Mercurial > pidgin.yaz
view README.MTN @ 25402:0c7b74fc558e
Lots of minor whitespace and comment changes:
* Removed stray whitespace
* Changed a few places that used space indentation to use tabs
* Changed some places that used tabs for alignment in the middle
of a line of code to use spaces
* Use two tabs to indent code that spans more than one line instead of
a few tabs and a few spaces in an effort to align the subsequent lines
with the initial one
* Changed "#ifdef _BLAH_H" to "#ifdef BLAH_H" because an underscore
followed by a capital letter is reserved for use by the compiler and
system libraries.
I also changed the path to the sound theme.xml file from
root_node = xmlnode_from_file(dir, "theme.xml", "sound themes", "sound-loader");
to
root_node = xmlnode_from_file(dir, "theme.xml", "sound themes", "sound-theme-loader");
author | Mark Doliner <mark@kingant.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 25 Jan 2009 22:55:23 +0000 |
parents | e0bcb8cfda74 |
children |
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If you plan to use Pidgin, Finch and libpurple from our Monotone repository, PLEASE read this message in its entirety! Pidgin, Finch, and libpurple are a fast-moving project with a somewhat regular release schedule. Due to the rate of development, the code in our Monotone repository undergoes frequent bursts of massive changes, often leaving behind brokenness and partial functionality while the responsible developers rewrite some portion of code or seek to add new features. What this all boils down to is that the code in our Monotone repository _WILL_ sometimes be broken. Because of this, we ask that users who are not interested in personally tracking down bugs and fixing them (without a lot of assistance from the developers!) use only released versions. Since releases will be made often, this should not prevent anyone from using the newest, shiniest features -- but it will prevent users from having to deal with ugly development bugs that we already know about but haven't gotten around to fixing. If you are interested in hacking on Pidgin, Finch, and/or libpurple, please check out the information available at: http://developer.pidgin.im By far the best documentation, however, is the documented code. If you have doxygen, you can run "make docs" in the toplevel directory to generate pretty documentation. Otherwise (or even if you do!), the header files for each subsystem contain documentation for the functions they contain. For instance, conversation.h contains documentation for the entire purple_conversation_* API, and account.h contains documentation for the purple_account_* API. If you have questions, please feel free to contact the Pidgin, Finch, and libpurple developers by email at devel@pidgin.im or on IRC at irc.freenode.net in #pidgin. Please do as much homework as you can before contacting us; the more you know about your question, the faster and more effectively we can help! Patches should be posted as Trac tickets at: http://developer.pidgin.im