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I am studying myself some Script Object with looking at reference from MSDN or googling. As skipped the whole properties, methods which object has, I can roughly imagine that how the object was constructed. But, If i can look at entire source code of each object such as FileSystemObject, I gonna much more understand the structure it has.
Is there someone who know how to get the entire source code of each Script's object?
You're a few decades off. Check out JavaScript or PowerShell. Even the latest version of Office supports scripting in JavaScript.
To directly answer your question, you can't. Microsoft only very very recently started making things open source.
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Are the JavaDocs for clojure.lang, etc. available online? Do I need to build it myself from the Clojure source?
Thanks.
if you want descriptions for functions and even examples, visit ClojureDocs
you can even contribute ;)
Javadocs don't exist, per se. If you look at the Java source code, it's very sparsely documented. Certainly you could generate a skeleton yourself, but it probably wouldn't be all that useful anyway as much of the language is self-implemented (in clojure), using Java mostly for bootstrapping the core functionality. I don't think clojure.lang package is really intended to be used directly.
To learn about Clojure functions you can:
Use (doc) and (find-doc) from a repl
Use the API reference at clojure.org
See ClojureDocs, per #Belun's answer
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what tools do you use to create programming flowchart/documentation from VB.NET source code? There are absolutely no comments/documentation at present. I am a beginner, i.e. I tried Sandcastle but it is way over my head and could not get it going, not even with GUI.
Fatesoft's CodeVisual To Flowchart is OK but it is almost the same as the code and I still don't understand the code.
Convert VB.NET to Csharp using http://converter.telerik.com/
Use Code Rocket to both generate documentation and flowchart http://www.rapidqualitysystems.com/Products/CodeRocketNET
You can use the built-in XML documentation, described here
I have always enjoyed the output of doxygen
And now I read that you need it for VB .... sigh
I guess you can look at it and think about how awesome it would have been to use ;)
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I'm thinking of making a D interface to Valgrind's client request API. By mucking around in the header files and de-compiling stuff, I could eventually figure out what it's doing but I'm wondering if their is a authoritative document on how things work? (BTW I already found this document but it doesn't have enough info)
What I'm looking for would answer questions like: How do I generate the macros to wrap/call a function that returns a 32bit machine word and takes a 64bit float?
In the valgrand manual, it describes the existing client request prototypes at the bottom of http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/manual-core-adv.html but none of these support passing 64bit floats. You could split it into two longs and pass it that way. It does look pretty hairy.
The authoritative document on how it works is the source code. If the tech docs are incomplete, then use the source.
I would also suggest looking at the sources of libraries that use the client request mechanism.
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I looked in http://docs.wxwidgets.org/trunk/ but could't find the documentation for it.
Does anyone know where it is and/or why it's not there?
I can explain why it's not there in a sense - there's no Doxygen annotations in the header file where the class is declared. As for why not, I'm guessing that the AUI authors isn't a big fan of Doxygen - I believe AUI was developed as a third party addition to wxWidgets, and has only relatively recently been merged in, so a few differences in things like this are to be expected.
The class is declared in include/wx/aui/auibar.h, it inherits wxControl, and from a quick look through the public methods it's probably not that hard to figure out.
There are some wxAuiToolbar examples in the aui sample program (samples/aui/auidemo.cpp). This should give a few more clues.
Until someone contributes some documentation updates, I'm afraid a bit of detective work is probably needed.
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Our company has a very large public Java API which is currently being released standalone and online using (of course) JavaDoc. It is surrounded by product documentation which links into the API.
We are moving our static documentation to DokuWiki - which works pretty good - and want to keep the links.
Now it would be good to have a method (or doclet) that exports the JavaDoc directly into DokuWiki - or a very near alternative.
Question: Is there something like this or do you know a method to do just that?
Here's a Doclet which writes to JSON.
https://bitbucket.org/ananelson/json-doclet/src/tip/src/it/dexy/jsondoclet/Doclet.java
It might help get you started writing a custom Doclet.
You need to write doclet yourself, its not hard - its just html generation from very nice meta-model.
this might help
P.S. doclet api is in lib/tools.jar of your sdk.