gtk2/examples
Matthias Clasen 9f1363013f More GTK+ 2.0 updates.
* docs/tutorial/gtk-tut.sgml, docs/tutorial/images/*, examples/*: More
	 GTK+ 2.0 updates.

	* docs/tutorial/Makefile.am: build and dist the new tutorial, not
	the old Linuxdoc one.
2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
..
arrow
aspectframe
base More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
buttonbox
buttons More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
calendar
clist
entry
eventbox
filesel
fixed
frame
gtkdial More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
helloworld
helloworld2
label
list More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
menu
notebook
packbox More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
paned
pixmap More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
progressbar
radiobuttons More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
rangewidgets
rulers
scribble-simple
scribble-xinput
scrolledwin
selection
spinbutton More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
statusbar
table
text More GTK+ 2.0 updates. 2002-02-25 01:47:44 +00:00
tictactoe
tree
wheelbarrow
extract.awk
extract.sh
find-examples.sh
Makefile
README.1ST

GTK Example Code - Tony Gale <gale@gtk.org> 980623
--------------------------------------------------

I have written an awk script to automatically extract the code
examples from the GTK Tutorial (in sgml), so they only have to be
changed in one place.

It's called 'extract.awk', and there is a shell wrapper to invoke
it called 'extract.sh'

It takes the following switches:
 -c : Just do checking rather than output files
 -f <filename> : Extract a specific file
 -d : Extract file(s) to current directory

Without the -d switch, the code will be placed in the appropriate
sub-directory. Those sub-directories will be created if they do not
exist.

Without the -f switch, all code examples will be extracted.

The shell wrapper assumes that the GTK Tutorial is in the 
file "../docs/gtk_tut.sgml"

It works by looking for sections of text in the tutorial surrounded
by, for example:

/* example-start helloworld helloworld.c */

and

/* example-end */

Where "helloworld" is the directory into which the file will be
placed (which can also be a directory spec like hello/hello1), and
"helloworld.c" is the file name for the code.

So, the code between these lines would be extracted to the file
helloworld/helloworld.c

It also handles replacing the sgml tag '&amp;' with '&'