class RDoc::Markup
RDoc::Markup parses plain text documents and attempts to decompose them into their constituent parts. Some of these parts are high-level: paragraphs, chunks of verbatim text, list entries and the like. Other parts happen at the character level: a piece of bold text, a word in code font. This markup is similar in spirit to that used on WikiWiki webs, where folks create web pages using a simple set of formatting rules.
RDoc::Markup and other markup formats do no output formatting, this is handled by the RDoc::Markup::Formatter subclasses.
Supported Formats¶ ↑
Besides the RDoc::Markup format, the following formats are built in to RDoc:
- markdown
-
The markdown format as described by daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/. See RDoc::Markdown for details on the parser and supported extensions.
- rd
-
The rdtool format. See RDoc::RD for details on the parser and format.
- tomdoc
-
The TomDoc format as described by tomdoc.org/. See RDoc::TomDoc for details on the parser and supported extensions.
You can choose a markup format using the following methods:
- per project
-
If you build your documentation with rake use RDoc::Task#markup.
If you build your documentation by hand run:
rdoc --markup your_favorite_format --write-options
and commit
.rdoc_options
and ship it with your packaged gem. - per file
-
At the top of the file use the
:markup:
directive to set the default format for the rest of the file. - per comment
-
Use the
:markup:
directive at the top of a comment you want to write in a different format.
RDoc::Markup¶ ↑
RDoc::Markup is extensible at runtime: you can add new markup elements to be recognized in the documents that RDoc::Markup parses.
RDoc::Markup is intended to be the basis for a family of tools which share the common requirement that simple, plain-text should be rendered in a variety of different output formats and media. It is envisaged that RDoc::Markup could be the basis for formatting RDoc style comment blocks, Wiki entries, and online FAQs.
Synopsis¶ ↑
This code converts input_string
to HTML. The conversion takes
place in the convert
method, so you can use the same RDoc::Markup converter to convert multiple input
strings.
require 'rdoc' h = RDoc::Markup::ToHtml.new puts h.convert(input_string)
You can extend the RDoc::Markup parser to recognize new markup sequences, and to add special processing for text that matches a regular expression. Here we make WikiWords significant to the parser, and also make the sequences {word} and <no>text…</no> signify strike-through text. We then subclass the HTML output class to deal with these:
require 'rdoc' class WikiHtml < RDoc::Markup::ToHtml def handle_special_WIKIWORD(special) "<font color=red>" + special.text + "</font>" end end markup = RDoc::Markup.new markup.add_word_pair("{", "}", :STRIKE) markup.add_html("no", :STRIKE) markup.add_special(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD) wh = WikiHtml.new markup wh.add_tag(:STRIKE, "<strike>", "</strike>") puts "<body>#{wh.convert ARGF.read}</body>"
Encoding¶ ↑
Where Encoding support is available, RDoc will automatically convert all documents to the same output encoding. The output encoding can be set via RDoc::Options#encoding and defaults to Encoding.default_external.
RDoc Markup Reference¶ ↑
Block Markup¶ ↑
Paragraphs and Verbatim¶ ↑
The markup engine looks for a document's natural left margin. This is used as the initial margin for the document.
Consecutive lines starting at this margin are considered to be a paragraph. Empty lines separate paragraphs.
Any line that starts to the right of the current margin is treated as verbatim text. This is useful for code listings:
3.times { puts "Ruby" }
In verbatim text, two or more blank lines are collapsed into one, and trailing blank lines are removed:
This is the first line This is the second non-blank line, after 2 blank lines in the source markup.
There were two trailing blank lines right above this paragraph, that have been removed. In addition, the verbatim text has been shifted left, so the amount of indentation of verbatim text is unimportant.
For HTML output RDoc makes a small effort to determine if a verbatim section contains ruby source code. If so, the verbatim block will be marked up as HTML. Triggers include “def”, “class”, “module”, “require”, the “hash rocket”# (=>) or a block call with a parameter.
Headers¶ ↑
A line starting with an equal sign (=) is treated as a heading. Level one headings have one equals sign, level two headings have two, and so on until level six, which is the maximum (seven hyphens or more result in a level six heading).
