Difference between revisions of "User talk:Humitos/SugarToolkitDocs"

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* Doxigen
 
* Doxigen
 
* <add your tool here>
 
* <add your tool here>
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Sugarlabs already has a sphinx instance, although it is a bit out of date: http://doc.sugarlabs.org/sphinx/
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It also has a epydoc instance: http://doc.sugarlabs.org/epydocs/ (a.k.a api.sugarlabs.org)
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I previously kept a Doxygen parsing of the Sugar toolkit, largely because I know how to make nice dependancy graphs with Doxygen.  This currently is not hosted anywhere.
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In general each documentation tool I have used has a slightly different style for comments to state things like '@param input_item Describes this input" and "@returns A XYZ object if successful; null on failure".  So you should decide on the tool to use that can do everything you want before you formally go annotating the code base.
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== Workaround ==
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* Taken from the sugar-devel mailing list
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<pre>
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My quick and dirty solution for browsable docs are to just hop into the terminal on an XO and type
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pydoc -p 8080 and then point Browse to localhost:8080. Now that we have moved to webkit I'm really
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tempted to wrap this up as a little webkit activity to get to the dev docs with no geeking around ;)
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</pre>

Latest revision as of 11:19, 5 July 2012

Just a couple of suggestions. Make it a Makefile target and use a better theme like sphinxdoc :) --dnarvaez

Tool to be used

  • Sphinx
  • epydoc
  • Doxigen
  • <add your tool here>


Sugarlabs already has a sphinx instance, although it is a bit out of date: http://doc.sugarlabs.org/sphinx/

It also has a epydoc instance: http://doc.sugarlabs.org/epydocs/ (a.k.a api.sugarlabs.org)

I previously kept a Doxygen parsing of the Sugar toolkit, largely because I know how to make nice dependancy graphs with Doxygen. This currently is not hosted anywhere.

In general each documentation tool I have used has a slightly different style for comments to state things like '@param input_item Describes this input" and "@returns A XYZ object if successful; null on failure". So you should decide on the tool to use that can do everything you want before you formally go annotating the code base.

Workaround

  • Taken from the sugar-devel mailing list
My quick and dirty solution for browsable docs are to just hop into the terminal on an XO and type
pydoc -p 8080 and then point Browse to localhost:8080. Now that we have moved to webkit I'm really
tempted to wrap this up as a little webkit activity to get to the dev docs with no geeking around ;)