How to disable generation of html folder in Doxygen? - doxygen

I am creating documentation for project using doxygen want to generate only .chm file. But for now html folder and also .chm file is generating.
I don't want that html folder to be generated
GENERATE_HTML = NO
.chm file is not generating but html folder is generating with some file
so how you can disable that folder

Chm is using html and thus html folder cannot be disabled.
From the documentation:
The HTML Help Workshop contains a compiler that can convert all HTML
output generated by doxygen into a single compiled HTML file (.chm).

Related

HTML support in phtml file

When working with pthml file, how do I get the HTML-Intellisense like I got when working with html file?
I have the extension PHP Intelephense installed, but it's not recommending the closing tag when adding new HTML tag. Or did I configured something wrongly?
Edited:
VS Code can do this by altering the setting file association. So if I associate the phtml file with html, I get the Intellisense for html, and the same for php. I think what I really want is to associate phtml with html and php... which is impossible for now, I guess.
For reference: https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/22415
Try:
"files.associations": {
"*.phtml": "html"
}
in your settings file. This should give .phtml files the same intellisense as html files.

Download link in GitHub markdown [duplicate]

When you link to a PDF file using:
[download this](file.pdf)
it downloads the pdf file. I have an excel workbook that I'd like to allow someone to download using:
[download this](file.xlsx)
When I click it, it takes me to create a new page in the wiki. Is there any markdown syntax I can add that identifies the link as something to download?
If I have to, I can save the excel workbook as a PDF, but it's not going to be pretty.
Thank you!
First, try making a files subdirectory in your wiki, and putting your files in there.
I tried using an html anchor tag
download this
instead of the markdown link syntax
[download this](files/file.csv)
but it seems that GitHub wiki strips out the download attribute from the anchor tag.
In the end, I zipped my spreadsheet in a zip file and had the markdown link point to the zip file.
[download this](files/file.csv.zip)

Can I link to a file for downloading (other than PDF) in a GitHub wiki?

When you link to a PDF file using:
[download this](file.pdf)
it downloads the pdf file. I have an excel workbook that I'd like to allow someone to download using:
[download this](file.xlsx)
When I click it, it takes me to create a new page in the wiki. Is there any markdown syntax I can add that identifies the link as something to download?
If I have to, I can save the excel workbook as a PDF, but it's not going to be pretty.
Thank you!
First, try making a files subdirectory in your wiki, and putting your files in there.
I tried using an html anchor tag
download this
instead of the markdown link syntax
[download this](files/file.csv)
but it seems that GitHub wiki strips out the download attribute from the anchor tag.
In the end, I zipped my spreadsheet in a zip file and had the markdown link point to the zip file.
[download this](files/file.csv.zip)

Doxygen: Images not shown in the chm file generated

I have copied folder names reports with html files and images which are necessary to the HTML output folder of the doxygen. In one of the pages I am trying to provide a link to the external HTML document(within reports directory).In the chm file the HTML document is opening but the images are not displayed.When I open the index.html file in the html output directory and try to open the link the images are shown properly.

Convert rtf files to chm files ? Convert hlp files to chm files?

We were shipping .hlp files to customers when development was in VC++. The process to create it was as follows:
1. Create rtf file
2. Create new project in WinHelp and then compile to get .hlp file.
Now development has moved to .net and also I found that we can no longer open .hlp files in windows 7 or vista.
I wanted to know if there are any free command line tools using which we can convert these .hlp files to a .chm file ?
Also I wanted to know if there are any free command line tools to convert .rtf file to .chm ?
Microsoft has a tool which can convert Win Help projects to HTML Help. It is called HTML Help Workshop. You can open the existing .hpj project file with it and choose the option to convert it to HTML Help project .hhp. You can then compile the .hhp project with the same tool to generate the .chm file.
There are however many shortcomings in the tool. It generates an HTML page for each page in the rtf file but the naming of these HTML pages is random causing future referencing to be difficult.
If you just have the .hlp file and not the original Win Help project files, you can use a decompiler to generate the .hpj and .rtf files first and then convert them using HTML Help Workshop.
I found the following link quite helpful:
http://www.help-info.de/en/Help_Info_WinHelp/hw_converting.htm
EDIT: there are some 3rd party convertors and Help Authoring Tools (HATs) also available which may do the job better than HTML Help Workshop but most of them are not free.
Keep in mind that CHM is compiled HTML, and not very related to html, so your main problem is conversion of rtf to html
I would try to convert RTF to HTML, but on a topic per file.
What you could try is to input the RTF into word and try to save as HTML, and then use a program/script to split out the various topics to individual files and fixup references.
Then compile the result with a CHM compiler (like MS htmlhelp workshop)