For example, the above header was obtained with:
=== Headers
In HTML output headers have an id matching their name. The above example's HTML is:
<h3 id="label-Headers">Headers</h3>
If a heading is inside a method body the id will be prefixed with the method's id. If the above header where in the documentation for a method such as:
## # This method does fun things # # = Example # # Example of fun things goes here ... def do_fun_things end
The header's id would be:
<h1 id="method-i-do_fun_things-label-Example">Example</h3>
The label can be linked-to using SomeClass@Headers
. See Links for further details.
Rules¶ ↑
A line starting with three or more hyphens (at the current indent) generates a horizontal rule. The more hyphens, the thicker the rule (within reason, and if supported by the output device).
In the case of HTML output, three dashes generate a 1-pixel high rule, four dashes result in 2 pixels, and so on. The actual height is limited to 10 pixels:
--- ----- -----------------------------------------------------
produces:
Simple Lists¶ ↑
If a paragraph starts with a “*”, “-”, “<digit>.” or “<letter>.”, then it is taken to be the start of a list. The margin is increased to be the first non-space following the list start flag. Subsequent lines should be indented to this new margin until the list ends. For example:
* this is a list with three paragraphs in the first item. This is the first paragraph. And this is the second paragraph. 1. This is an indented, numbered list. 2. This is the second item in that list This is the third conventional paragraph in the first list item. * This is the second item in the original list
produces:
-
this is a list with three paragraphs in the first item. This is the first paragraph.
And this is the second paragraph.
-
This is an indented, numbered list.
-
This is the second item in that list
This is the third conventional paragraph in the first list item.
-
-
This is the second item in the original list
Labeled Lists¶ ↑
You can also construct labeled lists, sometimes called description or definition lists. Do this by putting the label in square brackets and indenting the list body:
[cat] a small furry mammal that seems to sleep a lot [ant] a little insect that is known to enjoy picnics
produces:
- cat
-
a small furry mammal that seems to sleep a lot
- ant
-
a little insect that is known to enjoy picnics
If you want the list bodies to line up to the left of the labels, use two colons:
cat:: a small furry mammal that seems to sleep a lot ant:: a little insect that is known to enjoy picnics
produces:
- cat
-
a small furry mammal that seems to sleep a lot
- ant
-
a little insect that is known to enjoy picnics
Notice that blank lines right after the label are ignored in labeled lists:
[one] definition 1 [two] definition 2
produces the same output as
[one] definition 1 [two] definition 2
Lists and Verbatim¶ ↑
If you want to introduce a verbatim section right after a list, it has to be less indented than the list item bodies, but more indented than the list label, letter, digit or bullet. For instance:
* point 1 * point 2, first paragraph point 2, second paragraph verbatim text inside point 2 point 2, third paragraph verbatim text outside of the list (the list is therefore closed) regular paragraph after the list
produces:
-
point 1
-
point 2, first paragraph
point 2, second paragraph
verbatim text inside point 2
point 2, third paragraph
verbatim text outside of the list (the list is therefore closed)
regular paragraph after the list
Text Markup¶ ↑
Bold, Italic, Typewriter Text¶ ↑
You can use markup within text (except verbatim) to change the appearance of parts of that text. Out of the box, RDoc::Markup supports word-based and general markup.
Word-based markup uses flag characters around individual words:
*word*
-
displays word in a bold font
_word_
-
displays word in an emphasized font
+word+
-
displays word in a
code
font
General markup affects text between a start delimiter and an end delimiter. Not surprisingly, these delimiters look like HTML markup.
<b>text</b>
-
displays text in a bold font
<em>text</em>
-
displays text in an emphasized font (alternate tag:
<i>
) <tt>text</tt>
-
displays text in a
code
font (alternate tag:<code>
)
Unlike conventional Wiki markup, general markup can cross line boundaries. You can turn off the interpretation of markup by preceding the first character with a backslash (see Escaping Text Markup, below).
Links¶ ↑
Links to starting with http:
, https:
,
mailto:
, ftp:
or www.
are
recognized. An HTTP url that references an external image is converted
into an inline image element.
