------ generating HTML output --------- -- Although this can be generalized for outputting any format, since the template -- is language-agnostic, this implementation concentrates on HTML. -- This does the actual generation of HTML, and provides support functions in the ldoc -- table for the template -- -- A fair amount of the complexity comes from operating in two basic modes; first, where -- there is a number of modules (classic LuaDoc) or otherwise, where there is only one -- module and the index contains the documentation for that module. -- -- Like LuaDoc, LDoc puts similar kinds of documentation files in their own directories. -- So module docs go into 'modules/', scripts go into 'scripts/', and so forth. LDoc -- generalizes the idea of these project-level categories and in fact custom categories -- can be created (refered to as 'kinds' in the code) local List = require 'pl.List' local utils = require 'pl.utils' local path = require 'pl.path' local stringx = require 'pl.stringx' local template = require 'pl.template' local tools = require 'ldoc.tools' local markup = require 'ldoc.markup' local prettify = require 'ldoc.prettify' local doc = require 'ldoc.doc' local html = {} local quit = utils.quit local function cleanup_whitespaces(text) local lines = stringx.splitlines(text) for i = 1, #lines do lines[i] = stringx.rstrip(lines[i]) end lines[#lines + 1] = "" -- Little trick: file should end with newline return table.concat(lines, "\n") end local function get_module_info(m) local info = {} for tag in doc.module_info_tags() do local val = m.tags[tag] if type(val)=='table' then val = table.concat(val,',') end tag = stringx.title(tag) info[tag] = val end if next(info) then return info end end local escape_table = { ["'"] = "'", ["\""] = """, ["<"] = "<", [">"] = ">", ["&"] = "&" } function html.generate_output(ldoc, args, project) local check_directory, check_file, writefile = tools.check_directory, tools.check_file, tools.writefile function ldoc.escape(str) return (str:gsub("['&<>\"]", escape_table)) end function ldoc.prettify(str) return prettify.code('lua','usage',str,0,false) end -- this generates the internal module/function references function ldoc.href(see) if see.href then -- explict reference, e.g. to Lua manual return see.href else return ldoc.ref_to_module(see.mod)..'#'..see.name end end -- this is either called from the 'root' (index or single module) or -- from the 'modules' etc directories. If we are in one of those directories, -- then linking to another kind is `../kind/name`; to the same kind is just `name`. -- If we are in the root, then it is `kind/name`. function ldoc.ref_to_module (mod) local base = "" -- default: same directory mod = mod or ldoc.module local kind, module = mod.kind, ldoc.module local name = mod.name -- default: name of module if not ldoc.single then if module then -- we are in kind/ if module.type ~= type then -- cross ref to ../kind/ base = "../"..kind.."/" end else -- we are in root: index base = kind..'/' end else -- single module if mod == ldoc.single then name = ldoc.output if not ldoc.root then base = '../' end elseif ldoc.root then -- ref to other kinds (like examples) base = kind..'/' else if module.type ~= type then -- cross ref to ../kind/ base = "../"..kind.."/" end end end return base..name..'.html' end function ldoc.use_li(ls) if #ls > 1 then return '