sphinx.ext.autodoc
– Include documentation from docstrings¶
This extension can import the modules you are documenting, and pull in documentation from docstrings in a semi-automatic way.
Note
For Sphinx (actually, the Python interpreter that executes Sphinx) to find
your module, it must be importable. That means that the module or the
package must be in one of the directories on sys.path
– adapt your
sys.path
in the configuration file accordingly.
For this to work, the docstrings must of course be written in correct reStructuredText. You can then use all of the usual Sphinx markup in the docstrings, and it will end up correctly in the documentation. Together with hand-written documentation, this technique eases the pain of having to maintain two locations for documentation, while at the same time avoiding auto-generated-looking pure API documentation.
autodoc
provides several directives that are versions of the usual
py:module
, py:class
and so forth. On parsing time, they
import the corresponding module and extract the docstring of the given objects,
inserting them into the page source under a suitable py:module
,
py:class
etc. directive.
Note
Just as py:class
respects the current py:module
,
autoclass
will also do so. Likewise, automethod
will
respect the current py:class
.
-
.. automodule::
¶ -
.. autoclass::
¶ -
.. autoexception::
¶ Document a module, class or exception. All three directives will by default only insert the docstring of the object itself:
.. autoclass:: Noodle
will produce source like this:
.. class:: Noodle Noodle's docstring.
The “auto” directives can also contain content of their own, it will be inserted into the resulting non-auto directive source after the docstring (but before any automatic member documentation).
Therefore, you can also mix automatic and non-automatic member documentation, like so:
.. autoclass:: Noodle :members: eat, slurp .. method:: boil(time=10) Boil the noodle *time* minutes.
Options and advanced usage
If you want to automatically document members, there’s a
members
option:.. automodule:: noodle :members:
will document all module members (recursively), and
.. autoclass:: Noodle :members:
will document all non-private member functions and properties (that is, those whose name doesn’t start with
_
).For modules,
__all__
will be respected when looking for members; the order of the members will also be the order in__all__
.You can also give an explicit list of members; only these will then be documented:
.. autoclass:: Noodle :members: eat, slurp
If you want to make the
members
option (or other flag options described below) the default, seeautodoc_default_flags
.Members without docstrings will be left out, unless you give the
undoc-members
flag option:.. automodule:: noodle :members: :undoc-members:
“Private” members (that is, those named like
_private
or__private
) will be included if theprivate-members
flag option is given.New in version 1.1.
Python “special” members (that is, those named like
__special__
) will be included if thespecial-members
flag option is given:.. autoclass:: my.Class :members: :private-members: :special-members:
would document both “private” and “special” members of the class.
New in version 1.1.
Changed in version 1.2: The option can now take arguments, i.e. the special members to document.
For classes and exceptions, members inherited from base classes will be left out when documenting all members, unless you give the
inherited-members
flag option, in addition tomembers
:.. autoclass:: Noodle :members: :inherited-members:
This can be combined with
undoc-members
to document all available members of the class or module.Note: this will lead to markup errors if the inherited members come from a module whose docstrings are not reST formatted.
New in version 0.3.
It’s possible to override the signature for explicitly documented callable objects (functions, methods, classes) with the regular syntax that will override the signature gained from introspection:
.. autoclass:: Noodle(type) .. automethod:: eat(persona)
This is useful if the signature from the method is hidden by a decorator.
New in version 0.4.
The
automodule
,autoclass
andautoexception
directives also support a flag option calledshow-inheritance
. When given, a list of base classes will be inserted just below the class signature (when used withautomodule
, this will be inserted for every class that is documented in the module).New in version 0.4.
All autodoc directives support the
noindex
flag option that has the same effect as for standardpy:function
etc. directives: no index entries are generated for the documented object (and all autodocumented members).New in version 0.4.
automodule
also recognizes thesynopsis
,platform
anddeprecated
options that the standardpy:module
directive supports.New in version 0.5.
automodule
andautoclass
also has anmember-order
option that can be used to override the global value ofautodoc_member_order
for one directive.New in version 0.6.
The directives supporting member documentation also have a
exclude-members
option that can be used to exclude single member names from documentation, if all members are to be documented.New in version 0.6.
In an
automodule
directive with themembers
option set, only module members whose__module__
attribute is equal to the module name as given toautomodule
will be documented. This is to prevent documentation of imported classes or functions. Set theimported-members
option if you want to prevent this behavior and document all available members. Note that attributes from imported modules will not be documented, because attribute documentation is discovered by parsing the source file of the current module.New in version 1.2.
-
.. autofunction::
¶ -
.. autodata::
¶ -
.. automethod::
¶ -
.. autoattribute::
¶ These work exactly like
autoclass
etc., but do not offer the options used for automatic member documentation.autodata
andautoattribute
support theannotation
option. Without this option, the representation of the object will be shown in the documentation. When the option is given without arguments, only the name of the object will be printed:.. autodata:: CD_DRIVE :annotation:
You can tell sphinx what should be printed after the name:
.. autodata:: CD_DRIVE :annotation: = your CD device name
For module data members and class attributes, documentation can either be put into a comment with special formatting (using a
#:
to start the comment instead of just#
), or in a docstring after the definition. Comments need to be either on a line of their own before the definition, or immediately after the assignment on the same line. The latter form is restricted to one line only.This means that in the following class definition, all attributes can be autodocumented:
class Foo: """Docstring for class Foo.""" #: Doc comment for class attribute Foo.bar. #: It can have multiple lines. bar = 1 flox = 1.5 #: Doc comment for Foo.flox. One line only. baz = 2 """Docstring for class attribute Foo.baz.""" def __init__(self): #: Doc comment for instance attribute qux. self.qux = 3 self.spam = 4 """Docstring for instance attribute spam."""
