Re: API in binary release?

2018-09-17 Thread Andy Seaborne
Using maven/gradle/... will make things easier in the long run. If you do want to use the distribution, the source is available in the distribution and if you attach that, the javadoc should be available in the IDE (at least, it is in Eclipse). It is also online:

Re: API in binary release?

2018-09-17 Thread Lorenz B.
Using Maven/Gradle would fetch sources and Javadoc automatically via IDEs like Eclipse, IntelliJ, etc. If you really want to import the JARs manually, you can get Javadoc from Maven repo [1]. Indeed, you have to do it for each module, e.g. "core", "arq", etc. in your classpath [1]

API in binary release?

2018-09-16 Thread Steve Vestal
The download page says the distribution includes the API, but I cannot find a javadoc folder in the jars.  Is there some way to get this short of standing up a source build myself? (I'm putting the jars in an Eclipse plugin so Jena is conveniently available to multiple other plugins, and it is