Use dartdoc
to generate HTML documentaton for your Dart package.
For information about contributing to the dartdoc project, see the contributor docs.
For issues/details related to hosted Dart API docs, see dart-lang/api.dart.dev.
Run pub global activate dartdoc
to install the latest version of dartdoc compatible with your SDK.
Run dartdoc
from the root directory of a package. Here is an example of dartdoc documenting itself:
$ dartdoc
Documenting dartdoc...
Initialized dartdoc with 766 libraries in 63.9 seconds
Generating docs for library dartdoc from package:dartdoc/dartdoc.dart...
Validating docs...
no issues found
Documented 1 public library in 17.9 seconds
Success! Docs generated into <path to dartdoc>/doc/api
By default, the documentation is generated to the doc/api
directory as static
HTML files.
Run dartdoc -h
to see the available command-line options.
You can view the generated docs directly from the file system, but if you want to use the search function, you must load them with an HTTP server.
An easy way to run an HTTP server locally is to use the dhttpd
package. For
example:
$ pub global activate dhttpd
$ dhttpd --path doc/api
Navigate to http://localhost:8080
in your browser; the search function should
now work.
dartdoc produces static files with a predictable link structure.
index.html # homepage
index.json # machine-readable index
library-name/ # : is turned into a - e.g. dart:core => dart-core
ClassName-class.html # "homepage" for a class (and enum)
ClassName/
ClassName.html # constructor
ClassName.namedConstructor.html # named constructor
method.html
property.html
CONSTANT.html
property.html
top-level-function.html
File names are case-sensitive.
Check out the Effective Dart: Documentation guide.
The guide covers formatting, linking, markup, and general best practices when
authoring doc comments for Dart with dartdoc
.
dartdoc
will not generate documentation for a Dart element and its children that have the
@nodoc
tag in the documentation comment.
Creating a file named dartdoc_options.yaml at the top of your package can change how Dartdoc generates docs.
An example (not necessarily recommended settings):
dartdoc:
categories:
"First Category":
markdown: doc/First.md
name: Awesome
"Second Category":
markdown: doc/Second.md
name: Great
categoryOrder: ["First Category", "Second Category"]
examplePathPrefix: 'subdir/with/examples'
includeExternal: ['bin/unusually_located_library.dart']
nodoc: ['lib/sekret/*.dart']
linkTo:
url: "https://my.dartdocumentationsite.org/dev/%v%"
showUndocumentedCategories: true
ignore:
- ambiguous-doc-reference
errors:
- unresolved-doc-reference
warnings:
- tool-error
In general, paths are relative to the directory of the dartdoc_options.yaml
file in which the option
is defined, and should be specified as POSIX paths. Dartdoc will convert POSIX paths automatically on Windows.
Unrecognized options will be ignored. Supported options:
- categories: More details for each category/topic. For topics you'd like to document, specify
the markdown file with
markdown:
to use for the category page. Optionally, rename the category from the source code into a display name withname:
. If there is no matching category defined in dartdoc_options.yaml, those declared categories in the source code will be invisible. - categoryOrder: Specify the order of topics for display in the sidebar and the package page.
- examplePathPrefix: Specify the location of the example directory for resolving
@example
directives. - exclude: Specify a list of library names to avoid generating docs for,
overriding any specified in include. All libraries listed must be local to this package, unlike
the command line
--exclude
. See alsonodoc
. - errors: Specify warnings to be treated as errors. See the lists of valid warnings in the command
line help for
--errors
,--warnings
, and--ignore
. - favicon: A path to a favicon for the generated docs.
- footer: A list of paths to footer files containing HTML text.
- footerText: A list of paths to text files for optional text next to the package name and version
- header: A list of paths to header files containing HTML text.
- ignore: Specify warnings to be completely ignored. See the lists of valid warnings in the command
line help for
--errors
,--warnings
, and--ignore
. - include: Specify a list of library names to generate docs for, ignoring all others. All libraries
listed must be local to this package (unlike the command line
--include
). - includeExternal: Specify a list of library filenames to add to the list of documented libraries.
