
Cscope Home Page
Cscope is a developer's tool for browsing source code. It has an impeccable Unix pedigree, having been originally developed at Bell Labs back in the days of the PDP-11.
Vim/Cscope tutorial - SourceForge
Cscope is a very handy tool, but it's even better when you don't ever have to leave the comfort of your favorite editor (i.e. Vim) to use it. Fortunately, Cscope support has been built into Vim. This tutorial …
Using Cscope on large projects (example: the Linux kernel)
If you use the standalone Cscope browser, make sure to invoke it via cscope -d This tells Cscope not to regenerate the database. Otherwise you'll have to wait while Cscope checks for modified files, which …
Manpage of CSCOPE - SourceForge
cscope builds the symbol cross-reference the first time it is used on the source files for the program being browsed. On a subsequent invocation, cscope rebuilds the cross-reference only if a source file …
Cscope Home Page
" " -- vim 5: Stick this file somewhere and 'source cscope.vim' it from " your ~/.vimrc file (or cut and paste it into your .vimrc). " " NOTE: " These key maps use multiple keystrokes (2 or 3 keys). If you find that …
The History of Cscope - SourceForge
After AT&T, CScope moved on to UNIX Systems Laboratories (USL), which was acquired by Novell and then by Santa Cruz Operation (SCO). In April 2000 SCO open sourced the code to Cscope.
BSD License for Cscope - SourceForge
SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN …