gresource: Minor capitalisation fixes in documentation

This commit is contained in:
Philip Withnall 2015-05-14 08:15:46 +01:00
parent 6ac2e8c79a
commit a8c157f92b

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@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ G_DEFINE_BOXED_TYPE (GResource, g_resource, g_resource_ref, g_resource_unref)
*
* Applications and libraries often contain binary or textual data that is
* really part of the application, rather than user data. For instance
* #GtkBuilder .ui files, splashscreen images, GMenu markup xml, CSS files,
* #GtkBuilder .ui files, splashscreen images, GMenu markup XML, CSS files,
* icons, etc. These are often shipped as files in `$datadir/appname`, or
* manually included as literal strings in the code.
*
@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ G_DEFINE_BOXED_TYPE (GResource, g_resource, g_resource_ref, g_resource_unref)
* The only options currently supported are:
*
* `xml-stripblanks` which will use the xmllint command
* to strip ignorable whitespace from the xml file. For this to work,
* to strip ignorable whitespace from the XML file. For this to work,
* the `XMLLINT` environment variable must be set to the full path to
* the xmllint executable, or xmllint must be in the `PATH`; otherwise
* the preprocessing step is skipped.
@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ G_DEFINE_BOXED_TYPE (GResource, g_resource, g_resource_ref, g_resource_unref)
* abort.
*
* Resource bundles are created by the [glib-compile-resources][glib-compile-resources] program
* which takes an xml file that describes the bundle, and a set of files that the xml references. These
* which takes an XML file that describes the bundle, and a set of files that the XML references. These
* are combined into a binary resource bundle.
*
* An example resource description:
@ -103,23 +103,23 @@ G_DEFINE_BOXED_TYPE (GResource, g_resource, g_resource_ref, g_resource_unref)
* /org/gtk/Example/menumarkup.xml
* ]|
*
* Note that all resources in the process share the same namespace, so use java-style
* Note that all resources in the process share the same namespace, so use Java-style
* path prefixes (like in the above example) to avoid conflicts.
*
* You can then use [glib-compile-resources][glib-compile-resources] to compile the xml to a
* You can then use [glib-compile-resources][glib-compile-resources] to compile the XML to a
* binary bundle that you can load with g_resource_load(). However, its more common to use the --generate-source and
* --generate-header arguments to create a source file and header to link directly into your application.
*
* Once a #GResource has been created and registered all the data in it can be accessed globally in the process by
* using API calls like g_resources_open_stream() to stream the data or g_resources_lookup_data() to get a direct pointer
* to the data. You can also use uris like "resource:///org/gtk/Example/data/splashscreen.png" with #GFile to access
* to the data. You can also use URIs like "resource:///org/gtk/Example/data/splashscreen.png" with #GFile to access
* the resource data.
*
* There are two forms of the generated source, the default version uses the compiler support for constructor
* and destructor functions (where available) to automatically create and register the #GResource on startup
* or library load time. If you pass --manual-register two functions to register/unregister the resource is instead
* created. This requires an explicit initialization call in your application/library, but it works on all platforms,
* even on the minor ones where this is not available. (Constructor support is available for at least Win32, MacOS and Linux.)
* even on the minor ones where this is not available. (Constructor support is available for at least Win32, Mac OS and Linux.)
*
* Note that resource data can point directly into the data segment of e.g. a library, so if you are unloading libraries
* during runtime you need to be very careful with keeping around pointers to data from a resource, as this goes away