A tool for generating API documentation from Clojure or ClojureScript source code.
Include the following plugin in your project.clj
file or your global
profile:
:plugins [[lein-codox "0.10.3"]]
Then run:
lein codox
This will generate API documentation in the "target/doc" subdirectory
(or wherever your project :target-path
is set to).
Add boot-codox to your build.boot dependencies and require the namespace:
(set-env! :dependencies '[[boot-codox "0.10.3" :scope "test"]])
(require '[codox.boot :refer [codox]])
You can see the options available on the command line:
$ boot codox -h
or in the REPL:
boot.user=> (doc codox)
Remember to output files to the target directory with boot's built-in target
task:
$ boot codox target
In preparation for a 1.0 release, Codox 0.9 has a number of breaking changes:
- The Leiningen plugin has been changed from
codox
tolein-codox
- The Leiningen task has been changed from
lein doc
tolein codox
- The default output path has been changed from
doc
totarget/doc
- The
:sources
option has been renamed to:source-paths
- The
:output-dir
option has been renamed to:output-path
- The
:defaults
option has been renamed to:metadata
- The
:include
and:exclude
options have been replaced with:namespaces
- All the
:src-*
options have been replaced with:source-uri
See the "Source Files" section for information on the :namespaces
option, and the "Source Links" section for information on the
:source-uri
option.
Some examples of API docs generated by Codox in real projects:
AOT-compiled namespaces will lose their metadata, which mean you'll
lose documentation for namespaces. Avoid having global :aot
directives in your project; instead, place them in a specialized
profile, such as :uberjar
.
Codox can generate documentation from Clojure or ClojureScript. By
default it looks for Clojure source files, but you can change this to
ClojureScript by setting the :language
key:
:codox {:language :clojurescript}
By default Codox looks for source files in the :source-paths
of your
project, but you can change this just for Codox by placing the
following in your project.clj
file:
:codox {:source-paths ["path/to/source"]}
The :namespaces
option can be used to restrict the documentation to
a specific set of namespaces:
:codox {:namespaces [library.core library.io]}
Regular expressions can also be used for more general matching:
:codox {:namespaces [#"^library\."]}
For excluding only internal namespaces, it's sometimes useful to use negative lookahead:
:codox {:namespaces [#"^library\.(?!internal)"]}
To override the namespaces list and include all namespaces, use :all
(the default):
:codox {:namespaces :all}
The :exclude-vars
option can be used to exclude vars that match a
regular expression. Set to nil
to disable. By default vars generated
by record constructor functions are excluded (such as ->Foo
and
map->Foo
):
:codox {:exclude-vars #"^(map)?->\p{Upper}"}
Codox constructs documentation from metadata on vars and namespaces.
You can specify a set of default metadata using the :metadata
map:
:codox {:metadata {:doc "FIXME: write docs"}}
As well as source files, Codox also tries to include documentation
files as well. By default it looks for these in the doc
directory,
but you can change this with:
:codox {:doc-paths ["path/to/docs"]}
Documentation files will appear in the output sorted by their
filename. If you want a particular order, one solution is to prefix
your files with 01
, 02
, etc. Alternatively, you can also define
the documentation files explicitly:
:codox {:doc-files ["doc/intro.md", "doc/tutorial.md"]}
If :doc-files
is specifies, then :doc-paths
is ignored. Currently
only markdown files (.md
or .markdown
) are supported. Any links
between markdown files will be converted to their HTML equivalents
automatically.
To write output to a directory other than the default, use the
:output-path
key:
:codox {:output-path "codox"}
To use a different output writer, specify the fully qualified symbol of the
writer function in the :writer
key:
:codox {:writer codox.writer.html/write-docs}
By default the writer will include the project name, version and
description in the output. You can override these by specifying a
:project
map in your Codox configuration:
:codox {:project {:name "Example", :version "1.0", :description "N/A"}}
If you have the source available at a URI and would like to have links
to the function's source file in the documentation, you can set the
:source-uri
key:
:codox {:source-uri "https://github.com/foo/bar/blob/{version}/{filepath}#L{line}"}
The URI is a template that may contain the following keys:
{filepath}
- the file path from the root of the repository{basename}
- the basename of the file{classpath}
- the relative path of the file within the source directory{line}
- the line number of the source file{version}
- the version of the project
You can also assign different URI templates to different paths of your source tree. This is particularly useful for created source links from generated source code, such as is the case with cljx.
