An API documentation generator for JavaScript.
Want to contribute to JSDoc? Please read CONTRIBUTING.md
.
You can run JSDoc on either Node.js or Mozilla Rhino.
Native support for Node.js is available in JSDoc 3.3.0 and later. JSDoc supports Node.js 0.10 and later.
You can install JSDoc in your project's node_modules
folder, or you can
install it globally.
To install the latest alpha version:
npm install jsdoc@"<=3.3.0"
To install the latest development version:
npm install git+https://github.com/jsdoc3/jsdoc.git
If you installed JSDoc locally, the JSDoc command-line tool is available in
./node_modules/.bin
. To generate documentation for the file
yourJavaScriptFile.js
:
./node_modules/.bin/jsdoc yourJavaScriptFile.js
Or if you installed JSDoc globally, simply run the jsdoc
command:
jsdoc yourJavaScriptFile.js
By default, the generated documentation is saved in a directory named out
. You
can use the --destination
(-d
) option to specify another directory.
Run jsdoc --help
for a complete list of command-line options.
All versions of JSDoc 3 run on a customized version of Mozilla Rhino, which requires Java. You can run JSDoc 3 on Java 1.6 and later.
To install JSDoc, download a .zip file for the latest development version or a previous release.
You can also use git to clone the JSDoc repository:
git clone git+https://github.com/jsdoc3/jsdoc.git
The JSDoc repository includes a
customized version of Mozilla Rhino. Make
sure your Java classpath does not include any other versions of Rhino. (On OS X,
you may need to remove the file ~/Library/Java/Extensions/js.jar
.)
Note: In JSDoc 3.3.0 and later, if you need to run JSDoc on Mozilla Rhino, do not install JSDoc with npm. Use one of the methods described above.
On OS X, Linux, and other POSIX systems, to generate documentation for the file
yourJavaScriptFile.js
:
./jsdoc yourJavaScriptFile.js
Or on Windows:
jsdoc yourJavaScriptFile.js
By default, the generated documentation is saved in a directory named out
. You
can use the --destination
(-d
) option to specify another directory.
Run jsdoc --help
for a complete list of command-line options.
The JSDoc community has created numerous templates and other tools to help you generate and customize your documentation. Here are just a few:
JSDoc 3 uses the OpenSans typeface, the fonts for which can be re-generated as follows:
- Open the OpenSans page at Font Squirrel.
- Click on the 'Webfont Kit' tab.
- Either leave the subset drop-down as 'Western Latin (Default)', or if we decide we need more glyphs than change it to 'No Subsetting'.
- Click the 'DOWNLOAD @FONT-FACE KIT' button.
- For each typeface variant we plan to use, copy the 'eot', 'svg' and 'woff' files into the 'templates/default/static/fonts' directory.
- Documentation is available at Use JSDoc.
- Contribute to the docs at jsdoc3/jsdoc3.github.com.
- Ask for help on the JSDoc Users mailing list.
- Post questions tagged
jsdoc
to Stack Overflow.
JSDoc 3 is copyright (c) 2011-2014 Michael Mathews [email protected] and the contributors to JSDoc.
JSDoc 3 is free software, licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See
the file LICENSE.md
in this distribution for more details.