Incidentally,
(in case anyone else is interested). It turns out there's a setting
in Eclipse under Compiler/Javadoc that flags a warning for every
Javadoc problem. You can set this by project so that your code
without the rigid Velocity style scrutiny can stay in more relaxed
form.
WILL v^-
On 11/1/06, Henning P. Schmiedehausen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
excuse me for being anal but while starting to think about preparing
beta2, I noticed that we introduced quite a number of problems in the
javadocs.
(Nathan: As you were asking whether the large amount of formal javadoc
fixes had any real impact: Yes. Due to these fixes, it was now easy to
spot that the number of problems went up. That wasn't possible when
the number to start with was already very large because then the real
issues would have been lost in the noise.)
I've reopened VELOCITY-423 and opened VELOCITY-475 to deal with these
problems (Will, I'm afraid that will be mostly work for you...)
Best regards
Henning
--
Dipl.-Inf. (Univ.) Henning P. Schmiedehausen INTERMETA GmbH
[EMAIL PROTECTED] +49 9131 50 654 0 http://www.intermeta.de/
RedHat Certified Engineer -- Jakarta Turbine Development -- hero for hire
Linux, Java, perl, Solaris -- Consulting, Training, Development
Social behaviour: Bavarians can be extremely egalitarian and folksy.
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-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franconia
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