Document Navigation▲
The navigation commands are for linking the pages of a document in a meaningful sequence. Below is a sequence of QDoc comments that shows a typical use of the navigation commands.
I. Example▲
/*!
\page
basicqt.html
\nextpage Getting Started
\indexpage Index
\startpage Basic Qt
\title Basic Qt
The Qt toolkit is a C++ class library and a set of tools for
building multiplatform GUI programs using a "write once,
compile anywhere approach".
Table of contents:
\list
\li
\l {Getting Started}
\li
\l {Creating Dialogs}
\li
\l {Creating Main Windows}
\endlist
*/
/*!
\page
gettingstarted.html
\previouspage Basic Qt
\nextpage Creating Dialogs
\indexpage Index
\startpage Basic Qt
\title Getting Started
This chapter shows how to combine basic C++ with the
functionality provided by Qt to create a few small graphical
interface (GUI) applications.
*/
/
*!
\page creatingdialogs.html
\previouspage Getting Started
\indexpage Index
\startpage Basic Qt
\title Creating Dialogs
This chapter will teach you how to create dialog boxes using
Qt.
*/
/*!
\page
index.html
\indexpage Index
\startpage Basic Qt
\title Index
\list
\li
\l {Basic Qt}
\li
\l {Creating Dialogs}
\li
\l {Getting Started}
\endlist
*/
QDoc renders the "Getting Started" page in creatingdialogs.html:
|
The \startpage command creates a link to the page the author wants as the first page of a multipage document.
The link is included in the generated HTML source code but has no visual effect on the documentation:
&
lt;head&
gt;
...
&
lt;link rel=&
quot;start&
quot; href=&
quot;basicqt.html&
quot; /&
gt;
...
&
lt;/
head&
gt;
II. Commands▲
II-1. \previouspage▲
The \previouspage command links the current page to the previous page in a sequence. The command has two arguments, each enclosed by curly braces: the first is the link target (the title of the previous page), the second is the link text. If the page's title is equivalent to the link text, the second argument can be omitted.
The command must stand alone on its own line.
II-2. \nextpage▲
The \nextpage command links the current page to the next page in a sequence. The command follows the same syntax and argument convention as the \previouspage command.
II-3. \startpage▲
The \startpage command specifies the first page of a sequence of pages. The command must stand alone on its own line, and its unique argument is the title of the first document.
QDoc will generate a link to the start page and include it in the generated HTML file, but this has no visual effect on the documentation. The generated link type tells browsers and search engines which document is considered by the author to be the starting point of the collection.