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Doxxx

Updated fork of dox that supports imported types.

Doxxx is a JavaScript documentation generator that uses JSdoc tags.

Dox gives you a JSON representation, allowing you to use markdown and JSDoc-style tags.

Uses jsdoctypeparser for parsing.

Installation

Install from npm:

npm install -g doxxx

Usage Examples

dox(1) operates over stdio:

dox < utils.js
...JSON...

to inspect the generated data you can use the --debug flag, which is easier to read than the JSON output:

 $ dox --debug < utils.js

utils.js:

/**
 * Escape the given `html`.
 *
 * @example
 *     utils.escape('<script></script>')
 *     // => '&lt;script&gt;&lt;/script&gt;'
 *
 * @param {String} html string to be escaped
 * @return {String} escaped html
 * @api public
 */

exports.escape = function(html){
  return String(html)
    .replace(/&(?!\w+;)/g, '&amp;')
    .replace(/</g, '&lt;')
    .replace(/>/g, '&gt;');
};

output:

[
  {
    "tags": [
      {
        "type": "example",
        "string": "    utils.escape('<script></script>')\n    // => '&lt;script&gt;&lt;/script&gt;'",
        "html": "<pre><code>utils.escape(&#39;&lt;script&gt;&lt;/script&gt;&#39;)\n// =&gt; &#39;&amp;lt;script&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/script&amp;gt;&#39;\n</code></pre>"
      },
      {
        "type": "param",
        "string": "{String} html string to be escaped",
        "types": [
          "String"
        ],
        "name": "html",
        "description": "string to be escaped"
      },
      {
        "type": "return",
        "string": "{String} escaped html",
        "types": [
          "String"
        ],
        "description": "escaped html"
      },
      {
        "type": "api",
        "string": "public",
        "visibility": "public"
      }
    ],
    "description": {
      "full": "<p>Escape the given <code>html</code>.</p>",
      "summary": "<p>Escape the given <code>html</code>.</p>",
      "body": ""
    },
    "isPrivate": false,
    "ignore": false,
    "code": "exports.escape = function(html){\n  return String(html)\n    .replace(/&(?!\\w+;)/g, '&amp;')\n    .replace(/</g, '&lt;')\n    .replace(/>/g, '&gt;');\n};",
    "ctx": {
      "type": "method",
      "receiver": "exports",
      "name": "escape",
      "string": "exports.escape()"
    }
  }
]

This output can then be passed to a template for rendering. Look below at the "Properties" section for details.

Usage

Usage: dox [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                     output usage information
    -V, --version                  output the version number
    -r, --raw                      output "raw" comments, leaving the markdown intact
    -a, --api                      output markdown readme documentation
    -s, --skipPrefixes [prefixes]  skip comments prefixed with these prefixes, separated by commas
    -d, --debug                    output parsed comments for debugging
    -S, --skipSingleStar           set to false to ignore `/* ... */` comments

  Examples:

    # stdin
    $ dox > myfile.json

    # operates over stdio
    $ dox < myfile.js > myfile.json

Programmatic Usage


const dox = require('doxxx')
const code = "...";

var obj = dox.parseComments(code);
// [{ tags:[ ... ], description, ... }, { ... }, ...]

Properties

A "comment" is comprised of the following detailed properties:

- tags
- description
- isPrivate
- isEvent
- isConstructor
- line
- ignore
- code
- ctx

Description

A dox description is comprised of three parts, the "full" description, the "summary", and the "body". The following example has only a "summary", as it consists of a single paragraph only, therefore the "full" property has only this value as well.

/**
 * Output the given `str` to _stdout_.
 */

exports.write = function(str) {
  process.stdout.write(str);
};

yields:

description: { 
  full: '<p>Output the given <code>str</code> to <em>stdout</em>.</p>',
  summary: '<p>Output the given <code>str</code> to <em>stdout</em>.</p>',
  body: '' 
},

Large descriptions might look something like the following, where the "summary" is still the first paragraph, the remaining description becomes the "body". Keep in mind this is markdown, so you can indent code, use lists, links, etc. Dox also augments markdown, allowing "Some Title:\n" to form a header.

