const char *name;
/**
* Descriptive name for the format, meant to be more human-readable
- * than \p name. You \e should use the NULL_IF_CONFIG_SMALL() macro
+ * than name. You should use the NULL_IF_CONFIG_SMALL() macro
* to define it.
*/
const char *long_name;
const char *name;
/**
* Descriptive name for the format, meant to be more human-readable
- * than \p name. You \e should use the NULL_IF_CONFIG_SMALL() macro
+ * than name. You should use the NULL_IF_CONFIG_SMALL() macro
* to define it.
*/
const char *long_name;
#endif
/**
- * Parses \p datestr and returns a corresponding number of microseconds.
+ * Parses datestr and returns a corresponding number of microseconds.
* @param datestr String representing a date or a duration.
* - If a date the syntax is:
* @code
* If the year-month-day part is not specified it takes the current
* year-month-day.
* Returns the number of microseconds since 1st of January, 1970 up to
- * the time of the parsed date or INT64_MIN if \p datestr cannot be
+ * the time of the parsed date or INT64_MIN if datestr cannot be
* successfully parsed.
* - If a duration the syntax is:
* @code
* [-]S+[.m...]
* @endcode
* Returns the number of microseconds contained in a time interval
- * with the specified duration or INT64_MIN if \p datestr cannot be
+ * with the specified duration or INT64_MIN if datestr cannot be
* successfully parsed.
- * @param duration Flag which tells how to interpret \p datestr, if
- * not zero \p datestr is interpreted as a duration, otherwise as a
+ * @param duration Flag which tells how to interpret datestr, if
+ * not zero datestr is interpreted as a duration, otherwise as a
* date.
*/
int64_t parse_date(const char *datestr, int duration);