If you look inside of a docset bundle, there is a compiled . Mom file (CoreData) and a couple of plist files (with various extensions). I do not think there is a straightforward way to consume all that data without knowing the schemas You should probably create your own core data schema, and index the HTML contents of the docset manually at the first run of your app, and reuse that for searching and such.
A Doxygen-created . Docset contains the raw HTML files, at DoxygenDocs. Docset/html/*.html.
Those could be displayed in a UIWebView. – Graham Lee Mar 28 at 8:11 :) sure, that's actually very easy to do, but I think the question has to do with the indexes and those files that appear in the docset. Just a comment tho, docsets generated by the latest version of Doxygen are Mac OS X bundles, with the HTML files in the Content/Resources folder, if I'm not mistaken.
– akosma Mar 29 at 21:04 So what I see from one of my projects is a bundle DoxygenDocs. Docset laid out as I described. Inside that is com.fuzzyaliens.MyProduct.
Docset, which has the HTML in Contents/Resources/Documents and also has the binary indices. The compiled . Mom is a binary plist as you say so that part is quite easy to parse, it should be possible to write a tool to read in the index files.
– Graham Lee Mar 29 at 21:55.
If you look inside of a docset bundle, there is a compiled . Mom file (CoreData) and a couple of plist files (with various extensions). I do not think there is a straightforward way to consume all that data without knowing the schemas.
You should probably create your own core data schema, and index the HTML contents of the docset manually at the first run of your app, and reuse that for searching and such.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.