Changed in version 0.6:
autodata
andautoattribute
can now extract docstrings.Changed in version 1.1: Comment docs are now allowed on the same line after an assignment.
Changed in version 1.2:
autodata
andautoattribute
have anannotation
optionNote
If you document decorated functions or methods, keep in mind that autodoc retrieves its docstrings by importing the module and inspecting the
__doc__
attribute of the given function or method. That means that if a decorator replaces the decorated function with another, it must copy the original__doc__
to the new function.From Python 2.5,
functools.wraps()
can be used to create well-behaved decorating functions.
There are also new config values that you can set:
-
autoclass_content
¶ This value selects what content will be inserted into the main body of an
autoclass
directive. The possible values are:"class"
- Only the class’ docstring is inserted. This is the default. You can
still document
__init__
as a separate method usingautomethod
or themembers
option toautoclass
. "both"
- Both the class’ and the
__init__
method’s docstring are concatenated and inserted. "init"
- Only the
__init__
method’s docstring is inserted.
New in version 0.3.
-
autodoc_member_order
¶ This value selects if automatically documented members are sorted alphabetical (value
'alphabetical'
), by member type (value'groupwise'
) or by source order (value'bysource'
). The default is alphabetical.Note that for source order, the module must be a Python module with the source code available.
New in version 0.6.
Changed in version 1.0: Support for
'bysource'
.
-
autodoc_default_flags
¶ This value is a list of autodoc directive flags that should be automatically applied to all autodoc directives. The supported flags are
'members'
,'undoc-members'
,'private-members'
,'special-members'
,'inherited-members'
and'show-inheritance'
.If you set one of these flags in this config value, you can use a negated form,
'no-flag'
, in an autodoc directive, to disable it once. For example, ifautodoc_default_flags
is set to['members', 'undoc-members']
, and you write a directive like this:.. automodule:: foo :no-undoc-members:
the directive will be interpreted as if only
:members:
was given.New in version 1.0.
-
autodoc_docstring_signature
¶ Functions imported from C modules cannot be introspected, and therefore the signature for such functions cannot be automatically determined. However, it is an often-used convention to put the signature into the first line of the function’s docstring.
If this boolean value is set to
True
(which is the default), autodoc will look at the first line of the docstring for functions and methods, and if it looks like a signature, use the line as the signature and remove it from the docstring content.New in version 1.1.
Docstring preprocessing¶
autodoc provides the following additional events:
-
autodoc-process-docstring
(app, what, name, obj, options, lines)¶ New in version 0.4.
Emitted when autodoc has read and processed a docstring. lines is a list of strings – the lines of the processed docstring – that the event handler can modify in place to change what Sphinx puts into the output.
Parameters: - app – the Sphinx application object
- what – the type of the object which the docstring belongs to (one of
"module"
,"class"
,"exception"
,"function"
,"method"
,"attribute"
) - name – the fully qualified name of the object
- obj – the object itself
- options – the options given to the directive: an object with attributes
inherited_members
,undoc_members
,show_inheritance
andnoindex
that are true if the flag option of same name was given to the auto directive - lines – the lines of the docstring, see above
-
autodoc-process-signature
(app, what, name, obj, options, signature, return_annotation)¶ New in version 0.5.
Emitted when autodoc has formatted a signature for an object. The event handler can return a new tuple
(signature, return_annotation)
to change what Sphinx puts into the output.Parameters: - app – the Sphinx application object
- what – the type of the object which the docstring belongs to (one of
"module"
,"class"
,"exception"
,"function"
,"method"
,"attribute"
) - name – the fully qualified name of the object
- obj – the object itself
- options – the options given to the directive: an object with attributes
inherited_members
,undoc_members
,show_inheritance
andnoindex
that are true if the flag option of same name was given to the auto directive - signature – function signature, as a string of the form
"(parameter_1, parameter_2)"
, orNone
if introspection didn’t succeed and signature wasn’t specified in the directive. - return_annotation – function return annotation as a string of the form
" -> annotation"
, orNone
if there is no return annotation
The sphinx.ext.autodoc
module provides factory functions for commonly
needed docstring processing in event autodoc-process-docstring
:
-
sphinx.ext.autodoc.
cut_lines
(pre, post=0, what=None)¶ Return a listener that removes the first pre and last post lines of every docstring. If what is a sequence of strings, only docstrings of a type in what will be processed.
Use like this (e.g. in the
setup()
function ofconf.py
):from sphinx.ext.autodoc import cut_lines app.connect('autodoc-process-docstring', cut_lines(4, what=['module']))
This can (and should) be used in place of
automodule_skip_lines
.
-
sphinx.ext.autodoc.
between
(marker, what=None, keepempty=False, exclude=False)¶ Return a listener that either keeps, or if exclude is True excludes, lines between lines that match the marker regular expression. If no line matches, the resulting docstring would be empty, so no change will be made unless keepempty is true.
If what is a sequence of strings, only docstrings of a type in what will be processed.
Skipping members¶
autodoc allows the user to define a custom method for determining whether a member should be included in the documentation by using the following event:
-
autodoc-skip-member
(app, what, name, obj, skip, options)¶ New in version 0.5.
Emitted when autodoc has to decide whether a member should be included in the documentation. The member is excluded if a handler returns
True
. It is included if the handler returnsFalse
.Parameters: - app – the Sphinx application object
- what – the type of the object which the docstring belongs to (one of
"module"
,"class"
,"exception"
,"function"
,"method"
,"attribute"
) - name – the fully qualified name of the object
- obj – the object itself
- skip – a boolean indicating if autodoc will skip this member if the user handler does not override the decision
- options – the options given to the directive: an object with attributes
inherited_members
,undoc_members
,show_inheritance
andnoindex
that are true if the flag option of same name was given to the auto directive