- linkTo: For other packages depending on this one, if this map is defined those packages
will use the settings here to control how hyperlinks to the package are generated.
This will override the default for packages hosted on pub.dev and
api.flutter.dev.
-
url: A string indicating the base URL for documentation of this package. Ordinarily you do not need to set this in the package: consider
--link-to-hosted
and--link-to-sdks
instead of this option if you need to build your own website with dartdoc.The following strings will be substituted in to complete the URL:
%b%
: The branch as indicated by text in the version. 2.0.0-dev.3 is branch "dev". No branch is considered to be "stable".%n%
: The name of this package, as defined inpubspec.yaml
.%v%
: The version of this package as defined inpubspec.yaml
.
-
- linkToSource: Generate links to a source code repository based on given templates and
revision information.
-
excludes: A list of directories to exclude from processing source links.
-
root: The directory to consider the 'root' for inserting relative paths into the template. Source code outside the root directory will not be linked.
-
uriTemplate: A template to substitute revision and file path information. If revision is present in the template but not specified, or if root is not specified, dartdoc will throw an exception. To hard-code a revision, don't specify it with
%r%
.The following strings will be substituted in to complete the URL:
%f%
: Relative path of file to the repository root%r%
: Revision%l%
: Line number
-
- nodoc: Specify files (via globs) which should be treated as though they have the
@nodoc
tag in the documentation comment of every defined element. Unlikeexclude
this can specify source files directly, and neither inheritance nor reexports will cause these elements to be documented when included in other libraries. For more fine-grained control, use@nodoc
in element documentation comments directly, or theexclude
directive. - warnings: Specify otherwise ignored or set-to-error warnings to simply warn. See the lists
of valid warnings in the command line help for
--errors
,--warnings
, and--ignore
.
Unsupported and experimental options:
- ambiguousReexportScorerMinConfidence: The ambiguous reexport scorer will emit a warning if it is not at least this confident. Adjusting this may be necessary for some complex packages but most of the time, the default is OK. Default: 0.1
You can tag libraries or top level classes, functions, and variables in their documentation with
the string {@category YourCategory}
. For libraries, that will cause the library to appear in a
category when showing the sidebar on the Package and Library pages. For other types of objects,
the {@category}
will be shown with a link to the category page but only if specified in
dartdoc_options.yaml, as above.
/// Here is my library.
///
/// {@category Amazing}
library my_library;
A file categories.json
will be generated at the top level of the documentation tree with
information about categories collected from objects in the source tree. The directives
@category
, @subCategory
, @image
, and @samples
are understood and saved into this json.
Future versions of dartdoc may make direct use of the image and samples tags.
As an example, if we document the class Icon in flutter using the following:
/// {@category Basics}
/// {@category Assets, Images, and Icons}
/// {@subCategory Information displays}
/// {@image <image alt='' src='/images/catalog-widget-placeholder.png'>}
class Icon extends StatelessWidget {}
that will result in the following json:
{
"name": "Icon",
"qualifiedName": "widgets.Icon",
"href": "widgets/Icon-class.html",
"type": "class",
"categories": [
"Assets, Images, and Icons",
"Basics"
],
"subcategories": [
"Information displays"
],
"image": "<image alt='' src='/images/catalog-widget-placeholder.png'>"
}
You can specify links to videos inline that will be handled with a simple HTML5 player:
/// This widget is a dancing Linux penguin.
///
/// {@animation name 100 200 http://host.com/path/to/video.mp4}
'name' is user defined, and the numbers are the width and height of the animation in pixels.
You can specify "macros", i.e. reusable pieces of documentation. For that, first specify a template anywhere in the comments, like:
/// {@template template_name}
/// Some shared docs
/// {@endtemplate}
and then you can insert it via {@macro template_name}
, like
/// Some comment
/// {@macro template_name}
/// More comments
Template definitions are currently unscoped -- if dartdoc reads a file containing a template, it can be used in anything dartdoc is currently documenting. This can lead to inconsistent behavior between runs on different packages, especially if different command lines are used for dartdoc. It is recommended to use collision-resistant naming for any macros by including the package name and/or library it is defined in within the name.
