Generate markdown API documentation for Google-style Python docstring.
Getting Started β’ Features β’ Documentation β’ Support β’ Contribution β’ Changelog
Lazydocs makes it easy to generate beautiful markdown documentation for your Python API (see this example). It provides a simple command-line interface as well as a Python API to get full-fledged API documentation within seconds based on all of the Google-style docstrings in your code. This markdown documentation can be pushed to Github or integrated into your MkDocs site.
- β±Β Simple CLI to generate markdown docs in seconds.
- πΒ Supports Google-style Python Docstrings.
- πΒ Compatible with Github Markdown and MkDocs.
Requirements: Python 3.6+.
pip install lazydocs
To generate Markdown-based API documentation for your Python project, simply execute:
lazydocs path/to/your/package
The path can be either a python package (folder) or a specific script. You can also specify one or multiple module-, class- or function-imports:
lazydocs my_package.AwesomeClass
With the default configuration, the Markdown documentation will be generated inside the ./docs
folder in your working directory. You can find additional configuration options in the documentation section.
This project is maintained by Benjamin RΓ€thlein, Lukas Masuch, and Jan Kalkan. Please understand that we won't be able to provide individual support via email. We also believe that help is much more valuable if it's shared publicly so that more people can benefit from it.
Type | Channel |
---|---|
π¨Β Bug Reports | |
πΒ Feature Requests | |
π©βπ»Β Usage Questions | |
π―Β General Discussion | |
βΒ Other Requests |
Source Code Linking β’ API Overview β’ MKDocs Integration β’ Docstyle Validation β’ Print to Console
Lazydocs is capable to insert a badge on the right side of every module, class, method or function with a link the correct source-code file and line number. The default configuration will create relative paths to navigate within the Github Repo. This is useful if the documentation is hosted within the same repository as the source-code. If, the documentation is hosted outside of the Github repository, it is recommended to set the src-base-url
:
lazydocs --src-base-url="https://github.com/example/my-project/blob/main/" my_package
The src-base-url
is used as a prefix for all source-code linkings in the documentation.
An API overview might be very useful in case your project has a large number modules, classes and functions. You can specify an overview-file
with the lazydocs command to activate the generation of an API overview:
lazydocs --overview-file="README.md" my_package
The API overview will be written as markdown to the specified file with separated lists for all modules, classes, and functions of your project:
The markdown documentation generated by lazydocs can be easily integrated into your mkdocs documentation site:
- Generate the markdown documentation into a subfolder (e.g.
api-docs
) inside your mkdocs documentation. We recommend to use theoverview-file
option and set the source-code URL viasrc-base-url
, otherwise the source-code linking would not work:
lazydocs \
--output_path="./docs/api-docs" \
--overview-file="README.md" \
--src-base-url="https://github.com/example/my-project/blob/main/" \
my_package
-
Install and apply the awesome-pages mkdocs plugin. This enables mkdocs to automatically discover and include all markdown files. The alternative would be to manually include all generated markdown files in the navigation section of the
mkdocs.yaml
. In order to use the awesome-pages plugin you need to 1) install the plugin via pip 2) Include it in the plugin sectionmkdocs.yaml
and remove the navigation section (needs to be handled with.pages
files). -
If you used the
overview-file
option, a.pages
file will be automatically created. You can also manually create the.pages
file within the api-docs subfolder (e.g.api-docs
) with the following content:title: API Reference nav: - Overview: README.md - ...
Once you run or deploy your mkdocs documentation, you will see the API Reference section with all of your API markdown documentation.
Lazydocs can only parse valid Google-style docstring. To prevent the generation of invalid markdown documentation, you can use the validate
flag:
layzdocs --validate my_package
This will run pydocstyle on your docstring and cancel the generation if an issue is found.
To get the markdown documentation as console output instead of the file generation, specify stdout
as the output-path
:
layzdocs --output-path=stdout my_package
laydocs [OPTIONS] PATHS...
Arguments:
PATHS...
: Selected paths or imports for markdown generation. [required]
Options:
--output-path TEXT
: The output path for the creation of the markdown files. Set this tostdout
to print all markdown to stdout. [default: ./docs/]--src-base-url TEXT
: The base repo link used as prefix for all source links. Should also include the branch name.--overview-file TEXT
: Filename of overview file. If not provided, no API overview file will be generated.--remove-package-prefix / --no-remove-package-prefix
: IfTrue
, the package prefix will be removed from all functions and methods. [default: True]--ignored-modules TEXT
: A list of modules that should be ignored. [default: ]--watermark / --no-watermark
: IfTrue
, add a watermark with a timestamp to bottom of the markdown files. [default: True]--validate / --no-validate
: IfTrue
, validate the docstrings via pydocstyle. Requires pydocstyle to be installed. [default: False]--install-completion
: Install completion for the current shell.--show-completion
: Show completion for the current shell, to copy it or customize the installation.--help
: Show this message and exit.
Lazydocs can also be used and integrated via its Python API. For example, to generate markdown for an arbitrary Python import or object:
from lazydocs import MarkdownGenerator
generator = MarkdownGenerator()
# Select a module (e.g. my_module) to generate markdown documentation
markdown_docs = generator.import2md(my_module)
To programmatically generate all markdown documentation files you can use generate_docs
:
from lazydocs import generate_docs
# The parameters of this function correspond to the CLI options
generate_docs(["my_module"], output_path="./docs")
The full Python API documentation can be found here (generated via lazydocs).
- Pull requests are encouraged and always welcome. Read our contribution guidelines and check out help-wanted issues.
- Submit Github issues for any feature request and enhancement, bugs, or documentation problems.
- By participating in this project, you agree to abide by its Code of Conduct.
- The development section below contains information on how to build and test the project after you have implemented some changes.
Requirements: Docker and Act are required to be installed on your machine to execute the build process.
To simplify the process of building this project from scratch, we provide build-scripts - based on universal-build - that run all necessary steps (build, check, test, and release) within a containerized environment. To build and test your changes, execute the following command in the project root folder:
act -b -j build
Refer to our contribution guides for more detailed information on our build scripts and development process.
Licensed MIT. Created and maintained with β€οΈΒ by developers from Berlin.