API documentation generator for Sencha JavaScript frameworks.
JSDuck aims to be a better documentation generator for Ext JS than the old ext-doc was. It is used by Sencha to document Ext JS 4, Sencha Touch and several other products.
The highlights of JSDuck are Markdown support and keeping you DRY by inferring a lot of information from code. Read the documentation for full overview.
New to JSDuck? Watch introductory talk by Nick Poulden:
Standard rubygems install should do:
$ [sudo] gem install jsduck
Windows users probably want to download a binary release.
See the installation guide for help when you run into problems.
For the simplest test-run just use the --builtin-classes
option to
automatically produce documentation for JavaScript builtin classes
like Array, String and Object:
$ jsduck --builtin-classes --output your/docs
You can also use --verbose
option to see what's actually happening.
To generate docs for Ext JS 4 add path to the corresponding src/ dir:
$ jsduck ext-4.1.1/src \
--builtin-classes \
--images ext-4.1.1/docs/images \
--warnings=-no_doc,-dup_member,-link_ambiguous \
--external XMLHttpRequest \
--output your/docs
The --images
option specifies a path for images included with
{@img}
tags inside the source code.
The --warnings
option disables some of the warnings which you would
otherwise be overwhelmed with. That's because Ext JS 4.1.1 was
released when JSDuck 4 wasn't out yet. Sorry for that, JSDuck just
wants to be helpful. Similarly the --external
option defines
XMLHttpRequest
as an external class, otherwise a warning would be
thrown.
Another thing that often happens is that JSDuck is unable to determine
into which class a member belongs and will place all such items into a
global class - you can disable this using the --ignore-global
switch. For full list of all command line options type
jsduck --help
. For help on a specific option use
--help=--some-option
.
To generate docs for your own project, simply name additional input directories:
$ jsduck ext-4.1.1/src project1/js project2/js ...
Note that the resulting documentation will only contain the API documentation. Guides, videos and examples will not be present. These can be added using more command line options as explained in the documentation.
Read the documentation and take a look at example.js.
See Hacking guide in wiki.
- Appcelerator Titanium SDK
- AT&T API Platform SDK for HTML5
- Bryntum Siesta unit testing framework
- CKEditor
- GeoExt 2
- Rally Software Rally App SDK
- Sencha - obviously :)
These are some that we know of. Want your project listed here? Drop us a line.
JSDuck is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3.
JSDuck was developed by Rene Saarsoo, with many contributions from Nick Poulden.
Thanks to Ondřej Jirman, Thomas Aylott, johnnywengluu, gevik, ligaard, Bill Hubbard, Ed Spencer, atian25, Katherine Chu, Rob Dougan, Dave Thompson, burnnat, vjetteam, Chris Westbrook, Scott Whittaker, Timo Tijhof, and many-many others who reported bugs, submitted patches, and provided a lot of useful input.
See Changelog page in wiki.
Feel free to post an issue, but read the FAQ first.