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I recently felt the urge to generate documentation for my little project. I thought it would be fairly easy since I had a set of nice docstrings. Turns out the whole process is much more complicated in python 3.1.
Here's what I tried:
epydoc: Fails because it's for python 2. 2to3 didn't solve the problems
pydoc: I can't find any information how can you generate documentation for your own modules, seems like a server for reading python docs offline
sphinx: Most promising so far, I have built it from their repository however it fails with a very cryptic error message (jinja2.exceptions.UndefinedError: b'b"\'sphinx.jinja2glue.idgen object\' has no attribute \'next\'")
My question is: what should I do now? Are there any other non-commercial documentation generators that work with python3?
Apparently in Jinja, something is doing X.next(). In Python 3 that's next(x) instead. It should be a simple fix.
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I wanted to know the spell correct api's available for commercial/non commercial usage other than google/bing.
First of all you can write your own spell corrector with this tutorial. In addition there are some Python packages that may help you with that, such as TextBlob (which I highly recommend). Another option is Gingerit which Iv'e never tried but looks promising. Another DIY spell correct tutorial might interest you as well.
https://www.gigablast.com/spellcheckapi.html
I just launched this, so it's still beta, but it's not bad. It has a dictionary of over 600,000,000 entries covering most non-Asian languages.
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I am trying to get started with developing Kinect Application using OpenNi.I dont seem to find any sample code for OpenNi2.I could find code for OpenNI 1.5 though. Where would i be able to find it?
And I am also looking for the older version OpenNI1.5 since all the documentations are based on it.Where would i find a link to download it?
Thanks.
After you download OpenNI 2 and unzip it there is a Samples folder.
You will want to start with something like SimpleViewer.
I recommend checking out the OpenNI Migration Guide as well.
Also, you can find previous version of OpenNI (including 1.5.4.0) here
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I know Norman is working on the Netty 4 book as I've been following the tweets, but was wondering if there are any pieces available to help someone who hasn't worked with Netty 3. I have looked a little at the existing 3.x articles, but I think it would be easier to understand the primary components without having to learn 3.x and then mentally apply the New and Noteworthy section to bridge the gap.
For now, I'm just trying to go through the example/test code to see how it's used, but any overview/fundemental documentation would be great. If not, that's ok - just thought I'd check.
Thanks
There is nothing out there at the moment except what you find on the Blog and the javadocs. I'm currently working hard on getting the javadocs up-to-date before our next release, so you may find all you need in there. An other source of informations is like you said the example module which contains a lot examples for all kind of use-cases.
Hopefully the MEAP of the Netty book will start in not so far future. But we will see..
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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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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.