* Sticky events are events that keep their signal raised, ie. even if
a job is initialized afterwards, it will still be triggered.
* Consolidated naming for external events.
* Events are now registered once they are actually being used. This
allows them to allocate the resources they need to do their thing.
This was missed when introducing the feature in hrev49558. Thanks Jérôme
for the pointer!
Also add a note explaining that update operations on cached entries and
the removal of uncached entries are safe.
Without this, Doxygen attempts to parse __attribute__ directives
and often outputs garbage instead of properly parsing them, so just
exclude them from the documentation.
Fixes some incorrect function listings in BString documentation
and possibly more elsewhere.
The last time this was discussed on the ML, the consensus was that
the text lists were nicer than the diagrams (with only one objection).
For the minority that wants class diagrams, it's easy enough to reverse
this one-line change.
* Automatic whitespace cleanup.
* Removed all of Midi2 from the "libbe" group, as they aren't part of it
* Get rid of the redundant "libmidi2" group, as all of midi2 is already in
the "MIDI 2 Kit" group, and the docs explicitly state that the MIDI 2 Kit
has its own library.
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Written by DarkWyrm, this user guide has been long since superseded by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.
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.