object hardcoded
This is the hardcoded area of Scaladoc. This is where "undesirable" stuff gets eliminated. I know it's not pretty, but ultimately scaladoc has to be useful. :)
- Source
- Settings.scala
- Alphabetic
- By Inheritance
- hardcoded
- AnyRef
- Any
- Hide All
- Show All
- Public
- All
Value Members
-
val
commonConversionTargets: Set[String]
Common conversion targets that affect any class in Scala
-
def
isExcluded(qname: String): Boolean
Set of classes to exclude from index and diagrams TODO: Should be configurable
-
val
knownTypeClasses: Map[String, (String) ⇒ String]
The common context bounds and some humanly explanations.
The common context bounds and some humanly explanations. Feel free to add more explanations
<root>.scala.package.Numeric
is the type classtparam
is the name of the type parameter it gets (this only describes type classes with 1 type param) the function result should be a humanly-understandable description of the type class -
def
valueClassFilter(value: String, conversionName: String): Boolean
Dirty, dirty, dirty hack: the value params conversions can all kick in -- and they are disambiguated by priority but showing priority in scaladoc would make no sense -- so we have to manually remove the conversions that we know will never get a chance to kick in.
Dirty, dirty, dirty hack: the value params conversions can all kick in -- and they are disambiguated by priority but showing priority in scaladoc would make no sense -- so we have to manually remove the conversions that we know will never get a chance to kick in. Anyway, DIRTY DIRTY DIRTY!
- def valueClassFilterPrefixes: collection.immutable.List[String]
- def valueClassList: collection.immutable.List[String]
The Scala compiler and reflection APIs.