class RDoc::Markup
RDoc::Markup parses plain text documents and attempts to decompose them into their constituent parts. Some of these parts are high-level: paragraphs, chunks of verbatim text, list entries and the like. Other parts happen at the character level: a piece of bold text, a word in code font. This markup is similar in spirit to that used on WikiWiki webs, where folks create web pages using a simple set of formatting rules.
RDoc::Markup and other markup formats do no output formatting, this is handled by the RDoc::Markup::Formatter subclasses.
Markup Formats¶ ↑
RDoc supports these markup formats:
-
rdoc: theRDocmarkup format; seeRDoc::MarkupReference. -
markdown: Themarkdownmarkup format as described in the Markdown Guide; seeRDoc::Markdown. -
rd: therdmarkup format format; seeRDoc::RD. -
tomdoc: the TomDoc format as described in TomDoc for Ruby; seeRDoc::TomDoc.
You can choose a markup format using the following methods:
- per project
-
If you build your documentation with rake use
RDoc::Task#markup.If you build your documentation by hand run:
rdoc --markup your_favorite_format --write-options
and commit
.rdoc_optionsand ship it with your packaged gem. - per file
-
At the top of the file use the
:markup:directive to set the default format for the rest of the file. - per comment
-
Use the
:markup:directive at the top of a comment you want to write in a different format.
RDoc::Markup¶ ↑
RDoc::Markup is extensible at runtime: you can add new markup elements to be recognized in the documents that RDoc::Markup parses.
RDoc::Markup is intended to be the basis for a family of tools which share the common requirement that simple, plain-text should be rendered in a variety of different output formats and media. It is envisaged that RDoc::Markup could be the basis for formatting RDoc style comment blocks, Wiki entries, and online FAQs.
Synopsis¶ ↑
This code converts input_string to HTML. The conversion takes place in the convert method, so you can use the same RDoc::Markup converter to convert multiple input strings.
require 'rdoc' h = RDoc::Markup::ToHtml.new(RDoc::Options.new) puts h.convert(input_string)
You can extend the RDoc::Markup parser to recognize new markup sequences, and to add regexp handling. Here we make WikiWords significant to the parser, and also make the sequences {word} and <no>text…</no> signify strike-through text. We then subclass the HTML output class to deal with these:
require 'rdoc' class WikiHtml < RDoc::Markup::ToHtml def handle_regexp_WIKIWORD(target) "<font color=red>" + target.text + "</font>" end end markup = RDoc::Markup.new markup.add_word_pair("{", "}", :STRIKE) markup.add_html("no", :STRIKE) markup.add_regexp_handling(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD) wh = WikiHtml.new RDoc::Options.new, markup wh.add_tag(:STRIKE, "<strike>", "</strike>") puts "<body>#{wh.convert ARGF.read}</body>"
Encoding¶ ↑
Where Encoding support is available, RDoc will automatically convert all documents to the same output encoding. The output encoding can be set via RDoc::Options#encoding and defaults to Encoding.default_external.
RDoc Markup Reference¶ ↑
Attributes
An AttributeManager which handles inline markup.
Public Class Methods
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 151 def initialize attribute_manager = nil @attribute_manager = attribute_manager || RDoc::Markup::AttributeManager.new @output = nil end
Take a block of text and use various heuristics to determine its structure (paragraphs, lists, and so on). Invoke an event handler as we identify significant chunks.
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 121 def self.parse str RDoc::Markup::Parser.parse str rescue RDoc::Markup::Parser::Error => e $stderr.puts <<-EOF While parsing markup, RDoc encountered a #{e.class}: #{e} \tfrom #{e.backtrace.join "\n\tfrom "} ---8<--- #{text} ---8<--- RDoc #{RDoc::VERSION} Ruby #{RUBY_VERSION}-p#{RUBY_PATCHLEVEL} #{RUBY_RELEASE_DATE} Please file a bug report with the above information at: https://github.com/ruby/rdoc/issues EOF raise end
Parses str into an RDoc::Markup::Document.
Public Instance Methods
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 168 def add_html(tag, name) @attribute_manager.add_html(tag, name) end
Add to the sequences recognized as general markup.
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 180 def add_regexp_handling(pattern, name) @attribute_manager.add_regexp_handling(pattern, name) end
Add to other inline sequences. For example, we could add WikiWords using something like:
parser.add_regexp_handling(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD)
Each wiki word will be presented to the output formatter.
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 161 def add_word_pair(start, stop, name) @attribute_manager.add_word_pair(start, stop, name) end
Add to the sequences used to add formatting to an individual word (such as bold). Matching entries will generate attributes that the output formatters can recognize by their name.
Source
# File lib/rdoc/markup.rb, line 188 def convert input, formatter document = case input when RDoc::Markup::Document then input else RDoc::Markup::Parser.parse input end document.accept formatter end
We take input, parse it if necessary, then invoke the output formatter using a Visitor to render the result.