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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2016-01-18 12:42:47 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2016-01-18 12:42:47 +0200
commitc7b1b60ddc84ad0696845349cc3b685dc6a892fb (patch)
tree401b74b979722e489ab7941f2da8ec39f89dee17
parentfb963d87731dbd11d6c7df7a561eec792c1cee27 (diff)
Quote some values since cli no longer quotes \c in plain text
-rw-r--r--odb/options.cli10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/odb/options.cli b/odb/options.cli
index 0e01fd5..cf511d7 100644
--- a/odb/options.cli
+++ b/odb/options.cli
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ class options
"Use <ptr> as the default pointer for persistent objects and views.
Objects and views that do not have a pointer assigned with the
\cb{db pointer} pragma will use this pointer by default. The value
- of this option can be \cb{*} which denotes the raw pointer and is
+ of this option can be '\cb{*}' which denotes the raw pointer and is
the default, or qualified name of a smart pointer class template,
for example, \cb{std::auto_ptr}. In the latter case, the ODB compiler
constructs the object or view pointer by adding a single template
@@ -802,7 +802,7 @@ class options
data member names to function names when searching for a suitable
accessor function. The argument to this option is a Perl-like regular
expression in the form \c{\b{/}\i{pattern}\b{/}\i{replacement}\b{/}}.
- Any character can be used as a delimiter instead of \cb{/} and the
+ Any character can be used as a delimiter instead of '\cb{/}' and the
delimiter can be escaped inside \ci{pattern} and \ci{replacement}
with a backslash (\cb{\\}). You can specify multiple regular
expressions by repeating this option.
@@ -840,7 +840,7 @@ class options
data member names to function names when searching for a suitable
modifier function. The argument to this option is a Perl-like regular
expression in the form \c{\b{/}\i{pattern}\b{/}\i{replacement}\b{/}}.
- Any character can be used as a delimiter instead of \cb{/} and the
+ Any character can be used as a delimiter instead of '\cb{/}' and the
delimiter can be escaped inside \ci{pattern} and \ci{replacement}
with a backslash (\cb{\\}). You can specify multiple regular
expressions by repeating this option.
@@ -892,7 +892,7 @@ class options
generated \cb{#include} directive paths. The argument to this option
is a Perl-like regular expression in the form
\c{\b{/}\i{pattern}\b{/}\i{replacement}\b{/}}. Any character can be
- used as a delimiter instead of \cb{/} and the delimiter can be escaped
+ used as a delimiter instead of '\cb{/}' and the delimiter can be escaped
inside \ci{pattern} and \ci{replacement} with a backslash (\cb{\\}).
You can specify multiple regular expressions by repeating this option.
All the regular expressions are tried in the order specified and the
@@ -961,7 +961,7 @@ class options
{
"<option>",
"Pass <option> to the underlying C++ compiler (\cb{g++}). The <option>
- value that doesn't start with \cb{-} is considered the \cb{g++}
+ value that doesn't start with '\cb{-}' is considered the \cb{g++}
executable name."
};