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Autodox

Tool for generating documentation automatically from code annotations, types, and docstrings.

Status

  • Code
  • Docs
  • Package published
  • Denote async functions as such

Usage

Installation

pip install autodox

Note that Protocols do not support __init__ methods before Python 3.11. To use __init__ method signatures for Protocols in Python 3.10, use the typing.Protocol backport from the 3rd-party typing_extensions package. Otherwise, the __init__ method signature will be overridden with an empty one named _no_init_or_replace_init and will be ignored by this tool.

Document a module from CLI

Use the following to document a module with default configuration:

autodox module_name [options] > target_file.md

The output can be configured with the following options:

  • -exclude_name=name to exclude a specific part of the module by name
  • -exclude_type=type to exclude any module parts of the given type
  • -package=module_name to scope a relative import
  • -header_level=number to increase the hashtag count in headers by number
  • -function_format=format - can be one of 'header', 'paragraph', or 'list'
  • -method_format=format - can be one of 'header', 'paragraph', or 'list'
  • -value_format=format - can be one of 'header', 'paragraph', or 'list'
  • -line_length=number - number of chars per line in paragraphs
  • -include_private to include things prefaced with '_'
  • -include_dunder to include things prefaced with '__'
  • -include_submodules to include submodules
  • -document_submodules to run the module documentation for submodules
  • -debug to increase the level of debug statements printed (starts at 0)

For experimentation and to learn how the options work, try running the following:

autodox autodox [options]

Programmatic access

The autodox package can also be used by importing and running the desired documentation function(s). The following are included.

  • dox_a_module(module: ModuleType, options: dict = None) -> str produces docs for a module
  • dox_a_value(value: Any, options: dict = None) -> str produces docs for a value
  • dox_a_function(function: Callable, options: dict = None) -> str produces docs for a function
  • dox_a_class(cls: type, options: dict = None) -> str produces docs for a class

The valid options for each will be described below. Additionally, there is a system for setting up hooks that interact with the doc generation process to change the inputs or outputs, and that will be described below the options for the four dox_a_{thing} functions.

dox_a_module(module: ModuleType, options: dict = None) -> str

Produces docs for a module. Valid options are the following:

  • exclude_names: list[str] - names to exclude from docs
  • exclude_types: list[str] - types to exclude from docs
  • header_level: int - number of additional hashtags to add to headers
  • include_private: bool - if True, includes things with names prefaced by '_'
  • include_dunder: bool - if True, includes things with names prefaced by '__'
  • include_submodules: bool - if True, notes will be made about any additional modules encountered when analyzing the specified module
  • document_submodules: bool - if True, dox_a_module will be called recursively on any additional modules encountered when analyzing the specified module

dox_a_value(value: Any, options: dict = None) -> str

Produces docs for a value. Valid options are the following:

  • header_level: int - number of additional hashtags to add to headers
  • format: str - format can be one of 'header', 'paragraph', or 'list'

dox_a_function(function: Callable, options: dict = None) -> str

Produces docs for a function. Valid options are the following:

  • header_level: int - number of additional hashtags to add to headers

dox_a_class(cls: type, options: dict = None) -> str

Produces docs for a class. Valid options are the following:

  • exclude_names: list[str] - names to exclude from docs
  • header_level: int - number of additional hashtags to add to headers
  • include_private: bool - if True, includes things with names prefaced by '_'
  • include_dunder: bool - if True, includes things with names prefaced by '__'
  • method_format: str - can be one of 'header', 'paragraph', or 'list'

Hooks

There are eight events where custom functionality can be run, specified in the Event enum:

  • AFTER_HEADER
  • AFTER_PARAGRAPH
  • AFTER_LIST
  • BEFORE_VALUE
  • AFTER_VALUE
  • BEFORE_FUNCTION
  • AFTER_FUNCTION
  • BEFORE_CLASS
  • AFTER_CLASS
  • BEFORE_MODULE
  • AFTER_MODULE

Handlers for the BEFORE_ events can be set using the set_before_handler function. These handlers will receive the item to be documented and a dict containing any options passed into the dox_a_{thing} function, and they should return a tuple containing those two arguments after any modifications are made to them. Example:

from autodox import Event, set_before_handler
from typing import Callable


def handle_before_function(function: Callable, options: dict):
    # set an option
    options['header_level'] = 2
    return (function, options)

set_before_handler(Event.BEFORE_FUNCTION, handle_before_function)

Handlers for the AFTER_ events can be set using the set_after_handler function. These handlers will receive the str doc after the dox_a_{thing} function has completed executing, and they should return that document after any modifications are made. Example:

from autodox import Event, set_after_handler


def handle_after_function(doc: str):
    # do some string manipulation
    return doc + 'But really, why would you call this function anyway?\n\n'

set_after_handler(Event.AFTER_FUNCTION, handle_after_function)

Muliple handlers can be set for each event, and they will be executed in order, passing the output from the first as input to the second, etc. Example:

from autodox import Event, set_after_handler


# add 'hello world' to the end of each list item in two steps
def hello(doc: str):
    return doc + ' hello'

def world(doc: str):
    return doc + ' world'

set_after_handler(Event.AFTER_LIST, hello)
set_after_handler(Event.AFTER_LIST, world)

Testing

The test suite for this library is currently limited to hooks (14 tests) and a few edge cases I encountered using the package (12 tests).

To test, clone the repository and run the following:

python test_hooks.py
python test_doxing.py

ISC License

Copyleft (c) 2023 k98kurz

Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyleft notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.

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Tool for generating documentation automatically from code annotations, types, and docstrings.

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