Dartdoc allows you to filter parts of the documentation through an external tool and then include the output of that tool in place of the given input.
First, you have to configure the tools that will be used in the dartdoc_options.yaml
file:
dartdoc:
tools:
drill:
command: ["bin/drill.dart"]
setup_command: ["bin/setup.dart"]
description: "Puts holes in things."
compile_args: ["--no-sound-null-safety"]
echo:
macos: ['/bin/sh', '-c', 'echo']
setup_macos: ['/bin/sh', '-c', 'setup.sh']
linux: ['/bin/sh', '-c', 'echo']
setup_linux: ['/bin/sh', '-c', 'setup.sh']
windows: ['C:\\Windows\\System32\\cmd.exe', '/c', 'echo']
setup_windows: ['/bin/sh', '-c', 'setup.sh']
description: 'Works on everything'
The command
tag is used to describe the command executable, and any options
that are common among all executions. If the first element of this list is a
filename that ends in .dart
, then the dart executable will automatically be
used to invoke that script. The command
defined will be run on all platforms.
If the command
is a Dart script, then the first time it is run, a snapshot
will be created using the input and first-time arguments as training arguments,
and will be run from the snapshot from then on. Note that the Platform.script
property will point to the snapshot location during the snapshot runs. You can
obtain the original .dart
script location in a tool by looking at the
TOOL_COMMAND
environment variable.
The setup_command
tag is used to describe a command executable, and any
options, for a command that is run once before running a tool for the first
time. If the first element of this list is a filename that ends in .dart
, then
the dart executable will automatically be used to invoke that script. The
setup_command
defined will be run on all platforms. If the setup command is a
Dart script, then it will be run with the Dart executable, but will not be
snapshotted, as it will only be run once.
The macos
, linux
, and windows
tags are used to describe the commands to be
run on each of those platforms, and the setup_macos
, setup_linux
, and
setup_windows
tags define setup commands for their respective platforms.
The description
is just a short description of the tool for use as help text.
Only tools which are configured in the dartdoc_options.yaml
file are able to
be invoked.
The compile_args
tag is used to pass options to the dart compiler when the
first run of the tool is being snapshotted.
To use the tools in comment documentation, use the {@tool <name> [<options> ...] [$INPUT]}
directive to invoke the tool:
/// {@tool drill --flag --option="value" $INPUT}
/// This is the text that will be sent to the tool as input.
/// {@end-tool}
The $INPUT
argument is a special token that will be replaced with the name of
a temporary file that the tool needs to read from. It can appear anywhere in the
options, and can appear multiple times.
If the example drill
tool with those options is a tool that turns the content
of its input file into a code-font heading, then the directive above would be
the equivalent of having the following comment in the code:
/// # `This is the text that will be sent to the tool as input.`
Tools have a number of environment variables available to them. They will be
interpolated into any arguments given to the tool as $ENV_VAR
or $(ENV_VAR)
,
as well as available in the process environment.
SOURCE_LINE
: The source line number in the original source code.SOURCE_COLUMN
: The source column in the original source code.SOURCE_PATH
: The relative path from the package root to the original source file.PACKAGE_PATH
: The path to the package root.PACKAGE_NAME
: The name of the package.LIBRARY_NAME
: The name of the library, if any.ELEMENT_NAME
: The name of the element that this doc is attached to.TOOL_COMMAND
: The path to the original.dart
script or command executable.DART_SNAPSHOT_CACHE
: The path to the directory containing the snapshot files of the tools. This directory will be removed before Dartdoc exits.DART_SETUP_COMMAND
: The path to the setup command script, if any.INVOCATION_INDEX
: An index for how many times a tool directive has been invoked on the current dartdoc block. Allows multiple tool invocations on the same block to be differentiated.
It rarely happens, but sometimes what you really need is to inject some raw HTML
into the dartdoc output, without it being subject to Markdown processing
beforehand. This can be useful when the output of an external tool is HTML, for
instance. This is where the {@inject-html}...{@end-inject-html}
tags come in.