Classes and methods will be automatically linked to their definition. For
example, RDoc::Markup
will link to this documentation. By
default methods will only be automatically linked if they contain an
_
(all methods can be automatically linked through the
--hyperlink-all
command line option).
Single-word methods can be linked by using the #
character for
instance methods or ::
for class methods. For example,
#convert
links to convert. A class or method may be
combined like RDoc::Markup#convert
.
A heading inside the documentation can be linked by following the class or
method by an @
then the heading name.
RDoc::Markup@Links
will link to this section like this: Links at RDoc::Markup. Spaces in
headings with multiple words must be escaped with +
like
RDoc::Markup@Escaping+Text+Markup
. Punctuation and other
special characters must be escaped like CGI.escape.
Links can also be of the form label[url]
, in which case
label
is used in the displayed text, and url
is
used as the target. If label
contains multiple words, put it
in braces: {multi word label}[url]
. The url
may
be an http:-type
link or a cross-reference to a class, module
or method with a label.
Links with the rdoc-ref:
scheme will link to the referenced
class, module, method, file, etc. If the referenced item is does not exist
no link will be generated and rdoc-ref:
will be removed from
the resulting text.
Links starting with rdoc-label:label_name
will link to the
label_name
. You can create a label for the current link (for
bidirectional links) by supplying a name for the current link like
rdoc-label:label-other:label-mine.
Links starting with link:
refer to local files whose path is
relative to the --op
directory. Use rdoc-ref:
instead of link:
to link to files generated by RDoc as the
link target may be different across RDoc generators.
Example links:
https://github.com/rdoc/rdoc mailto:user@example.com {RDoc Documentation}[http://rdoc.rubyforge.org] {RDoc Markup}[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup]
Escaping Text Markup¶ ↑
Text markup can be escaped with a backslash, as in <tt>, which was
obtained with \<tt>
. Except in verbatim sections and
between <tt> tags, to produce a backslash you have to double it
unless it is followed by a space, tab or newline. Otherwise, the HTML
formatter will discard it, as it is used to escape potential links:
* The \ must be doubled if not followed by white space: \\. * But not in \<tt> tags: in a Regexp, <tt>\S</tt> matches non-space. * This is a link to {ruby-lang}[www.ruby-lang.org]. * This is not a link, however: \{ruby-lang.org}[www.ruby-lang.org]. * This will not be linked to \RDoc::RDoc#document
generates:
-
The \ must be doubled if not followed by white space: \.
-
But not in <tt> tags: in a Regexp,
\S
matches non-space. -
This is a link to ruby-lang
-
This is not a link, however: {ruby-lang.org}[www.ruby-lang.org]
-
This will not be linked to RDoc::RDoc#document
Inside <tt> tags, more precisely, leading backslashes are removed
only if followed by a markup character (<*_+
), a backslash,
or a known link reference (a known class or method). So in the example
above, the backslash of \S
would be removed if there was a
class or module named S
in the current context.
This behavior is inherited from RDoc version 1, and has been kept for compatibility with existing RDoc documentation.
Conversion of characters¶ ↑
HTML will convert two/three dashes to an em-dash. Other common characters are converted as well:
em-dash:: -- or --- ellipsis:: ... single quotes:: 'text' or `text' double quotes:: "text" or ``text'' copyright:: (c) registered trademark:: (r)
produces:
- em-dash
-
– or —
- ellipsis
-
…
- single quotes
-
'text' or `text'
- double quotes
-
“text” or “text''
- copyright
-
©
- registered trademark
-
®
Documenting Source Code¶ ↑
Comment blocks can be written fairly naturally, either using #
on successive lines of the comment, or by including the comment in a
=begin
/=end
block. If you use the latter form,
the =begin
line must be flagged with an
rdoc
tag:
Documentation to be processed by RDoc.
...
RDoc stops processing comments if it finds a comment line starting with
--
right after the #
character (otherwise, it
will be treated as a rule if it has three dashes or more). This can be used
to separate external from internal comments, or to stop a comment being
associated with a method, class, or module. Commenting can be turned back
on with a line that starts with ++
.
