# **Rocco** is a Ruby port of [Docco][do], the quick-and-dirty, # hundred-line-long, literate-programming-style documentation generator. # # Rocco reads Ruby source files and produces annotated source documentation # in HTML format. Comments are formatted with [Markdown][md] and presented # alongside syntax highlighted code so as to give an annotation effect. # This page is the result of running Rocco against [its own source file][so]. # # Most of this was written while waiting for [node.js][no] to build (so I # could use Docco!). Docco's gorgeous HTML and CSS are taken verbatim. # The main difference is that Rocco is written in Ruby instead of # [CoffeeScript][co] and may be a bit easier to obtain and install in # existing Ruby environments or where node doesn't run yet. # # Install Rocco with Rubygems: # # gem install rocco # # Once installed, the `rocco` command can be used to generate documentation # for a set of Ruby source files: # # rocco lib/*.rb # # The HTML files are written to the current working directory. # # [no]: http://nodejs.org/ # [do]: http://jashkenas.github.com/docco/ # [co]: http://coffeescript.org/ # [md]: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ # [so]: http://github.com/rtomayko/rocco/blob/master/lib/rocco.rb#commit #### Prerequisites # We'll need a Markdown library. [RDiscount][rd], if we're lucky. Otherwise, # issue a warning and fall back on using BlueCloth. # # [rd]: http://github.com/rtomayko/rdiscount begin require 'rdiscount' rescue LoadError => boom warn "warn: #{boom}. trying bluecloth" require 'bluecloth' Markdown = BlueCloth end # We use [{{ mustache }}](http://defunkt.github.com/mustache/) for # HTML templating. require 'mustache' # Code is run through [Pygments](http://pygments.org/) for syntax # highlighting. Fail fast right here if we can't find the `pygmentize` # program on PATH. if ! ENV['PATH'].split(':').any? { |dir| File.exist?("#{dir}/pygmentize") } fail "Pygments is required for syntax highlighting" end #### Public Interface # `Rocco.new` takes a source `filename`, an optional list of source filenames # for other documentation sources, an `options` hash, and an optional `block`. # The `options` hash respects two members: `:language`, which specifies which # Pygments lexer to use; and `:comment_chars`, which specifies the comment # characters of the target language. The options default to `'ruby'` and `'#'`, # respectively. # When `block` is given, it must read the contents of the file using whatever # means necessary and return it as a string. With no `block`, the file is read # to retrieve data. class Rocco VERSION = '0.3' def initialize(filename, sources=[], options={}, &block) @file = filename @data = if block_given? yield else File.read(filename) end defaults = { :language => 'ruby', :comment_chars => '#' } @options = defaults.merge(options) @sources = sources @comment_pattern = Regexp.new("^\\s*#{@options[:comment_chars]}") @sections = highlight(split(parse(@data))) end # The filename as given to `Rocco.new`. attr_reader :file # A list of two-tuples representing each *section* of the source file. Each # item in the list has the form: `[docs_html, code_html]`, where both # elements are strings containing the documentation and source code HTML, # respectively. attr_reader :sections # A list of all source filenames included in the documentation set. Useful # for building an index of other files. attr_reader :sources # Generate HTML output for the entire document. require 'rocco/layout' def to_html Rocco::Layout.new(self).render end #### Internal Parsing and Highlighting # Parse the raw file data into a list of two-tuples. Each tuple has the # form `[docs, code]` where both elements are arrays containing the # raw lines parsed from the input file. The first line is ignored if it # is a shebang line. def parse(data) sections = [] docs, code = [], [] lines = data.split("\n") lines.shift if lines[0] =~ /^\#\!/ lines.each do |line| case line when @comment_pattern if code.any? sections << [docs, code] docs, code = [], [] end docs << line else code << line end end sections << [docs, code] if docs.any? || code.any? sections end # Take the list of paired *sections* two-tuples and split into two # separate lists: one holding the comments with leaders removed and # one with the code blocks. def split(sections) docs_blocks, code_blocks = [], [] sections.each do |docs,code| docs_blocks << docs.map { |line| line.sub(@comment_pattern, '') }.join("\n") code_blocks << code.map do |line| tabs = line.match(/^(\t+)/) tabs ? line.sub(/^\t+/, ' ' * tabs.captures[0].length) : line end.join("\n") end [docs_blocks, code_blocks] end # Take the result of `split` and apply Markdown formatting to comments and # syntax highlighting to source code. def highlight(blocks) docs_blocks, code_blocks = blocks # Combine all docs blocks into a single big markdown document with section # dividers and run through the Markdown processor. Then split it back out # into separate sections. markdown = docs_blocks.join("\n\n##### DIVIDER\n\n") docs_html = Markdown.new(markdown, :smart). to_html. split(/\n*
DIVIDER<\/h5>\n*/m) # Combine all code blocks into a single big stream and run through # Pygments. We `popen` a read/write pygmentize process in the parent and # then fork off a child process to write the input. code_html = nil open("|pygmentize -l #{@options[:language]} -f html", 'r+') do |fd| pid = fork { fd.close_read fd.write code_blocks.join("\n\n# DIVIDER\n\n") fd.close_write exit! } fd.close_write code_html = fd.read fd.close_read Process.wait(pid) end # Do some post-processing on the pygments output to split things back # into sections and remove partial `
` blocks.
    code_html = code_html.
      split(/\n*# DIVIDER<\/span>\n*/m).
      map { |code| code.sub(/\n?
/m, '') }.
      map { |code| code.sub(/\n?<\/pre><\/div>\n/m, '') }

    # Lastly, combine the docs and code lists back into a list of two-tuples.
    docs_html.zip(code_html)
  end
end

# And that's it.