On Saturday 18 Mar 2017, Jonathan H wrote:
> Hi, thanks - that looks really good!
>
> I was about to embark on some non-visual stuff using Ragic, but this
> looks great.
>
> Is there a binary anywhere, or any instructions to compile? I've never
> compiled C# code before, and although a quick
Hey, that's great. I just tried the executable - seems to run OK.
I've also taken a look at the PDF - thank you again.
It's getting late here in the UK so I'm going to look more with a
fresh head tomorrow.
So, even if I do not actually build dialplan with this, I can still
use it to document
Everything is now on release folder on GitHub, documentation and executable.
Hope it helps
On Mar 18, 2017, 20:17 +0100, Sebastian Gutierrez , wrote:
> This should work with at least .net framework 4, no dependency needed, just
> .net framework, I think you should be able to
I´ve just added a .exe to the base folder of the project, check if works for
you, I will try to attach the pdf where everything is explained, is 25mb I will
see if allows me to upload it.
Best regards
On Mar 18, 2017, 20:13 +0100, Jonathan H , wrote:
> Hi, thanks -
This should work with at least .net framework 4, no dependency needed, just
.net framework, I think you should be able to compile it from a vs express
version. If you are not able to let me know and next week I will build it for
you and upload it as an artifact, in my Astricon 2015 talk
Hi, thanks - that looks really good!
I was about to embark on some non-visual stuff using Ragic, but this
looks great.
Is there a binary anywhere, or any instructions to compile? I've never
compiled C# code before, and although a quick google suggests it
shouldn't be too hard, I might need to
Check this one:
https://github.com/IntegraCCS/integradesigner
You can do many things, document each node, and save xml with each extension.
We´ve made it open source on Astricon 2015 you can extend it the way you want.
Hope it helps you.
Best regards
On Mar 18, 2017, 12:50 +0100, Jonathan
How are we all documenting complex dialplan?
Is there something similar to Doxygen?
I've got around 20 config files covering around 60 contexts and 40
variables. Of course, I've maintained a basic list of the major stuff,
and documented the code throughout, but it's grown to the stage where
it