Re: Major trouble with PhpDocumentor [message #182314 is a reply to message #182313] |
Sun, 28 July 2013 02:45 |
Fiver
Messages: 35 Registered: July 2013
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On 2013-07-28 04:22, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 7/27/2013 10:14 PM, Fiver wrote:
>> Their support structure, as far as I can tell, is GitHub. I could file a
>> new issue for every problem I encountered, sure, but that would a) swamp
>> their bugtracker, and b) be premature until I can eliminate the
>> possibility that I'm simply doing something wrong. I saw *so* many bugs
>> that I need to rule out a systematic error on my part first. If they had
>> a forum or mailing list, I would certainly try that first.
>>
>> I would also like to know what everybody else is doing to document their
>> source code when they're using PHP 5.4 syntax. I find it hard to believe
>> that I'm alone in this situation.
> This still isn't a good place to ask such questions. I suspect very
> few, if anyone, uses it.
This may not be the ideal place to ask, but as I said, I haven't found
anything directly relevant. There's a good chance that others in this
group are using, or have used, PhpDocumentor; it used to be the number
one documentation generator for PHP. I'll stick around for a couple of
days and see if somebody who has worked with it has a suggestion.
> They also have a "Contact us" link you can
> use. You might make a suggestion they add a forum. Or, if you can't
> figure out if you're doing something wrong, start filing bug reports.
> If the documentation is that unclear, maybe it needs to be fixed.
I maintain and contribute to several FOSS projects, and I know from
experience that support requests in a bug tracker are rarely
appreciated. But yeah, unless I can find out what I'm doing wrong,
that's what I'll have to do.
> Personally, much of my code is documented before any code is written
> (it's called a "design"). It may or may not be a complete design,
> depending on the complexity of the project. But the rough outlines are
> there. Then I add any additional details as I go along.
Okay, but what do you use to process your inline documentation?
Design, documentation and tests first is a nice principle, but I've
never seen a (non-trivial) project go from design to production without
significant changes. Having to maintain separate documentation files in
parallel to the source is asking for trouble, IMHO. But to each their own.
Thanks,
5er
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