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Pack logtalk -- logtalk-3.86.0/manuals/_sources/devtools/lgtdoc.rst.txt |
.. _library_lgtdoc:
lgtdoc
This is the default Logtalk documenting tool for generating API documentation for libraries and applications. It uses the structural reflection API to extract and output in XML format relevant documentation about a source file, a library or directory of source files, or all loaded source files. The tool predicates accept several options for generating the XML files, including the output directory.
The lgtdoc/xml
directory contains several ready to use Bash and
PowerShell scripts for converting the XML documenting files into final
formats including (X)HTML, PDF, Markdown, and reStructuredText (for use
with Sphinx), and plain text files. The scripts are described in their
man
pages and made available in the system path by default.
This tool requirements for converting the XML files it generates to a final format are as follows:
The reStructuredText files output is usually used as an intermediate step to generate Sphinx HTML, PDF, ePub, and Texinfo files. The additional requirements are:
xml/NOTES.md
file. See the
tools/NOTES.md
file for per operating-system installation
instructions for the above dependencies.This tool API documentation is available at:
`../../docs/library_index.html#lgtdoc <../../docs/library_index.html#lgtdoc>`__
This tool can be loaded using the query:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(lgtdoc(loader))
.
To test this tool, load the tester.lgt
file:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(lgtdoc(tester))
.
For information on documenting your source code, notably on documenting directives, consult the documenting section of the User Manual:
`../../manuals/userman/documenting.html <../../manuals/userman/documenting.html>`__
Extracting documenting information from your source code using with this
tool requires compiling the source files using the source_data(on)
compiler flag. For example:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(source_file, [source_data(on)])
.
Usually, this flag is set for all application source files in the
corresponding loader file. In alternative, you may also turn on the
source_data
flag globally by typing:
::
| ?- set_logtalk_flag(source_data, on)
.
The tool API allows generating documentation for libraries, directories, and files, complemented with library, directory, entity, and predicate indexes. Note that the source files to be documented must be loaded prior to using this tool predicates to generate the documentation.
For a simple application, assuming a library alias is defined for it
(e.g. my_app
), and at the top-level interpreter, we can generate the
application documentation by typing:
::
| ?- {my_app(loader)
}.
...
| ?- {lgtdoc(loader)
}.
...
| ?- lgtdoc::library(my_app)
.
...
By default, the documenting XML files are created in a xml_docs
directory in the current working directory. But usually all documenting
files are collected for both the application and the libraries it uses
in a common directory so that all documentation links resolved properly.
The lgtdoc
predicates can take a list of options to customize the
generated XML documenting files. See the remarks section in the
`lgtdocp https://logtalk.org/docs/library_index.html#lgtdoc`__
protocol documentation for details on the available options.
After generating the XML documenting files, these can be easily converted into final formats using the provided scripts. For example, assuming that we want to generate HTML documentation:
::
$ cd xml_docs $ lgt2html -t "My app"
To generate the documentation in Sphinx format instead (as used by Logtalk itself for its APIs):
::
$ cd xml_docs $ lgt2rst -s -- -q -p "Application name" -a "Author name" -v "Version X.YZ.P" $ make html
In this case, the generated documentation will be in the
xml_docs/_build/html/
directory. See the scripts man pages or call
them using the -h
option to learn more about their supported
options.
For more complex applications, you can use the doclet
tool to define
a doclet to automate all the steps required to generate documentation.
The doclet message that triggers the process can also be sent
automatically when the make
tool is used with the documentation
target.
When the lgtdoc_missing_directives
flag is set to warning
(its
usual default value), the lgtdoc
tool prints warnings on missing
entity info/1 directives and missing predicate info/2 and
mode/2 directives.
When the lgtdoc_missing_info_key
flag is set to warning
(its
usual default value), the lgtdoc
tool prints warnings on entity
info/1 directive and predicate info/2 directive missing de facto
required keys (e.g., comment
, parameters
or parnames
for
parametric entities, arguments
or argnames
for
predicates/non-terminals with arguments).
When the lgtdoc_invalid_dates
flag is set to warning
(its usual
default value), the lgtdoc
tool prints warnings on invalid dates
(including dates in the future) in info/1 directives.
When the lgtdoc_non_standard_exceptions
flag is set to warning
(its usual default value), the lgtdoc
tool prints warnings on
non-standard exceptions. This linter check is particularly effective in
detecting typos when specifying standard exceptions.
When the lgtdoc_missing_punctuation
flag is set to warning
(its
usual default value), the lgtdoc
tool prints warnings on missing
ending periods (full stops), exclamation marks, or question marks in
info/1-2
directives (in comments, remarks, parameter descriptions,
and argument descriptions).
Set a flag value to silent
to turn off the corresponding linter
warnings.