gtk-doc has gained an official CMake module which can fix xrefs.
Meanwhile, our old module has stopped working for whatever reason,
might be that I've botched the LdCategoryView interface somehow.
I've come to the conclusion that copyright mostly just stands in the way
of software development. In my jurisdiction I cannot give up my own
copyright and 0BSD seems to be the closest thing to public domain.
The updated mail address, also used in my author/committer lines,
is shorter and looks nicer. People rarely interact anyway.
* Hack up support for gtkdoc-scangobj and use it in CMakeLists.txt.
* Trash gtkdoc-mktmpl, we won't need it.
* Always remove SGML/XML/HTML directories before filling them.
* Add Win32Depends.cmake, which retrieves all dependencies from
the Internet. Other ways of building the application on Win32
are not supported.
* Install the application correctly on Win32.
* Make FindGTK2.cmake search for GIO.
* Make the project a C-only project, so g++ is not needed.
* Remove obsolete checks for strtok().
* Set WIN32_EXECUTABLE on the application.
* Set the working directory for glib-genmarshal correctly.
* Use one more path suffix when searching for glibconfig.h.
* Don't assume that gdk_screen_get_resolution() returns
a useful value.
* Do not require gtk-doc to be installed.
* Use FindPackageHandleStandardArgs in FindGtkDoc.cmake.
* Fix installation (wrong source path).
* Don't install neither the documentation nor the desktop file on Windows.
FindGTK2.cmake required a change for successful program compilation.
It seems that gdk_pixbuf has been put as a separate library.
The new tools also generate a slightly different version
of marshallers, so I've added it to the tree.