Doxygen
Doxygen is the de facto standard tool for generating documentation from
annotated C++ sources, but it also supports other popular programming
languages such as C, Objective-C, C#, PHP, Java, Python, IDL
(Corba, Microsoft, and UNO/OpenOffice flavors), Fortran, VHDL, Tcl,
and to some extent D.
Doxygen can help you in three ways:
- It can generate an on-line documentation browser (in HTML) and/or an
off-line reference manual (in LaTeX) from a set of documented source files.
There is also support for generating output in RTF (MS-Word), PostScript,
hyperlinked PDF, compressed HTML, DocBook and Unix man pages.
The documentation is extracted directly from the sources, which makes
it much easier to keep the documentation consistent with the source code.
- You can configure doxygen to extract the code structure from undocumented
source files. This is very useful to quickly find your way in large
source distributions. Doxygen can also visualize the relations between
the various elements by means of include dependency graphs, inheritance
diagrams, and collaboration diagrams, which are all generated automatically.
- You can also use doxygen for creating normal documentation (as I did for
the doxygen user manual and doxygen web-site).
Download
The latest binaries and source of Doxygen can be downloaded from:
Developers
Issues, bugs, requests, ideas
Use the bug tracker to report bugs:
- current list:
- Submit a new bug or feature request
Comms
Mailing Lists
There are three mailing lists:
- doxygen-announce@lists.sourceforge.net - Announcement of new releases only
- doxygen-users@lists.sourceforge.net - for doxygen users
- doxygen-develop@lists.sourceforge.net - for doxygen developers
- To subscribe follow the link to
Source Code
In May 2013, Doxygen moved from
subversion to git hosted at GitHub
Enjoy,
Dimitri van Heesch (dimitri at stack.nl)