rust/doc
Daniel Micay 49c74524e2 vec: rm old_iter implementations, except BaseIter
The removed test for issue #2611 is well covered by the `std::iterator`
module itself.

This adds the `count` method to `IteratorUtil` to replace `EqIter`.
2013-06-21 03:20:22 -04:00
..
lib Remove fail keyword from lexer & parser and clean up remaining calls to 2013-02-01 00:15:42 -08:00
lib.css Establish 'core' library separate from 'std'. 2011-12-06 12:13:04 -08:00
manual.css Display the full TOC in the manual. Closes #4194 2012-12-14 18:06:21 -08:00
prep.js fix escape 2012-10-05 12:41:00 -07:00
README add gitattributes and fix whitespace issues 2013-05-03 20:01:42 -04:00
rust.css Remove h[123] border and increase their padding to better readability 2013-06-16 17:40:45 +02:00
rust.md Correct docs 2013-06-16 12:48:08 -04:00
rustpkg.md docs: Mention recently-added rustpkg features in the rustpkg manual 2013-06-02 17:21:01 -07:00
tutorial-borrowed-ptr.md Replace shared/unique by managed/owned in the tutorial 2013-05-14 22:25:55 +09:00
tutorial-ffi.md librustc: Disallow multiple patterns from appearing in a "let" declaration. 2013-06-04 21:45:42 -07:00
tutorial-macros.md librustc: Disallow multiple patterns from appearing in a "let" declaration. 2013-06-04 21:45:42 -07:00
tutorial-tasks.md vec: rm old_iter implementations, except BaseIter 2013-06-21 03:20:22 -04:00
tutorial.md Correct tutorial tests 2013-06-16 12:47:36 -04:00
version_info.html.template add gitattributes and fix whitespace issues 2013-05-03 20:01:42 -04:00

The markdown docs are only generated by make when node is installed (use
`make doc`). If you don't have node installed you can generate them yourself.
Unfortunately there's no real standard for markdown and all the tools work
differently. pandoc is one that seems to work well.

To generate an html version of a doc do something like:
pandoc --from=markdown --to=html --number-sections -o build/doc/rust.html doc/rust.md && git web--browse build/doc/rust.html

The syntax for pandoc flavored markdown can be found at:
http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/README.html#pandocs-markdown

A nice quick reference (for non-pandoc markdown) is at:
http://kramdown.rubyforge.org/quickref.html