For security reasons, the {@inject-html}
directive will be ignored unless the
--inject-html
flag is given on the dartdoc command line.
Since this HTML fragment doesn't undergo Markdown processing, reference links and other normal processing won't happen on the contained fragment.
So, this:
/// {@inject-html}
/// <p>[The HTML to inject.]()</p>
/// {@end-inject-html}
Will result in this be emitted in its place in the HTML output (notice that the markdown link isn't linked).
<p>[The HTML to inject.]()</p>
It's best to only inject HTML that is self-contained and doesn't depend upon other elements on the page, since those may change in future versions of Dartdoc.
If --auto-include-dependencies
flag is provided, dartdoc tries to automatically add
all the used libraries, even from other packages, to the list of the documented libraries.
The source linking feature in dartdoc is a little tricky to use, since pub packages do not actually include enough information to link back to source code and that's the context in which documentation is generated for the pub site. This means that for now, it must be manually specified in dartdoc_options.yaml what revision to use. It is currently a recommended practice to specify a revision in dartdoc_options.yaml that points to the same revision as your public package. If you're using a documentation staging system outside of Dart's pub site, override the template and revision on the command line with the head revision number. You can use the branch name, but generated docs will generate locations that may start drifting with further changes to the branch.
Example dartdoc_options.yaml:
link-to-source:
root: '.'
uriTemplate: 'https://github.com/dart-lang/dartdoc/blob/v0.28.0/%f%#L%l%'
Example staging command line:
pub global run dartdoc --link-to-source-root '.' --link-to-source-revision 6fac6f770d271312c88e8ae881861702a9a605be --link-to-source-uri-template 'https://github.com/dart-lang/dartdoc/blob/%r%/%f#L%l%'
This gets more complicated with --auto-include-dependencies
as these command line flags
will override all settings from individual packages. In that case, to preserve
source links from third party packages it may be necessary to generate
dartdoc_options.yaml options for each package you are intending to add source links
to yourself.
Please file reports on the GitHub Issue Tracker. Issues are labeled with priority based on how much impact to the ecosystem the issue addresses and the number of generated pages that show the anomaly (widespread vs. not widespread).
Some examples of likely triage priorities:
-
P0
- Broken links, widespread
- Uncaught exceptions, widespread
- Incorrect linkage outside of comment references, widespread
- Very ugly or navigation impaired generated pages, widespread
- Generation errors for high priority users (Flutter, Pub, Fuchsia, Dart), widespread and/or blocking critical teams
-
P1
- Broken links, few or on edge cases
- Uncaught exceptions, very rare or with simple workarounds
- Incorrect linkage outside of comment references, few or on edge cases
- Incorrect linkage in comment references, widespread or with high impact
- Incorrect doc contents, widespread or with high impact
- Minor display warts not significantly impeding navigation, widespread
- Default-on warnings that are misleading or wrong, widespread
- Generation errors that should be detected but aren't warned, widespread
- Enhancements that have significant data around them indicating they are a big win
- User performance problem (e.g. page load, search), widespread
- Generation errors for high priority users (Flutter, Pub, Fuchsia, Dart), not widespread or blocking critical teams
-
P2
- Incorrect doc contents, not widespread
- Incorrect linkage in comment references, not widespread
- Minor display warts not significantly impeding navigation, not widespread
- Generation problems that should be detected but aren't warned, not widespread
- Default-on warnings that are misleading or wrong, few or on edge cases
- Non-default warnings that are misleading or wrong, widespread
- Enhancements considered important but without significant data indicating they are a big win
- User performance problem (e.g. page load, search), not widespread
- Generation performance problem, widespread
-
P3
- Theoretical or extremely rare problems with generation
- Minor display warts on edge cases only
- Non-default warnings that are misleading or wrong, few or on edge cases
- Enhancements whose importance is uncertain
- Generation performance problem, limited impact or not widespread
Please see the dartdoc license.
Generated docs include:
- Highlight.js -
LICENSE
- With
github.css
(c) Vasily Polovnyov [email protected]
- With