Doxygen
Features

  • Requires very little overhead from the writer of the documentation. Plain text will do, Markdown is support, and for more fancy or structured output HTML tags and/or some of doxygen's special commands can be used.
  • Cross platform: works on Windows and many Unix flavors (including Linux and MacOSX).
  • Indexes, organizes and generates browsable and cross-referenced output even from undocumented code.
  • Generates structured XML output for parsed sources, which can be used by external tools.
  • Supports C/C++, Java, (Corba and Microsoft) Java, Python, VHDL, PHP IDL, C#, Fortran, TCL, Objective-C 2.0, and to some extent D sources.
  • Supports documentation of files, namespaces, packages, classes, structs, unions, templates, variables, functions, typedefs, enums and defines.
  • Javadoc (1.1), qdoc3 (partially), and ECMA-334 (C# spec.) compatible.
  • Comes with a GUI frontend (Doxywizard) to ease editing the options and run doxygen. The GUI is available on Windows, Linux, and MacOSX.
  • Automatically generates class and collaboration diagrams in HTML (as clickable image maps) and $\mbox{\LaTeX}$ (as Encapsulated PostScript images).
  • Uses the dot tool of the Graphviz tool kit to generate include dependency graphs, collaboration diagrams, call graphs, directory structure graphs, and graphical class hierarchy graphs.
  • Allows grouping of entities in modules and creating a hierarchy of modules.
  • Flexible comment placement: Allows you to put documentation in the header file (before the declaration of an entity), source file (before the definition of an entity) or in a separate file.
  • Generates a list of all members of a class (including any inherited members) along with their protection level.
  • Outputs documentation in on-line format (XHTML and UNIX man page) and off-line format ( $\mbox{\LaTeX}$ and RTF) simultaneously (any of these can be disabled if desired). All formats are optimized for ease of reading.
    Furthermore, compressed HTML can be generated from HTML output using Microsoft's HTML Help Workshop (Windows only) and PDF can be generated from the $\mbox{\LaTeX}$ output.
  • Support for various third party help formats including HTML Help, docsets, Qt-Help, and eclipse help.
  • Includes a full C preprocessor to allow proper parsing of conditional code fragments and to allow expansion of all or part of macros definitions.
  • Automatically detects public, protected and private sections, as well as the Qt specific signal and slots sections. Extraction of private class members is optional.
  • Automatically generates references to documented classes, files, namespaces and members. Documentation of global functions, global variables, typedefs, defines and enumerations is also supported.
  • References to base/super classes and inherited/overridden members are generated automatically.
  • Includes a fast, rank based search engine to search for strings or words in the class and member documentation (PHP based).
  • Includes an JavaScript based live search feature to search for symbols as you type (for small to medium sized projects).
  • You can type normal HTML tags in your documentation. Doxygen will convert them to their equivalent $\mbox{\LaTeX}$, RTF, and man-page counterparts automatically.
  • Allows references to documentation generated for other (doxygen documented) projects (or another part of the same project) in a location independent way.
  • Allows inclusion of source code examples that are automatically cross-referenced with the documentation.
  • Inclusion of undocumented classes is also supported, allowing to quickly learn the structure and interfaces of a (large) piece of code without looking into the implementation details.
  • Allows automatic cross-referencing of (documented) entities with their definition in the source code.
  • All source code fragments are syntax highlighted for ease of reading.
  • Allows inclusion of function/member/class definitions in the documentation.
  • All options are read from an easy to edit and (optionally) annotated configuration file.
  • Documentation and search engine can be transferred to another location or machine without regenerating the documentation.
  • Supports many different character encodings and uses UTF-8 internally and for the generated output.
  • Doxygen can generate a layout which you can use and edit to change the layout of each page.
  • There more than a 100 configurable options to fine-tune the output.
  • Can cope with large projects easily.

Although doxygen can now be used in any project written in a language that is supported by doxygen, initially it was specifically designed to be used for projects that make use of Qt Software's Qt toolkit. I have tried to make doxygen ‘Qt-compatible’. That is: Doxygen can read the documentation contained in the Qt source code and create a class browser that looks quite similar to the one that is generated by Qt Software. Doxygen understands the C++ extensions used by Qt such as signals and slots and many of the markup commands used in the Qt sources.

Doxygen can also automatically generate links to existing documentation that was generated with doxygen or with Qt's non-public class browser generator. For a Qt based project this means that whenever you refer to members or classes belonging to the Qt toolkit, a link will be generated to the Qt documentation. This is done independent of where this documentation is located!

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