Files
Nim/doc/docstyle.md
Andrey Makarov 417b90a7e5 Improve Markdown code blocks & start moving docs to Markdown style (#19954)
- add additional parameters parsing (other implementations will just
  ignore them). E.g. if in RST we have:

  .. code:: nim
     :test: "nim c $1"

     ...

  then in Markdown that will be:

  ```nim test="nim c $1"
  ...
  ```

- implement Markdown interpretation of additional indentation which is
  less than 4 spaces (>=4 spaces is a code block but it's not
implemented yet). RST interpretes it as quoted block, for Markdown it's
just normal paragraphs.
- add separate `md2html` and `md2tex` commands. This is to separate
  Markdown behavior in cases when it diverges w.r.t. RST significantly —
most conspicously like in the case of additional indentation above, and
also currently the contradicting inline rule of Markdown is also turned
on only in `md2html` and `md2tex`. **Rationale:** mixing Markdown and
RST arbitrarily is a way to nowhere, we need to provide a way to fix the
particular behavior. Note that still all commands have **both** Markdown
and RST features **enabled**. In this PR `*.nim` files can be processed
only in Markdown mode, while `md2html` is for `*.md` files and
`rst2html` for `*.rst` files.
- rename `*.rst` files to `.*md` as our current default behavior is
  already Markdown-ish
- convert code blocks in `docgen.rst` to Markdown style as an example.
  Other code blocks will be converted in the follow-up PRs
- fix indentation inside Markdown code blocks — additional indentation
  is preserved there
- allow more than 3 backticks open/close blocks (tildas \~ are still not
  allowed to avoid conflict with RST adornment headings) see also
https://github.com/nim-lang/RFCs/issues/355
- better error messages
- (other) fix a bug that admonitions cannot be used in sandbox mode; fix
  annoying warning on line 2711
2022-07-15 19:27:54 +02:00

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Documentation Style

General Guidelines

  • See also nep1<https://nim-lang.github.io/Nim/nep1.html>_ which should probably be merged here.
  • Authors should document anything that is exported; documentation for private procs can be useful too (visible via nim doc --docInternal foo.nim:cmd:).
  • Within documentation, a period (.) should follow each sentence (or sentence fragment) in a comment block. The documentation may be limited to one sentence fragment, but if multiple sentences are within the documentation, each sentence after the first should be complete and in present tense.
  • Documentation is parsed as a custom ReStructuredText (RST) with partial markdown support.
  • In nim sources, prefer single backticks to double backticks since it's simpler and nim doc:cmd: supports it. Likewise with rst files: nim rst2html:cmd: will render those as monospace, and adding .. default-role:: code to an rst file will also make those render as monospace when rendered directly in tools such as github.
  • (debatable) In nim sources, for links, prefer [link text](link.html) to \link text<link.html>`_:code: since the syntax is simpler and markdown is more common (likewise, nim rst2html`:cmd: also supports it in rst files).

.. code-block:: nim

proc someproc*(s: string, foo: int) = ## Use single backticks for inline code, e.g.: s or someExpr(true). ## Use a backlash to follow with alphanumeric char: int8\s are great.

Module-level documentation

Documentation of a module is placed at the top of the module itself. Each line of documentation begins with double hashes (##). Sometimes ##[ multiline docs containing code ]## is preferable, see lib/pure/times.nim. Code samples are encouraged, and should follow the general RST syntax:

.. code-block:: Nim

The universe module computes the answer to life, the universe, and everything.

.. code-block::

doAssert computeAnswerString() == 42

Within this top-level comment, you can indicate the authorship and copyright of the code, which will be featured in the produced documentation.

.. code-block:: Nim

This is the best module ever. It provides answers to everything!

:Author: Steve McQueen

Leave a space between the last line of top-level documentation and the beginning of Nim code (the imports, etc.).

Procs, Templates, Macros, Converters, and Iterators

The documentation of a procedure should begin with a capital letter and should be in present tense. Variables referenced in the documentation should be surrounded by single tick marks:

.. code-block:: Nim

proc example1*(x: int) = ## Prints the value of x. echo x

Whenever an example of usage would be helpful to the user, you should include one within the documentation in RST format as below.

.. code-block:: Nim

proc addThree*(x, y, z: int8): int = ## Adds three int8 values, treating them as unsigned and ## truncating the result. ## ## .. code-block:: ## # things that aren't suitable for a runnableExamples go in code-block: ## echo execCmdEx("git pull") ## drawOnScreen() runnableExamples: # runnableExamples is usually preferred to code-block, when possible. doAssert addThree(3, 125, 6) == -122 result = x +% y +% z

The command nim doc:cmd: will then correctly syntax highlight the Nim code within the documentation.

Types

Exported types should also be documented. This documentation can also contain code samples, but those are better placed with the functions to which they refer.

.. code-block:: Nim

type NamedQueue*[T] = object ## Provides a linked data structure with names ## throughout. It is named for convenience. I'm making ## this comment long to show how you can, too. name*: string ## The name of the item val*: T ## Its value next*: ref NamedQueue[T] ## The next item in the queue

You have some flexibility when placing the documentation:

.. code-block:: Nim

type NamedQueue*[T] = object ## Provides a linked data structure with names ## throughout. It is named for convenience. I'm making ## this comment long to show how you can, too. name*: string ## The name of the item val*: T ## Its value next*: ref NamedQueue[T] ## The next item in the queue

Make sure to place the documentation beside or within the object.

.. code-block:: Nim

type ## Bad: this documentation disappears because it annotates the type keyword ## above, not NamedQueue. NamedQueue*[T] = object name*: string ## This becomes the main documentation for the object, which ## is not what we want. val*: T ## Its value next*: ref NamedQueue[T] ## The next item in the queue

Var, Let, and Const

When declaring module-wide constants and values, documentation is encouraged. The placement of doc comments is similar to the type sections.

.. code-block:: Nim

const X* = 42 ## An awesome number. SpreadArray* = [ [1,2,3], [2,3,1], [3,1,2], ] ## Doc comment for SpreadArray.

Placement of comments in other areas is usually allowed, but will not become part of the documentation output and should therefore be prefaced by a single hash (#).

.. code-block:: Nim

const BadMathVals* = [ 3.14, # pi 2.72, # e 0.58, # gamma ] ## A bunch of badly rounded values.

Nim supports Unicode in comments, so the above can be replaced with the following:

.. code-block:: Nim

const BadMathVals* = [ 3.14, # π 2.72, # e 0.58, # γ ] ## A bunch of badly rounded values (including π!).