* When RemoveSelf() is called, we do not own our own layout items, so
we must not delete them.
* However, we do own them when we still have layout items left when
we get deleted ourselves.
* This fixes removing/adding a child view to a view without deleting
it inbetween (like the new Network preferences will do).
* Optimized item removal -- not a good idea to always remove item 0.
The version of this in src/add-ons/media/media-add-ons/tone_producer_demo/
is virtually identical, plus it is under a more permissive license
(Be Sample Code vs. BSD 3-Clause) and already fixed for 64bit.
Works on Linux, doesn't work on Haiku. It appears xsltproc tries
to fetch the DTD and XSL stylesheets (which doesn't work, for some reason
it wasn't built with HTTP support, and I can't figure out why). Even
when telling it to use the preinstalled XSL & DTDs using --catalog,
it still tries to download the files...
DocBookCSS is a mostly-pure-CSS2 implementation of the DocBook standard.
Unlike DocBookXSL which relies on transforming the XML, it utilizes the
XML-styling features of modern web browsers to display the DocBook.
Its appearance still is a long way from the Haiku Book and Userguide, but
it looks (mostly) the same as the old DocBookXSL so we can stop using that.
Eventually we just need to make DocBookCSS use our styling.
Written by DarkWyrm, this user guide has been long since superseded by
the new HTML-based User Guide, which has everything this did and then
some, with the exception of the "History" section. That section
does seem like it could be useful somewhere, so I've moved it to
its own file in the "docs/misc" directory.
"BToolBar" matches the current convention ("BStatusBar", "BMenuBar", etc.)
I've no idea what I was thinking when I renamed this before...
Also adjust all users of BToolBar (Tracker and ShowImage).
* It no longer has consistent naming across architectures, as it's
now GCC4-only.
* It hasn't been in the default images for that reason since that change
was made a few months ago, and nobody has missed it.
* Only a few pieces of software use it at this point, so those who need
it can simply run "pkgman install cmd:cmake".
All of the other .dox files here list authors at the top of the file
in a standard (non-Doxygen) comment, so do the same here.
I've listed the file as copyright 2011, as (according to Git) that's
the last time it was functionally changed. I also added a few people
in as being authors of the file who seem to have made significant
changes to it.
* Remove references to outdated stuff (OsDrawer, old OpenGrok)
* Removed GitHub as a code search option (not nearly as flexible
as OpenGrok, and updated bi-monthly or so instead of daily.)
* General reorganization.
Fixes#11842.
I didn't add the gdb package to the bundled packages because AFAIK,
most users / developers of Haiku use our built-in Debugger instead,
because it's so much more awesome (thanks, Ingo & Rene!).
If I'm somehow mistaken about that, please don't hesitate to speak
up and I'll add it.
The "header" in this case is just the MIME type and content size, but we
must still send the notification when these are available. It will be
used for example in WebKit next release.
* Put getlimits and kill back in the image, the former is not provided
by coreutils, Haiku provides an updated version of the latter.
* frcode is not provided by either coreutils or Haiku and has been
removed, do we need it?