DYC is a CLI tool that helps with documenting your source code. It will help keep you alert for new methods that were added and not documented. Also supports to build a reusable docstring template. Just answer the prompt questions in your terminal to see the effect on your files.
- Keep your Docstrings consistent.
- Document your DIFF patch.
- Ease of helping other developers understand your code.
All contributions are welcome. Please follow Development steps to get up and running, all PRs are welcome.
$ pip install document-your-code
This is intended to work on all programming languages. Kicking off with Python as a starter (Only default formatting added). You can override
the default settings for python files and extend new formats in dyc.yaml
at your root project. Refer to Example and Advanced
To run on all files in a project. Run
$ dyc start
To run on a Git Diff patch. Run
$ dyc diff
To have Docstrings prepended on a method while development. Run the following command
$ dyc diff --watch
You can also Setup your own customized Docstring Method Formatting in dyc.yaml
within formats
key
Methods
Key | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
ignore |
Known method Names to be ignored from Docstrings | list |
keywords |
The necessary keyword to search for in a line the triggers actions | list |
enabled |
Determine if formatting is enabled for the extension | bool |
indent |
Indentation in a method. Limited options ['tab', '2 spaces', '4 spaces'] | str |
indent_content |
Confirm if the content of a docstring has to be indented as well | bool |
open |
Starting opener text of a method | str |
close |
Close text of a method. This could be the same as opened, but not all languages opening and closing docstrings are same | str |
break_after_open |
Do we add a new line after adding the open strings of a method? | bool |
break_after_docstring |
Do we add a new line after adding the docstring? | bool |
break_before_close |
Add a new line before closing docstrings on a method | bool |
words_per_line |
How many words do we add per docstring? | int |
within_scope |
Should the docstring be within the scope of the method or out? Just like JS Method docstrings | bool |
Arguments
Key | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
title |
A title for arguments. i.e: "Parameters" | str |
underline |
Underline the title | bool |
add_type |
If true, it will prompt for the argument type | bool |
inline |
Add docstrings all inline or break within. | bool |
ignore |
Arguments to ignore. | list |
prefix |
A prefix like "@param". | str |
// TODO
// TODO
$ cd myapp/
$ touch example.py
# example.py
def hello(name):
return "Hello " + name
$ dyc start
Processing Methods
Do you want to document method hello? [y/N]: y
(hello) Method docstring : DYC Greets you
(name) Argument docstring : John Smith
(name) Argument type : str
## CONFIRM: MODIFY DOCSTRING BETWEEN START AND END LINES ONLY
def hello(name):
## START
"""
DYC Greets you
Parameters
----------
str name: John Smith
"""
## END
return "Hello " + name
~
~
~
$ cat example.py
def hello(name):
"""
DYC Greets you
Parameters
----------
str name: John Smith
"""
return "Hello " + name%
Watch diff flag.
Run in a terminal session where you have project initialized with Git and on unstaged file. This will not work (YET) on untracked files
$ dyc diff --watch
Then on a separate session
vim path/to/file
## Append or add
def auto_document(foo=False):
return foo
Print output
$ git diff path/to/file
+
+def auto_document(foo=False):
+ """
+ <docstring>
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ <type> foo: <arg docstring>
+ """
+ return foo
$ cd myapp/
$ touch example.py
$ touch dyc.yaml
# example.py
def hello(name):
return "Hello " + name
# dyc.yaml
formats:
-
extension: 'py'
method:
indent: 'tab'
open: "'''"
close: "'''"
break_after_open: false
break_before_close: false
arguments:
title: 'My Customized Title'
underline: true
add_type: false
prefix: '@myAppParam'
$ dyc start
Processing Methods
Do you want to document method hello? [y/N]: y
(hello) Method docstring : Greeting Function
(name) Argument docstring : Human Name
## CONFIRM: MODIFY DOCSTRING BETWEEN START AND END LINES ONLY
def hello(name):
## START
'''Greeting Function
My Customized Title
-------------------
@myAppParam name: Human Name'''
## END
return "Hello " + name
~
Thank you for taking the time to contribute into this project. It is simple but could be really helpful moving forward to all developers.
To get started.
- Fork this repo.
- Clone the project.
- Setup virtualenv
- In the app folder. Run
$ pip install --editable .
MIT ©