For example, perhaps your Clojure source files are generated in
target/classes
. To link back to the original .cljx file, you could do:
:codox
{:source-uri
{#"target/classes" "https://github.com/foo/bar/blob/master/src/{classpath}x#L{line}"
#".*" "https://github.com/foo/bar/blob/master/{filepath}#L{line}"}}
The HTML writer can be customized using Enlive-style transformations. You can use these to modify the HTML documents produced in arbitrary ways, but the most common use is to add in new stylesheets or scripts.
The transforms live in the :transforms
key, in the :html
map, and
consist of a vector that matches selectors to transformations, in the
same way that let
matches symbols to values.
For example, the following code adds a new <script>
element as the
last child of the <head>
element:
:html {:transforms [[:head] [:append [:script "console.log('foo');"]]]}
The selectors follow the Enlive selector syntax.
The transformations are a little different. There are five transforms,
:append
, :prepend
, :after
, :before
and :substitute
. These
match to the corresponding Enlive transformations, but expect
Hiccup-style arguments.
The HTML writer also has one other customization option.
By default the namespace list is nested, unless there is only one
namespace in the library. To override this, set the :namespace-list
option in the :html
map to either :nested
or :flat
.
:html {:namespace-list :flat}
Themes are HTML transformations packaged with resources. Because
they're data-driven and based on transformation of the generated
documentation, multiple themes can be applied. The default theme is
:default
. Themes can be added by changing the :themes
key:
:themes [:my-custom-theme]
To create a theme, you'll need to place the following resource in the classpath, either directly in your project, or via a dependency:
codox/theme/my-custom-theme/theme.edn
This edn file should contain a map of two keys: :transforms
and
:resources
.
The :transforms
key contains an ordered collection of HTML
transformations. See the previous section for more information on the
syntax.
The :resources
key contains a list of sub-resources that will be
copied to the target directory when the documentation is compiled. For
example, if you define a sub-resource css/main.css
, then Codox will
copy the resource codox/theme/foo/css/main.css
to the file
css/main.css
in the target directory.
Themes can also take parameters. You can put in a keyword as a placeholder, and then end users can specify the value that should replace the keyword. This is achieved by using a vector instead of a keyword to specify the theme:
:themes [[keyword {placeholder value}]]
For example:
:themes [[:my-custom-theme {:some-value "foobar"}]]
Codox will look for the keyword :some-value
in the theme file, and
replace it with the string "foobar"
.
If you want to take a look at a complete theme, try the default theme for Codox.
To force Codox to skip a public var, add :no-doc true
to the var's metadata. For example:
;; Documented
(defn square
"Squares the supplied number."
[x]
(* x x))
;; Not documented
(defn ^:no-doc hidden-square
"Squares the supplied number."
[x]
(* x x))
You can also skip namespaces by adding :no-doc true
to the
namespace's metadata. This currently only works for Clojure code, not
ClojureScript. For example:
(ns ^:no-doc hidden-ns)
To denote the library version the var was added in, use the :added
metadata key:
(defn square
"Squares the supplied number."
{:added "1.0"}
[x]
(* x x))
Similar, deprecated vars can be denoted with the :deprecated
metadata key:
(defn square
"Squares the supplied number."
{:deprecated "2.0"}
[x]
(* x x))
By default, docstrings are rendered by Codox as fixed-width plain text, as they would be on a terminal. However, you can override this behavior by specifying an explicit format for your docstrings.
Currently there are only two formats for docstrings: plaintext and markdown. The markdown format includes extensions for code blocks, tables, and, like the plaintext format, URLs are automatically encoded as links.
You can specify docstring formats via a var's metadata, using the
:doc/format
option:
(defn foo
"A **markdown** formatted docstring."
{:doc/format :markdown}
[x])
Or you can specify the docstring format globally by adding it to the
:metadata
map in your project.clj file:
:codox {:metadata {:doc/format :markdown}}
Markdown docstrings also support wikilink-style relative links, for referencing other vars. Vars in the current namespace will be matched first, and then Codox will try and find a best match out of all the vars its documenting.
(defn bar
"See [[foo]] and [[user/square]] for other examples."
{:doc/format :markdown}
[x])
You can make the code in your documentation live and interactive by using the Klipse theme written by Yehonathan Sharvit. This third-party theme integrates the generated docs with the Klipse code evaluator.
Copyright © 2017 James Reeves
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.