Small changes to LibNVCClient doxygen documentation.

pull/1/head
Christian Beier 13 years ago
parent abf6fad894
commit 66b0603b5a

@ -146,7 +146,8 @@ struct _rfbClient;
* client->HandleTextChat to a pointer to that function subsequent to your
* rfbGetClient() call.
* @param client The client which called the text chat handler
* @param value ????
* @param value text length if text != NULL, or one of rfbTextChatOpen,
* rfbTextChatClose, rfbTextChatFinished if text == NULL
* @param text The text message from the server
*/
typedef void (*HandleTextChatProc)(struct _rfbClient* client, int value, char *text);
@ -369,14 +370,13 @@ extern rfbBool InitialiseRFBConnection(rfbClient* client);
* modify the 'client' data structure directly. However some changes to this
* structure must be communicated back to the server. For instance, if you
* change the encoding to hextile, the server needs to know that it should send
* framebuffer updates in hextile format. Likewise if you change the dimensions
* of the framebuffer, the server must be notified about this as well. Call this
* function to propagate your changes to the local 'client' structure over to
* the server. These changes to the local 'client' structure must be followed
* by a call to SetFormatAndEncodings():
* framebuffer updates in hextile format. Likewise if you change the pixel
* format of the framebuffer, the server must be notified about this as well.
* Call this function to propagate your changes of the local 'client' structure
* over to the server.
* @li Encoding type
* @li Framebuffer dimensions
* @li Pixel format
* @li RFB protocol extensions announced via pseudo-encodings
* @li Framebuffer pixel format (like RGB vs ARGB)
* @li Remote cursor support
* @param client The client in which the format or encodings have been changed
* @return true if the format or encodings were sent to the server successfully,
@ -400,7 +400,8 @@ extern rfbBool SendIncrementalFramebufferUpdateRequest(rfbClient* client);
* @param y The vertical position of the update request rectangle
* @param w The width of the update request rectangle
* @param h The height of the update request rectangle
* @param incremental ???
* @param incremental false: server sends rectangle even if nothing changed.
* true: server only sends changed parts of rectangle.
* @return true if the update request was sent successfully, false otherwise
*/
extern rfbBool SendFramebufferUpdateRequest(rfbClient* client,
@ -433,7 +434,7 @@ extern rfbBool SendPointerEvent(rfbClient* client,int x, int y, int buttonMask);
* viewer (i.e. it controls the server), you'll want to send the keys that the
* user presses to the server. Use this function to do that.
* @param client The client through which to send the key event
* @param key A key which was pressed in UTF-8
* @param key An rfbKeySym defined in rfb/keysym.h
* @param down true if this was a key down event, false otherwise
* @return true if the key event was send successfully, false otherwise
*/
@ -453,7 +454,7 @@ extern rfbBool SendKeyEvent(rfbClient* client,uint32_t key, rfbBool down);
extern rfbBool SendClientCutText(rfbClient* client,char *str, int len);
/**
* Handles messages from the RFB server. You must call this function
* intermittently so libvncclient can parse messages from the server. For
* intermittently so LibVNCClient can parse messages from the server. For
* example, if your app has a draw loop, you could place a call to this
* function within that draw loop.
* @note You must call WaitForMessage() before you call this function.
@ -494,7 +495,7 @@ extern rfbBool SupportsServer2Client(rfbClient* client, int messageType);
/* client data */
/**
* Associates a client data tag with the given pointer. libvncclient has
* Associates a client data tag with the given pointer. LibVNCClient has
* several events to which you can associate your own handlers. These handlers
* have the client structure as one of their parameters. Sometimes, you may want
* to make data from elsewhere in your application available to these handlers
@ -564,7 +565,7 @@ extern int WaitForMessage(rfbClient* client,unsigned int usecs);
/* vncviewer.c */
/**
* Allocates and returns a pointer to an rfbClient structure. This will probably
* be the first libvncclient function your client code calls. Most libvncclient
* be the first LibVNCClient function your client code calls. Most libVNCClient
* functions operate on an rfbClient structure, and this function allocates
* memory for that structure. When you're done with the rfbClient structure
* pointer this function returns, you should free the memory rfbGetClient()
@ -593,22 +594,22 @@ rfbClient* rfbGetClient(int bitsPerSample,int samplesPerPixel,int bytesPerPixel)
* name is set already. The options are as follows:
* <table>
* <tr><th>Option</th><th>Description</th></tr>
* <tr><td>-listen</td><td>Listen for incoming connections</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-listennofork</td><td>Listen for incoming connections without forking
* <tr><td>-listen</td><td>Listen for incoming connections.</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-listennofork</td><td>Listen for incoming connections without forking.
* </td></tr>
* <tr><td>-play</td><td>Unknown???</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-play</td><td>Set this client to replay a previously recorded session.</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-encodings</td><td>Set the encodings to use. The next item in the
* argv array is the encodings. Possible values are:</td></tr>
* argv array is the encodings string, consisting of comma separated encodings like 'tight,ultra,raw'.</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-compress</td><td>Set the compression level. The next item in the
* argv array is the compression level as an integer. Possible values are:
* argv array is the compression level as an integer. Ranges from 0 (lowest) to 9 (highest).
* </td></tr>
* <tr><td>-scale</td><td>Set the scaling level. The next item in the
* argv array is the scaling level as an integer. Example:</td></tr>
* argv array is the scaling level as an integer. The screen will be scaled down by this factor.</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-qosdscp</td><td>Set the Quality of Service Differentiated Services
* Code Point (QoS DSCP). The next item in the argv array is the code point as
* an integer. Example:</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-repeaterdest</td><td>Set the ???. The next item in the argv array is
* the ???? as a string. Example:</td></tr>
* an integer.</td></tr>
* <tr><td>-repeaterdest</td><td>Set a VNC repeater address. The next item in the argv array is
* the repeater's address as a string.</td></tr>
* </table>
*
* The host may include a port number (delimited by a ':').

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