/**
 * Output the given `str` to _stdout_
 * or the stream specified by `options`.
 *
 * Options:
 *
 *   - `stream` defaulting to _stdout_
 *
 * Examples:
 *
 *     mymodule.write('foo')
 *     mymodule.write('foo', { stream: process.stderr })
 *
 */

exports.write = function(str, options) {
  options = options || {};
  (options.stream || process.stdout).write(str);
};

yields:

description:
     { full: '<p>Output the given <code>str</code> to <em>stdout</em><br />or the stream specified by <code>options</code>.</p>\n\n<h2>Options</h2>\n\n<ul>\n<li><code>stream</code> defaulting to <em>stdout</em></li>\n</ul>\n\n<h2>Examples</h2>\n\n<pre><code>mymodule.write(\'foo\')\nmymodule.write(\'foo\', { stream: process.stderr })\n</code></pre>',
       summary: '<p>Output the given <code>str</code> to <em>stdout</em><br />or the stream specified by <code>options</code>.</p>',
       body: '<h2>Options</h2>\n\n<ul>\n<li><code>stream</code> defaulting to <em>stdout</em></li>\n</ul>\n\n<h2>Examples</h2>\n\n<pre><code>mymodule.write(\'foo\')\nmymodule.write(\'foo\', { stream: process.stderr })\n</code></pre>' }

Tags

Dox also supports JSdoc-style tags. Currently only @api is special-cased, providing the comment.isPrivate boolean so you may omit "private" utilities etc.


/**
 * Output the given `str` to _stdout_
 * or the stream specified by `options`.
 *
 * @param {String} str
 * @param {{stream: Writable}} options
 * @return {Object} exports for chaining
 */

exports.write = function(str, options) {
  options = options || {};
  (options.stream || process.stdout).write(str);
  return this;
};

yields:

tags:
   [ { type: 'param',
       string: '{String} str',
       types: [ 'String' ],
       name: 'str',
       description: '' },
     { type: 'param',
       string: '{{stream: Writable}} options',
       types: [ { stream: ['Writable'] } ],
       name: 'options',
       description: '' },
     { type: 'return',
       string: '{Object} exports for chaining',
       types: [ 'Object' ],
       description: 'exports for chaining' },
     { type: 'api',
       visibility: 'public' } ]

Complex jsdoc tags

dox supports all jsdoc type strings specified in the jsdoc documentation. You can specify complex object types including optional flag =, nullable ?, non-nullable ! and variable arguments ....

Additionally you can use typesDescription which contains formatted HTML for displaying complex types.


/**
 * Generates a person information string based on input.
 *
 * @param {string | {name: string, age: number | date}} name Name or person object
 * @param {{separator: string} =} options An options object
 * @return {string} The constructed information string
 */

exports.generatePersonInfo = function(name, options) {
  var str = '';
  var separator = options && options.separator ? options.separator : ' ';

  if(typeof name === 'object') {
    str = [name.name, '(', name.age, ')'].join(separator);
  } else {
    str = name;
  }
};

yields:

tags:
[
  {
    "tags": [
      {
        "type": "param",
        "string": "{string | {name: string, age: number | date}} name Name or person object",
        "name": "name",
        "description": "Name or person object",
        "types": [
          "string",
          {
            "name": [
              "string"
            ],
            "age": [
              "number",
              "date"
            ]
          }
        ],
        "typesDescription": "<code>string</code>|{ name: <code>string</code>, age: <code>number</code>|<code>date</code> }",
        "optional": false,
        "nullable": false,
        "nonNullable": false,
        "variable": false
      },
      {
        "type": "param",
        "string": "{{separator: string} =} options An options object",
        "name": "options",
        "description": "An options object",
        "types": [
          {
            "separator": [
              "string"
            ]
          }
        ],
        "typesDescription": "{ separator: <code>string</code> }|<code>undefined</code>",
        "optional": true,
        "nullable": false,
        "nonNullable": false,
        "variable": false
      },
      {
        "type": "return",
        "string": "{string} The constructed information string",
        "types": [
          "string"
        ],
        "typesDescription": "<code>string</code>",
        "optional": false,
        "nullable": false,
        "nonNullable": false,
        "variable": false,
        "description": "The constructed information string"
      }
    ]