## # Extract the age and calculate the date-of-birth. #-- # FIXME: fails if the birthday falls on February 29th #++ # The DOB is returned as a Time object. def get_dob(person) # ... end
Names of classes, files, and any method names containing an underscore or preceded by a hash character are automatically linked from comment text to their description. This linking works inside the current class or module, and with ancestor methods (in included modules or in the superclass).
Method parameter lists are extracted and
displayed with the method description. If a method calls
yield
, then the parameters passed to yield will also be
displayed:
def fred ... yield line, address
This will get documented as:
fred() { |line, address| ... }
You can override this using a comment containing ':yields: …' immediately after the method definition
def fred # :yields: index, position # ... yield line, address
which will get documented as
fred() { |index, position| ... }
:yields:
is an example of a documentation directive. These
appear immediately after the start of the document element they are
modifying.
RDoc automatically cross-references words with underscores or camel-case.
To suppress cross-references, prefix the word with a \ character. To
include special characters like “\n
”, you'll need to use
two \ characters in normal text, but only one in <tt> text:
"\\n" or "<tt>\n</tt>"
produces:
“\n” or “\n
”
Directives¶ ↑
Directives are keywords surrounded by “:” characters.
Controlling what is documented¶ ↑
:nodoc:
/:nodoc: all
-
This directive prevents documentation for the element from being generated. For classes and modules, methods, aliases, constants, and attributes directly within the affected class or module also will be omitted. By default, though, modules and classes within that class or module will be documented. This is turned off by adding the
all
modifier.module MyModule # :nodoc: class Input end end module OtherModule # :nodoc: all class Output end end
In the above code, only class
MyModule::Input
will be documented.The
:nodoc:
directive, like:enddoc:
,:stopdoc:
and:startdoc:
presented below, is local to the current file: if you do not want to document a module that appears in several files, specify:nodoc:
on each appearance, at least once per file. :stopdoc:
/:startdoc:
-
Stop and start adding new documentation elements to the current container. For example, if a class has a number of constants that you don't want to document, put a
:stopdoc:
before the first, and a:startdoc:
after the last. If you don't specify a:startdoc:
by the end of the container, disables documentation for the rest of the current file. :doc:
-
Forces a method or attribute to be documented even if it wouldn't be otherwise. Useful if, for example, you want to include documentation of a particular private method.
:enddoc:
-
Document nothing further at the current level: directives
:startdoc:
and:doc:
that appear after this will not be honored for the current container (file, class or module), in the current file. :notnew:
/:not_new:
/:not-new:
-
Only applicable to the
initialize
instance method. Normally RDoc assumes that the documentation and parameters forinitialize
are actually for thenew
method, and so fakes out anew
for the class. The:notnew:
directive stops this. Remember thatinitialize
is private, so you won't see the documentation unless you use the-a
command line option.
Method arguments¶ ↑
:arg:
or:args:
parameters-
Overrides the default argument handling with exactly these parameters.
## # :args: a, b def some_method(*a) end
:yield:
or:yields:
parameters-
Overrides the default yield discovery with these parameters.
## # :yields: key, value def each_thing &block @things.each(&block) end
:call-seq:
-
Lines up to the next blank line or lines with a common prefix in the comment are treated as the method's calling sequence, overriding the default parsing of method parameters and yield arguments.
Multiple lines may be used.
# :call-seq: # ARGF.readlines(sep=$/) -> array # ARGF.readlines(limit) -> array # ARGF.readlines(sep, limit) -> array # # ARGF.to_a(sep=$/) -> array # ARGF.to_a(limit) -> array # ARGF.to_a(sep, limit) -> array # # The remaining lines are documentation ...
Sections¶ ↑
Sections allow you to group methods in a class into sensible containers. If you use the sections 'Public', 'Internal' and 'Deprecated' (the three allowed method statuses from TomDoc) the sections will be displayed in that order placing the most useful methods at the top. Otherwise, sections will be displayed in alphabetical order.
