[cogl/wip/rib/cogl-1.12: 86/101] Use <literal> not <pre> in the comments
- From: Robert Bragg <rbragg src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [cogl/wip/rib/cogl-1.12: 86/101] Use <literal> not <pre> in the comments
- Date: Mon, 6 Aug 2012 13:08:17 +0000 (UTC)
commit 9ae7bd96d5f077a7a4edd8718436f63bba1df087
Author: Damien Lespiau <damien lespiau intel com>
Date: Wed Jun 20 14:30:03 2012 +0100
Use <literal> not <pre> in the comments
Comments are interpreted as docbook snippets and <pre> is from html. The
closest maching tag for inline content seems to be <literal>.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert linux intel com>
(cherry picked from commit 66c9f26dfb3133f43d319128d6636f793a1ceb4a)
cogl/cogl-attribute.h | 23 +++++++++++------------
cogl/cogl-quaternion.h | 2 +-
2 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/cogl/cogl-attribute.h b/cogl/cogl-attribute.h
index f9316a6..7011707 100644
--- a/cogl/cogl-attribute.h
+++ b/cogl/cogl-attribute.h
@@ -56,10 +56,10 @@ G_BEGIN_DECLS
* @name: The name of the attribute (used to reference it from GLSL)
* @stride: The number of bytes to jump to get to the next attribute
* value for the next vertex. (Usually
- * <pre>sizeof (MyVertex)</pre>)
+ * <literal>sizeof (MyVertex)</literal>)
* @offset: The byte offset from the start of @attribute_buffer for
* the first attribute value. (Usually
- * <pre>offsetof (MyVertex, component0)</pre>
+ * <literal>offsetof (MyVertex, component0)</literal>
* @components: The number of components (e.g. 4 for an rgba color or
* 3 for and (x,y,z) position)
* @type: FIXME
@@ -95,23 +95,22 @@ G_BEGIN_DECLS
* ]|
*
* In this case, to describe either the position or texture coordinate
- * attribute you have to move <pre>sizeof (MyVertex)</pre> bytes to
+ * attribute you have to move <literal>sizeof (MyVertex)</literal> bytes to
* move from one vertex to the next. This is called the attribute
* @stride. If you weren't interleving attributes and you instead had
* a packed array of float x, y pairs then the attribute stride would
- * be <pre>(2 * sizeof (float))</pre>. So the @stride is the number of
+ * be <literal>(2 * sizeof (float))</literal>. So the @stride is the number of
* bytes to move to find the attribute value of the next vertex.
*
* Normally a list of attributes starts at the beginning of an array.
- * So for the <pre>MyVertex</pre> example above the @offset is the
- * offset inside the <pre>MyVertex</pre> structure to the first
+ * So for the <literal>MyVertex</literal> example above the @offset is the
+ * offset inside the <literal>MyVertex</literal> structure to the first
* component of the attribute. For the texture coordinate attribute
- * the offset would be <pre>offsetof (MyVertex, s)</pre> or instead of
- * using the offsetof macro you could use <pre>sizeof (float) * 3</pre>.
- * If you've divided your @array into blocks of non-interleved
- * attributes then you will need to calculate the @offset as the
- * number of bytes in blocks preceding the attribute you're
- * describing.
+ * the offset would be <literal>offsetof (MyVertex, s)</literal> or instead of
+ * using the offsetof macro you could use <literal>sizeof (float) *
+ * 3</literal>. If you've divided your @array into blocks of non-interleved
+ * attributes then you will need to calculate the @offset as the number of
+ * bytes in blocks preceding the attribute you're describing.
*
* An attribute often has more than one component. For example a color
* is often comprised of 4 red, green, blue and alpha @components, and a
diff --git a/cogl/cogl-quaternion.h b/cogl/cogl-quaternion.h
index 2a00741..7683633 100644
--- a/cogl/cogl-quaternion.h
+++ b/cogl/cogl-quaternion.h
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ G_BEGIN_DECLS
* component. The scalar component is normally referred to as w and the
* vector might either be referred to as v or a (for axis) or expanded
* with the individual components: (x, y, z) A full quaternion would
- * then be written as <pre>[w (x, y, z)]</pre>.
+ * then be written as <literal>[w (x, y, z)]</literal>.
*
* Quaternions can be considered to represent an axis and angle
* pair although sadly these numbers are buried somewhat under some
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