These commands are for indicating that a documented element has some special status. The element could be marked as about to be made obsolete, or that it is simply not to be included in the public interface. The \since command is for specifying the version number in which a function or class first appeared. The \qmlabstract command is for marking a QML type as an abstract base class.
\abstract is a synonym for the \qmlabstract command. Add this command to the \qmltype comment for a QML type when that type is meant to be used only as an abstract base type. When a QML type is abstract, it means that the QML type that can't be instantiated. Instead, the properties in its public API are included in the public properties list on the reference page for each QML type that inherits the abstract QML type. The properties are documented as if they are properties of the inheriting QML type.
Normally, when a QML type is marked with \qmlabstract, it is also marked with \internal so that its reference page is not generated. It the abstract QML type is not marked internal, it will have a reference page in the documentation.
The \default command is for marking a QML property as the default property. The word default
is displayed in the documentation of the property.
/ *! \qmlproperty list<Change> State::changes This property holds the changes to apply for this state. \default By default these changes are applied against the default state. If the state extends another state, then the changes are applied against the state being extended. * /
See how QDoc renders this property on the reference page for the State type.
The \dontdocument command is only used in a dontdocument.qdoc file for a particular module. This file specifies publically declared classes or structs that are not meant to be documented. QDoc will not print warnings about missing \class comments for these classes and structs.
Below you will find the \dontdocument command in the dontdocument.qdoc for widgets:
/ *! \dontdocument (QTypeInfo QMetaTypeId) * /
The \inheaderfile meta-command is used for overriding the include statement generated for a C++ class, namespace, or header file reference documentation.
By default, QDoc documents a \class SomeClass
to be available with a following include statement:
#include <SomeClass>
If the actual include statement differs from the default, this can be documented as
\class SomeClass \inheaderfile Tools/SomeClass ...
See also \class and \headerfile.
The \obsolete command is for indicating that a function is being deprecated, and it should no longer be used in new code. There is no guarantee for how long it will remain in the library.
The \obsolete command takes no arguments.
When generating the reference documentation for a class, QDoc will create and link to a separate page documenting its obsolete functions. Usually an equivalent function is provided as an alternative.
/ *! \fn MyClass::MyObsoleteFunction \obsolete Use MyNewFunction() instead. * /
QDoc renders this in myclass-obsolete.html
as:
Obsolete Members for MyClass
The following class members are obsolete. They are provided to keep old source code working. We strongly advise against using them in new code.
...
- void MyObsoleteFunction()
(obsolete)
- ...
Member Function Documentation
void MyObsoleteFunction ()
Use MyNewFunction() instead.
...
The \internal command indicates that the referenced function is not part of the public interface.
The command must stand on its own line.
QDoc ignores the documentation as well as the documented item, when generating the associated class reference documentation.
/ *! \internal Tries to find the decimal separator. If it can't find it and the thousand delimiter is != '.' it will try to find a '.'; * / int QDoubleSpinBoxPrivate::findDelimiter (const QString &str, int index) const { int dotindex = str.indexOf(delimiter, index); if (dotindex == -1 && thousand != dot && delimiter != dot) dotindex = str.indexOf(dot, index); return dotindex; }
This function will not be included in the documentation.
The \preliminary command is for indicating that a referenced function is still under development.
The command must stand on its own line.
The \preliminary command expands to a notification in the function documentation, and marks the function as preliminary when it appears in lists.
/ *! \preliminary Returns information about the joining type attributes of the character (needed for certain languages such as Arabic or Syriac). * / QChar::JoiningType QChar::joiningType() const { return QChar::joiningType(ucs); }
QDoc renders this as:
JoiningType QChar::joiningType() const
This function is under development and subject to change.
Returns information about the joining type attributes of the character (needed for certain languages such as Arabic or Syriac).
And the function's entry in QChar's list of public functions will be rendered as:
- ...
- JoiningType joiningType() const
(preliminary)
- ...
The \readonly command is used in conjunction with a \qmlproperty command to mark the QML property as read-only.
The \since command tells in which minor release the associated functionality was added.
/ *! \since 4.1 Returns an icon for \a standardIcon. ... \sa standardPixmap() * / QIcon QStyle::standardIcon(StandardPixmap standardIcon, const QStyleOption *option, const QWidget *widget) const { }
QDoc renders this as:
QIcon QStyle::standardIcon(StandardPixmap standardIcon, const QStyleOption *option, const QWidget *widget) const
This function was introduced in Qt version 4.1
Returns an icon for standardIcon.
...
See also standardPixmap().
QDoc generates the "Qt" reference from the project
configuration variable. For that reason this reference will change according to the current documentation project.
See also project
.
© The Qt Company Ltd
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5.15/16-qdoc-commands-status.html