Refactor of the great work done by Mike Brevoort in extending the original Docco project. This fork extends the 'huskiness' by dynamically building a table of contents by recursing project sub-directories and creating hyperlinks to their documentation. Many thanks to Mike initiating docco-husky.
A streamlined static site generator for project documentation based on Docco. "Husky" because it's bigger and more irregular than Docco, like Husky Jeans you would buy at Sears back in the day.
A fork of Docco, intended to go beyond the appropriate scope of Docco itself. Forked because Docco itself is pretty simple and this is intended to diverge. The initial fork included merged pull requests from nevir and jswartwood for their work on supporting recursive directories and an improved "Jump To" menu.
Check out the generated documentation for this project.
Or these other samples
- Docco requires Pygments to be installed and will try to install it if it's not already.
- Perl is required for cloc
To install via npm into your project:
npm install docco-husky
Install globally:
[sudo] npm install -g docco-husky
Or include as a dependency in your package.json
docco-husky will generate docs in a ./docs directory. It accepts multiple files (including wildcards) and directories for it to recurse.
docco-husky -name "<optional project name>" <list of files>
Optional configuration in your package.json. The project name can alternatively be passed in the package.json configuration and it will override the value passed in the -name
option.
"docco_husky": {
"css": "path/to/alternative/css/file.css"
"output_dir": "docs/out", // default "docs"
"content_dir": "docs/my_markdown_files", // default null
"project_name": "Your Project name",
"show_timestamp": true // default true
}
# from a local install
./node_modules/.bin/docco-husky app.js lib public
# with a project name
./node_modules/.bin/docco-husky -name "My Project" app.js lib public
# with wildcards
./node_modules/.bin/docco-husky -name "My Project" *.js lib public
# with global install
docco-husky -name "My Project" *.js lib public
docco-husky
can also include other markdown content from your project. It expects the markdown files to be in a specified directory configured with content_dir
. It walks the directory recursively and puts the resulting files in your the output_dir
root including a relative subdirectory.
You can manually link to these files from your README.md or optionally if there is a content_index.md
file in your content_dir
directory, this will be injected into the package.json section of the main page just below the module name and description in index.html
. This is a convenient way to reference any additional documents in your index.html
that you don't want in your README.md file. One reason you may not want links in your README.md file is that these relative links will not resolve when Github renders your project's README.md file.
docco-husky will write generated files to ./docs by default or to the directory specified in the package.json config as output_dir
For all source files, the output will be like
. (e.g. foo.js) --> .html (e.g. foo.html).An index.html will be generated and will include a formatted version of a README.md if your project includes it, some details from the a package.json file, and project stats generated by cloc.
Single line comments will only be parsed with the exception os Javascript (as of 0.2.0) which is in an early experimental state.