          MODULE=doxygen
         VERSION=1.7.6.1
          SOURCE=$MODULE-$VERSION.src.tar.gz
         SOURCE2=$MODULE-without-qt4.patch.bz2
      SOURCE_URL=ftp://ftp.stack.nl/pub/users/dimitri
     SOURCE2_URL=$PATCH_URL
      SOURCE_VFY=sha1:6203d4423d12315f1094b56a4d7393347104bc4a
     SOURCE2_VFY=sha1:bc3c707b9f2b80c854e49a888096d81089fc07ec
        WEB_SITE=http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen
         ENTERED=20020529
         UPDATED=20111211
           SHORT="Documentation system for C++, Java, IDL (Corba, Microsoft and KDE-DCOP flavors) and C"

PSAFE=no
cat << EOF
Doxygen is a documentation system for C++, Java, IDL (Corba, Microsoft and
KDE-DCOP flavors) and C.

It can help you in three ways:
 1. It can generate an on-line documentation browser (in HTML) and/or an
    off-line reference manual (in ) from a set of documented source files.
    There is also support for generating output in RTF (MS-Word), PostScript,
    hyperlinked PDF, compressed HTML, and Unix man pages. The documentation is
    extracted directly from the sources, which makes it much easier to keep the
    documentation consistent with the source code.
 2. Doxygen can be configured to extract the code structure from undocumented
    source files. This can be very useful to quickly find your way in large
    source distributions. The relations between the various elements are be
    visualized by means of include dependency graphs, inheritance diagrams, and
    collaboration diagrams, which are all generated automatically.
 3. You can even abuse doxygen for creating normal documentation (as I did for
    this manual). Doxygen is developed under Linux, but is set-up to be highly
    portable. As a result, it runs on most other Unix flavors as well.
    Furthermore, executables for Windows 9x/NT and Mac OS X are available.
EOF
