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Chapter 47. Quickbook 1.7

Joel de Guzman

Eric Niebler

Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)

Table of Contents

Introduction
Change Log
Command Line Usage
Command Line Options
Syntax Summary
Comments
Document Structure
Document Info
Sections
Phrase Level Elements
Font Styles
Replaceable
Quotations
Simple formatting
Role
Inline code
Code blocks
Source Mode
line-break
Anchors
Links
Anchor links
refentry links
Code Links
Escape
Single char escape
Unicode escape
Images
Footnotes
Macro Expansion
Template Expansion
Conditional Generation
Block Level Elements
xinclude
Paragraphs
Lists
Code
Escaping Back To QuickBook
Preformatted
Blockquote
Admonitions
Headings
Generic Heading
Macros
Predefined Macros
Templates
Blurbs
Tables
Variable Lists
Include
Import
Plain blocks
Language Versions
Upgrading to a new version
Stable Versions
Quickbook 1.6
Quickbook 1.7
Installation and configuration
Mac OS X
Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 7
Debian, Ubuntu
Editor Support
Scintilla Text Editor
KDE Support
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick Reference

Introduction

Why program by hand in five days what you can spend five years of your life automating?

-- Terrence Parr, author ANTLR/PCCTS

Well, QuickBook started as a weekend hack. It was originally intended to be a sample application using Spirit. What is it? What you are viewing now, this documentation, is autogenerated by QuickBook. These files were generated from one master:

Originally named QuickDoc, this funky tool that never dies, evolved into a funkier tool thanks to Eric Niebler who resurrected the project making it generate BoostBook instead of HTML. The BoostBook documentation format is an extension of DocBook, an SGML or XML based format for describing documentation.

[Tip] Tip

You don't need to know anything about BoostBook or DocBook to use QuickBook. A basic understanding of DocBook might help, but shouldn't be necessary. For really advanced stuff you will need to know DocBook, but you can ignore it at first, and maybe continue to do so.

QuickBook is a WikiWiki style documentation tool geared towards C++ documentation using simple rules and markup for simple formatting tasks. QuickBook extends the WikiWiki concept. Like the WikiWiki, QuickBook documents are simple text files. A single QuickBook document can generate a fully linked set of nice HTML and PostScript/PDF documents complete with images and syntax- colorized source code.

Features include:

  • generate BoostBook xml, to generate HTML, PostScript and PDF
  • simple markup to link to Doxygen-generated entities
  • macro system for simple text substitution
  • simple markup for italics, bold, preformatted, blurbs, code samples, tables, URLs, anchors, images, etc.
  • automatic syntax coloring of code samples
  • CSS support

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