jdoc
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Documentation markup for large projects
JDoc
Pretty documentation generator for large projects
Description
JDoc is a Jekyll plugin that lets you organize your documentation into a hierarchical file structure. It was created primarily to generate Project Pages for large projects where the documentation needs to be organized hierarchically across multiple files.
For example, this code produces this result.
Getting Started
- Install jekyll
- Clone jdoc-example recursively to include its submodule:
git clone --recursive git://github.com/tombenner/jdoc-example.git
- Start jekyll using
jekyll --server
(read more) and see the site here - Edit the files in
documentation/
to start documenting!
Tips:
- You might want to use
jekyll --server --auto
to automatically regenerate the site when you modify files. - You can change the root URL of the site with the
baseurl
value in _config.yml.
File Structure
Documentation is organized in the documentation
directory in root Jekyll directory. The file structure looks like this:
documentation/
first_topic/
_sort.yml
first_subtopic.md
second_subtopic.md
index.md
second_topic.md
This structure will be rendered into a hierarchical menu. index.md
is the content that's shown for first_topic
.
_sort.yml
is optional. If it's included in a directory, it specifies the order in which that directory's topics are rendered in the menu. In the example above, it might look like this:
first_subtopic
second_subtopic
Documentation Syntax
Each file behaves just like a Jekyll file does, except that the YAML header isn't required. An initial ---
is required, though:
---
Here's some documentation on this topic.
The title is inferred from the file's name, but you can explicitly set the title using the YAML header
---
title: My Custom Title
---
Here's some documentation on this topic.
Tags
doc_link
Creates a link to another topic. The first argument is the path to the topic; the second is the text:
{% doc_link first_topic My custom text %}
<a href="/first_topic/">My custom text</a>
If the second argument is omitted, the title of the topic will be used:
{% doc_link first_topic/second_subtopic %}
<a href="/first_topic/second_subtopic/">Second Subtopic</a>
doc_children
Renders all of the current topic's children in a single page. Here's an example of the output.
{% doc_children %}
doc_menu
Renders the hierarchical menu of topics.
{% doc_menu %}