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<divclass="title">Graph Legend</div></div>
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<p>This page explains how to interpret the graphs that are generated by doxygen.</p>
<p>Consider the following example: </p><divclass="fragment"><divclass="line"><spanclass="comment">/*! Invisible class because of truncation */</span></div>
</div><!-- fragment --><p> This will result in the following graph:</p>
<center><imgsrc="graph_legend.png"alt=""class="inline"/></center><p>The boxes in the above graph have the following meaning: </p>
<ul>
<li>
A filled gray box represents the struct or class for which the graph is generated. </li>
<li>
A box with a black border denotes a documented struct or class. </li>
<li>
A box with a gray border denotes an undocumented struct or class. </li>
<li>
A box with a red border denotes a documented struct or class forwhich not all inheritance/containment relations are shown. A graph is truncated if it does not fit within the specified boundaries. </li>
</ul>
<p>The arrows have the following meaning: </p>
<ul>
<li>
A dark blue arrow is used to visualize a public inheritance relation between two classes. </li>
<li>
A dark green arrow is used for protected inheritance. </li>
<li>
A dark red arrow is used for private inheritance. </li>
<li>
A purple dashed arrow is used if a class is contained or used by another class. The arrow is labelled with the variable(s) through which the pointed class or struct is accessible. </li>
<li>
A yellow dashed arrow denotes a relation between a template instance and the template class it was instantiated from. The arrow is labelled with the template parameters of the instance. </li>