximum size on full screen. \li Use your favorite tool to take the screen shot. \li Include only the part of the screen that you need (you can crop the image also in the screen capture tool). \li In the screen capture tool, open the screen shot and adjust its size to 75%. \li To highlight parts of the screen shot, use the images of numbers that are stored in \c{doc\images\numbers} in the \QC repository. \li Before you submit the images to the repository, optimize them to save space. \endlist \section2 Optimizing Images Save images in the PNG format in the \QC project folder in the \c {doc\images} folder. Binary images can easily add megabytes to the Git history. To keep the history as small as possible, the Git post-commit hooks remind you to try to keep image size below 50 kilobytes. To achieve this goal, crop images so that only relevant information is visible in them. Before committing images, optimize them by using an image optimization tool. Optimization should not visibly reduce image quality. If it does, do not do it. You can use a web service, such as \l{https://tinypng.com}, or an image optimization tool to shrink the images. For example, you can use the Radical Image Optimization Tool (RIOT) on Windows (very efficient) or ImageOptim on \macos (much less efficient), or some other tool available on Linux. With ImageOptim, you simply drag and drop the image files to the application. The following section describes the settings to use for RIOT. \section3 Using RIOT Download and install \l{http://luci.criosweb.ro/riot/}{RIOT}. \image riot.png Open your images in RIOT and use the following settings for them: \list \li Color reduction: Optimal 256 colors palette \li Reduce colors to: 256 \li Best compression (slow) \li Color quantization algorithm: NeuQuant neural-net (slow) \li External optimizers: OptiPNG o3 \endlist Compare the initial and optimized images to check that image quality is preserved. If the image quality deteriorates, do not use color reduction (select the \uicontrol {True Color} option, instead). You can also see the sizes of the initial and optimized image. \section1 Building Documentation You use QDoc to build the documentation. Build the documentation from time to time, to check its structure and the validity of the QDoc commands. The error messages that QDoc issues are generally very useful for troubleshooting. For more information about setting up the build environment if you do not want to build the whole Qt, see \l{https://wiki.qt.io/Building_Qt_Documentation}{Building Qt Documentation} on the Qt wiki. The content and formatting of documentation are separated in QDoc. The documentation configuration, style sheets, and templates have changed over time, so they differ between Qt and \QC versions. Since \QC version 3.3, only Qt 5 is supported for building documentation. The templates to use are defined by the \c {qt5\qtbase\doc\global\qt-html-templates-offline.qdocconf} and \c {qt5\qtbase\doc\global\qt-html-templates-online.qdocconf} configuration file. They are fetched from Qt sources by adding the following lines to the qdocconf file: \list \li \c {include ($QT_INSTALL_DOCS/global/qt-html-templates-offline.qdocconf)} for help files \li \c {include ($QT_INSTALL_DOCS/global/qt-html-templates-online.qdocconf)} for publishing on the web \endlist \note To have the correct fonts loaded for the online version, you must be running it on a web server. \note If the styles look wrong to you when reading help files in \QC or \QA, you might be looking at them in the QTextBrowser instead of the Qr WebEngine browser. This happens if you do not have Qt WebEngine installed. To build documentation for the sources from the qtcreator master branch, use build scripts defined in the doc.pri file. To build all \QC docs in the help format and to create help files (.qch), enter the following build commands from the project folder (after running qmake): \list \li nmake docs (on Windows) \li make docs (on Linux and \macos) \endlist The \QC Manual HTML files are generated in the \c {doc/qtcreator} directory. The Extending \QC Manual files are generated in the \c {doc/qtcreator-dev} directory. The help files (\c {.qch}) are generated in the \c {share/doc/qtcreator} directory in the \QC build directory on Windows and Linux, and in the \c {bin/Qt Creator.app/Contents/Resources/app} directory on \macos. You can view the HTML files in a browser and the help files in the \QC \uicontrol Help mode. For more information about adding the help files to \QC, see \l{http://doc.qt.io/qtcreator/creator-help.html#adding-external-documentation} {Adding External Documentation}. Besides \c docs, you have the following options: \list \li html_docs - build \QC Manual in help format, but do not generate a help file \li dev_html_docs - build Extending \QC Manual in help format, but do not generate a help file \li qch_docs - build \QC Manual in help format and generate a help file (.qch) \li dev_qch_docs - build Extending \QC Manual in help format and generate a help file (.qch) \li docs_online - build \QC Manual and Extending \QC Manual in online format \li html_docs_online - build \QC Manual in online format \li dev_html_docs_online - build Extending \QC Manual in online format \endlist */