:category:
section-
Adds this item to the named
section
overriding the current section. Use this to group methods by section in RDoc output while maintaining a sensible ordering (like alphabetical).# :category: Utility Methods # # CGI escapes +text+ def convert_string text CGI.escapeHTML text end
An empty category will place the item in the default category:
# :category: # # This method is in the default category def some_method # ... end
Unlike the :section: directive, :category: is not sticky. The category only applies to the item immediately following the comment.
Use the :section: directive to provide introductory text for a section of documentation.
:section:
title-
Provides section introductory text in RDoc output. The title following
:section:
is used as the section name and the remainder of the comment containing the section is used as introductory text. A section's comment block must be separated from following comment blocks. Use an empty title to switch to the default section.The :section: directive is sticky, so subsequent methods, aliases, attributes, and classes will be contained in this section until the section is changed. The :category: directive will override the :section: directive.
A :section: comment block may have one or more lines before the :section: directive. These will be removed, and any identical lines at the end of the block are also removed. This allows you to add visual cues to the section.
Example:
# ---------------------------------------- # :section: My Section # This is the section that I wrote. # See it glisten in the noon-day sun. # ---------------------------------------- ## # Comment for some_method def some_method # ... end
Other directives¶ ↑
:markup:
type-
Overrides the default markup type for this comment with the specified markup type. For ruby files, if the first comment contains this directive it is applied automatically to all comments in the file.
Unless you are converting between markup formats you should use a
.rdoc_options
file to specify the default documentation format for your entire project. See Saved Options at RDoc::Options for instructions.At the top of a file the
:markup:
directive applies to the entire file:# coding: UTF-8 # :markup: TomDoc # TomDoc comment here ... class MyClass # ...
For just one comment:
# ... end # :markup: RDoc # # This is a comment in RDoc markup format ... def some_method # ...
See DEVELOPERS at Markup for instructions on adding a new markup format.
:include:
filename-
Include the contents of the named file at this point. This directive must appear alone on one line, possibly preceded by spaces. In this position, it can be escaped with a \ in front of the first colon.
The file will be searched for in the directories listed by the
--include
option, or in the current directory by default. The contents of the file will be shifted to have the same indentation as the ':' at the start of the:include:
directive. :title:
text-
Sets the title for the document. Equivalent to the
--title
command line parameter. (The command line parameter overrides any :title: directive in the source). :main:
name-
Equivalent to the
--main
command line parameter.
Attributes
An AttributeManager which handles inline markup.
Public Class Methods
Take a block of text and use various heuristics to determine its structure (paragraphs, lists, and so on). Invoke an event handler as we identify significant chunks.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 780 def initialize attribute_manager = nil @attribute_manager = attribute_manager || RDoc::Markup::AttributeManager.new @output = nil end
Parses str
into an RDoc::Markup::Document.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 750 def self.parse str RDoc::Markup::Parser.parse str rescue RDoc::Markup::Parser::Error => e $stderr.puts <<-EOF While parsing markup, RDoc encountered a #{e.class}: #{e} \tfrom #{e.backtrace.join "\n\tfrom "} ---8<--- #{text} ---8<--- RDoc #{RDoc::VERSION} Ruby #{RUBY_VERSION}-p#{RUBY_PATCHLEVEL} #{RUBY_RELEASE_DATE} Please file a bug report with the above information at: https://github.com/rdoc/rdoc/issues EOF raise end
Public Instance Methods
Add to the sequences recognized as general markup.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 797 def add_html(tag, name) @attribute_manager.add_html(tag, name) end
Add to other inline sequences. For example, we could add WikiWords using something like:
parser.add_special(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD)
Each wiki word will be presented to the output formatter via the accept_special method.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 810 def add_special(pattern, name) @attribute_manager.add_special(pattern, name) end
Add to the sequences used to add formatting to an individual word (such as
bold). Matching entries will generate attributes that the
output formatters can recognize by their name
.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 790 def add_word_pair(start, stop, name) @attribute_manager.add_word_pair(start, stop, name) end
We take input
, parse it if necessary, then invoke the output
formatter
using a Visitor to render the result.
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 818 def convert input, formatter document = case input when RDoc::Markup::Document then input else RDoc::Markup::Parser.parse input end document.accept formatter end