Code

The .code property is the code following the comment block, in our previous examples:

exports.write = function(str, options) {
  options = options || {};
  (options.stream || process.stdout).write(str);
  return this;
};

Ctx

The .ctx object indicates the context of the code block, is it a method, a function, a variable etc. Below are some examples:

exports.write = function(str, options) {
};

yields:

ctx:
 { type: 'method',
   receiver: 'exports',
   name: 'write',
   string: 'exports.write()' } }
var foo = 'bar';

yields:

ctx:
 { type: 'declaration',
   name: 'foo',
   value: '\'bar\'',
   string: 'foo' }
function User() {

}

yields:

ctx:
 { type: 'function',
   name: 'User',
   string: 'User()' } }

Extending Context Matching

Context matching in dox is done by performing pattern matching against the code following a comment block. dox.contextPatternMatchers is an array of all pattern matching functions, which dox will iterate over until one of them returns a result. If none return a result, then the comment block does not receive a ctx value.

This array is exposed to allow for extension of unsupported context patterns by adding more functions. Each function is passed the code following the comment block and (if detected) the parent context if the block.

dox.contextPatternMatchers.push(function (str, parentContext) {
  // return a context object if found
  // return false otherwise
});

Ignore

Comments and their associated bodies of code may be flagged with "!" to be considered worth ignoring, these are typically things like file comments containing copyright etc, however you of course can output them in your templates if you want.

/**
 * Not ignored.
 */

vs

/*!
 * Ignored.
 */

You may use -S, --skipSingleStar or {skipSingleStar: true} to ignore /* ... */ comments.

Running tests

Install dev dependencies and execute make test:

 $ npm install -d
 $ make test

License

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2011 TJ Holowaychuk <tj@vision-media.ca>

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

CheatSheet

Optional params can be set with [] or {type=} ending in = sign.

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {string=} a  - description about a
 * @param {string} [b] - description about b
 */
function example(a, b) {
  // stuff
}

Optional param with default

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {string} [a="hi"]  - description about a
 */
function example(a = 'hi') {
  // stuff
}

Multiple types

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {(string|number)} a	- description about a
 */
function example(a) {
  // a can be string or number
}

Any type

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {*} a	- description about a
 */
function example(a) {
  // a can be anything
}

Variadic repeatable arguments

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {...string}	a - description about a
 */
function example(...a) {
  // a can be N number of strings
  return a.map((x) => `_${x}`)
}
example('one', 'two', 'three')

Array of strings

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {string[]}	a - description about a
 */
function example(a) {
  return a.map((x) => `_${x}`)
}
example(['one', 'two', 'three'])

Function returns a promise with array of strings

/**
 * Description about the function
 * @param {string[]}	a - description about a
 * @return {Promise<string[]>} n	- Promise fulfilled by array of strings
 */
function example(a) {
  return Promise.resolve(a.map((x) => `_${x}`))
}
example(['one', 'two', 'three']).then((newArray) => {
  console.log(newArray)
})

Variables

/**
 * @type {number}
 */
var FOO = 1
/**
 * @const {number}
 */
const FOO = 1

Using Typedefs

/**
 * A song
 * @typedef {Object} Song
 * @property {string} title - The title
 * @property {string} artist - The artist
 * @property {number} year - The year
 */

/**
 * Plays a song
 * @param {Song} song - The {@link Song} to be played
 */
function play(song) {
  // ...
}

Alternative libraries