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mirror of https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/conky.git synced 2025-01-13 19:22:58 +00:00
conky/doc
Marc Payne 0dbd27d2de Require Lua 5.1 when building the Lua bindings
The cairo/imlib2/rsvg bindings require tolua++ [1], which is currently only
compatible with Lua 5.1 or earlier. We need to force Conky to compile against
Lua 5.1 if the user chooses to build the bindings.

This commit adds a separate pkg_search_module command specifically for Lua 5.1,
along with a note in the documentation. The original pkg_search_module command
was updated to include (and prefer) Lua 5.3+. Also, I threw in two other minor
random fixes to the docs while I was at it.

[1] https://github.com/LuaDist/toluapp
2015-12-11 16:05:02 -07:00
..
CMakeLists.txt Update version, copyright. 2012-05-03 16:34:44 -07:00
command_options.xml Read configuration from ~/.config/conky/conky.conf 2014-11-17 22:06:27 +01:00
config_settings.xml added support for multiple xinerama heads (fixes issue #172) 2015-12-01 13:53:43 +01:00
config_settings.xsl Read configuration from ~/.config/conky/conky.conf 2014-11-17 22:06:27 +01:00
conky-howto.xml Read configuration from ~/.config/conky/conky.conf 2014-11-17 22:06:27 +01:00
docgen.sh Make sure we get report if one of the commands in the documentation pipeline fails 2012-10-03 22:51:28 +02:00
docs.xml Require Lua 5.1 when building the Lua bindings 2015-12-11 16:05:02 -07:00
lua.xml Add creation functions for certain cairo structures. 2009-11-25 12:53:42 -08:00
lua.xsl Refactor some of the new weather code, fix docs. 2009-07-12 23:31:57 -06:00
README.docs Reformatted all code 2008-02-20 20:30:45 +00:00
variables.xml Merge pull request #157 from travisred/master 2015-11-07 09:30:21 -08:00
variables.xsl Refactor some of the new weather code, fix docs. 2009-07-12 23:31:57 -06:00

DA DOCS. YO.
============
The main file that contains the bulk of our documentation is docs.xml .
We use the DocBook format, which is a really kickass xml-based way of
writing documentation, heavily oriented towards programming and computer
stuff. There are tags like <command> and <option> that marks up your
content without actually having to mark it up, which is why something
that's of the <command> shows up in some cool style regardless of
whether it's in a man page or a web page. DocBook has been around for
10 years, and there's TONS of resources online about the different
tags and the stuff that can be done.

FILE ORGANIZATION
=================
For the sake of making things readable and organized,
docs.xml "includes" three other files, as of 8/18/05.
These are config_settings.xml, command_options.xml, and variables.xml .
Their names are pretty self-explanatory, and what the "include" essentially
does is stick their contents into docs.xml at the appropriate locations
when it's time to produce a man page or html file. So if you wanted to
add a variable or explain a command line option better, you'd look in
variables.xml and command_options.xml. If you wanted to change the authors
or something, look in docs.xml

BUILDING DA DOCS
================
(NOTE that the docs are now built automatically via doc/Makefile.am, but it requires that you have docbook2x and xsltproc installed)

making the html is easy. xsltproc should more than likely already be on your system:

xsltproc http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl docs.xml > docs.html
==============================================================================================================
making the man page is pretty easy, it uses a program called docbook2x, which you might or might not have.

docbook2x-man docs.xml (produces a conky.1 file)
gzip conky.1

conky.1.gz can be viewed in man-form by doing "man -l conky.1.gz"
==============================================================================================================
making the README (text-only) file is just some simple unix:
man -l conky.1.gz | col -b > README