There is no clear statement in the main README.md about which languages are supported.
The screenshots imply C++, however, C++ is never mentioned on that page (Ctrl-F "C++" - 0 results).
Then again, I can get a simple C function declaration parsed and Doxygen comment generated:
/**
* @brief
*
* @param a
* @param b
*/
void myfunc(int a, int b) {
}
... which is great!
( I usually just get "@brief" populated in the autogenerated comments for enums and structs; I thought at first that meant no support for these C constructs, but I've found examples here https://wiki.scilab.org/Doxygen%20documentation%20Examples that show that is likely the correct approach, since documenting the fields goes on the same line where the field is declared. I guess that is what https://github.com/cschlosser/doxdocgen/issues/278 is talking about - entering extra keywords in the autogenerated comment for structs and enums ).
So, I would just have loved some sort of a note in the main README, on what languages is this addon applicable to (C++ only, or also C, or maybe also other languages?)
Describe the bug
This is mostly a documentation bug:
There is no clear statement in the main README.md about which languages are supported.
The screenshots imply C++, however, C++ is never mentioned on that page (Ctrl-F "C++" - 0 results).
Then again, I can get a simple C function declaration parsed and Doxygen comment generated:
... which is great!
( I usually just get "@brief" populated in the autogenerated comments for enums and structs; I thought at first that meant no support for these C constructs, but I've found examples here https://wiki.scilab.org/Doxygen%20documentation%20Examples that show that is likely the correct approach, since documenting the fields goes on the same line where the field is declared. I guess that is what https://github.com/cschlosser/doxdocgen/issues/278 is talking about - entering extra keywords in the autogenerated comment for structs and enums ).
So, I would just have loved some sort of a note in the main README, on what languages is this addon applicable to (C++ only, or also C, or maybe also other languages?)