I'm using Doxygen to create documentation to my project.
This tool is wonderful except an issue I have with the searching function.
When I try to use the search box he find files and function that starting with the letters I wrote.
I will explain..
I have 3 files in my project:
BaseTemplate.java
RegularTemplate.java
CustomTemplate.java
when I write 'Template' in the search box he didn't find anything. This because he search items(function, files, etc.) only by prefix.
Is there a solution to this issue?
Thanks
Related
Notepad++ is my go to editor for most things. I would like to develop a new command(keyboard shortcut) for doing something unique. Anybody has any pointers regarding how I can do this?
I would like to create a command which arranges selected text in certain order based on the characters found. I would also like create a keyboard shortcut for running the same command.
You have several options:
develop a macro - examine Macros dropdown menu in Notepad++
use AutoHotKey which can send keystrokes/mouseclicks, run apps/DLL's, work with clipboard, read any system settings, take values from input boxes and many more. Please see here for its sample usage with Notepad++
use JN plugin for Notepad++ and script your functionality in JavaScript - example. Similarly, there is a Python scripting plugin, too.
write your own N++ plugin. You get the best control, but without experience this is the most difficult option.
I'd like to create a package containing a series of snippets that incorporate user-definable variables. For example, I'd like the user to be able to provide a value for a variable called HOSTNAME and have the snippets include that user's value.
The Sublime Text Unofficial Documentation explains:
Snippets have access to contextual information in the form of environment variables. Sublime Text automatically sets the values of the variables listed below.
You can also add your own variables to provide extra information. These custom variables are defined in .sublime-options files.
I've had no luck finding any information on the syntax for a .sublime-options file, however, and Sublime does not seem to try to read a file with that extension when I save it anywhere under the Packages directory. Is this a typo?
Using a .tmPreferences file seems to do what I'm looking for. Is this the only method of getting user-defined values into a snippet? Is it possible to use a .sublime-settings file?
The .sublime-options, actually, is the .sublime-settings. .sublime-options were the ST1 files and the docs got outdated, BUT you use the wrong link, you should always check and switch in the sidebar on the left to your version - ST2, ST3.
And to answer your question, you need to put the variables in .tmPreferences as may be seen here
I need to add some code to the of several html contained in a folder on my desktop. How can i do that?
I am using a prototyping tool (Axure) on Mac and I want to add some html meta tags to the generated pages. These pages can be overwritten every time I generate the prototype. What I need is a sort of script that I can launch after re-generating the prototype, to reinsert the code. There is something for windows but it doesn't work on Mac: http://joshuamorse.com/2009/01/14/axure-protonotes-an-alternative-to-protoshare/
thanks
This is a very simple problem to solve using a shell script.
If you are not familiar with scripting, then check out the Automator program built-in to OS X.
This provides a "visual" way of building automation workflows.
This is the basic steps that your workflow will need to perform.
Find the files that need updating.
For each file
Open the file using TextEdit
Tell TextEdit to Find the Head element and replace with the new Head Element that includes the script
Save the file.
Repeat
How about a simple find/replace in multiple files using something like this:
http://search-and-replace.en.softonic.com/mac
If you are able to create some sort of 'dummy' tag in Axure, you could use that as the 'find' that you could replace with your meta tags.
That seems to be a simple way to do what you want.
I'm doing a project in Java which creates a user manual (html files that are linked together like Windows "Help and support centre") of software. Now once a user manual is created I have only html files remaining. Now I want to search html file that contains specified keyword(Search Engine).How can I do this without Java code??
grep, find, python script, or open any file with a text editor and try edit->search
(on windows use windows search in file)
If all of your other code is written in java, then it'll be sensible (without knowing your usecase) to use java for searching as well. You might of course use some commandline programs as grep or find - or built in search functionality in a webbrowser, but if the search should be part of a java application anyway, why not go for java and e.g. Lucene?
If this 'help' is going to be online than you can embed google search in it (limiting the search results to specified site:). Alternatively if you're hosting the pages yourself you can use htdig for indexing the pages.
However if it's going to offilne you'll be better of by generating a static index page with links to topics. In order to create a more help-system-alike user experience you can hide the contents of the index in the invisible html DIV tags and add a JavaScript that takes searched phrase as an input and that unhides the matched words with their links.
Maybe I'm missing something, but have you looked at javahelp? It has indexing and searching built in, and can be used online or offline.
I created a CHM help file using MadCap Flare. When I search for a term that I know is present in my text, the search function always reports "no topics found."
How can I fix the search function?
In my case the problem was fixed by registering itcc.dll on the machine where Flare is installed (the machine building the CHM.)
C:\> regsvr32 itcc.dll
The file is included with MadCap Flare as well as the Microsoft HTML Help Workshop.
I have also found an article indicating that the language setting of the help file can affect the search function.
Here is the Getting Started Guide. Chapter 4 has a section about Search, which might prove useful.