By default, Typedoc (with the mode="modules"
option) will create a Module (née "External Module") for every file with any exported ES6 constructs. This can result in an unmanageable number of globals, poor discoverability, and difficult navigation. This plugin enables the grouping of these modules by a particular name.
This plugin supports two additional comment tags:
@moduledefinition ModuleName
can be placed at the top of a file that best represents a "module" for your codebase. This will create aModuleName
module in the top-level project hierarchy.@module ModuleName
can be added to the comment of any other valid exported Typescript declaration (e.g. a class, interface, function, enum etc). These declarations will be moved to any modules specified with@moduledefinition
. Any orphaned modules (e.g. a file that exports a@module
-tagged class and nothing else) are deleted.
Additionally, all exported TS constructs not explicitly tagged with @module
are automatically unwrapped from the default "module" (which is just the file in which it is defined) and placed directly beneath the project. This should be identical to using Typedoc with mode="file"
.
See the test/multiple-ancestor-modules
directory for a typical use case for this plugin.
Inspired by the popular typedoc-plugin-external-module-name, but with a slightly different set of requirements. This plugin leverages some improved TypeDoc comment APIs to support spaces within module names.
This was originally created to improve the API Docs for the Convergence Javascript client. There are hundreds of files in this project, and we needed a way to organize the API docs by subsystem. The "Modules" section in the right sidebar is the result of this. Navigating to a module will only show the code constructs associated with the current module. This makes the docs much more discoverable.
See the companion theme for an optional, slightly customized version of the default theme with this plugin in mind.
- Support per-file
@module
tags as well. Individual export@module
s would override any file@module
s - Nested modules with a
@parent
tag or something - Support automatic creation of modules (such that a
@moduledefinition
isn't required for every potential@module
)