| # Godoc: documenting Go code |
| 31 Mar 2011 |
| Tags: godoc, technical |
| Summary: How and why to document your Go packages. |
| OldURL: /godoc-documenting-go-code |
| |
| Andrew Gerrand |
| |
| ## |
| |
| The Go project takes documentation seriously. |
| Documentation is a huge part of making software accessible and maintainable. |
| Of course it must be well-written and accurate, |
| but it also must be easy to write and to maintain. |
| Ideally, it should be coupled to the code itself so the documentation evolves |
| along with the code. |
| The easier it is for programmers to produce good documentation, |
| the better for everyone. |
| |
| To that end, we have developed the [godoc](https://golang.org/cmd/godoc/) documentation tool. |
| This article describes godoc's approach to documentation, |
| and explains how you can use our conventions and tools to write good documentation |
| for your own projects. |
| |
| Godoc parses Go source code - including comments - and produces documentation |
| as HTML or plain text. |
| The end result is documentation tightly coupled with the code it documents. |
| For example, through godoc's web interface you can navigate from a function's |
| [documentation](https://golang.org/pkg/strings/#HasPrefix) to its [implementation](https://golang.org/src/pkg/strings/strings.go#L493) with one click. |
| |
| Godoc is conceptually related to Python's [Docstring](http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/) |
| and Java's [Javadoc](http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/documentation/index-jsp-135444.html), |
| but its design is simpler. |
| The comments read by godoc are not language constructs (as with Docstring) |
| nor must they have their own machine-readable syntax (as with Javadoc). |
| Godoc comments are just good comments, the sort you would want to read even |
| if godoc didn't exist. |
| |
| The convention is simple: to document a type, |
| variable, constant, function, or even a package, |
| write a regular comment directly preceding its declaration, |
| with no intervening blank line. |
| Godoc will then present that comment as text alongside the item it documents. |
| For example, this is the documentation for the `fmt` package's [`Fprint`](https://golang.org/pkg/fmt/#Fprint) function: |
| |
| // Fprint formats using the default formats for its operands and writes to w. |
| // Spaces are added between operands when neither is a string. |
| // It returns the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. |
| func Fprint(w io.Writer, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { |
| |
| Notice this comment is a complete sentence that begins with the name of |
| the element it describes. |
| This important convention allows us to generate documentation in a variety of formats, |
| from plain text to HTML to UNIX man pages, |
| and makes it read better when tools truncate it for brevity, |
| such as when they extract the first line or sentence. |
| |
| Comments on package declarations should provide general package documentation. |
| These comments can be short, like the [`sort`](https://golang.org/pkg/sort/) |
| package's brief description: |
| |
| // Package sort provides primitives for sorting slices and user-defined |
| // collections. |
| package sort |
| |
| They can also be detailed like the [gob package](https://golang.org/pkg/encoding/gob/)'s overview. |
| That package uses another convention for packages that need large amounts |
| of introductory documentation: |
| the package comment is placed in its own file, |
| [doc.go](https://golang.org/src/pkg/encoding/gob/doc.go), |
| which contains only those comments and a package clause. |
| |
| When writing package comments of any size, |
| keep in mind that their first sentence will appear in godoc's [package list](https://golang.org/pkg/). |
| |
| Comments that are not adjacent to a top-level declaration are omitted from godoc's output, |
| with one notable exception. |
| Top-level comments that begin with the word `"BUG(who)”` are recognized as known bugs, |
| and included in the "Bugs” section of the package documentation. |
| The "who” part should be the user name of someone who could provide more information. |
| For example, this is a known issue from the [bytes package](https://golang.org/pkg/bytes/#pkg-note-BUG): |
| |
| // BUG(r): The rule Title uses for word boundaries does not handle Unicode punctuation properly. |
| |
| Sometimes a struct field, function, type, or even a whole package becomes |
| redundant or unnecessary, but must be kept for compatibility with existing |
| programs. |
| To signal that an identifier should not be used, add a paragraph to its doc |
| comment that begins with "Deprecated:" followed by some information about the |
| deprecation. |
| There are a few examples [in the standard library](https://golang.org/search?q=Deprecated:). |
| |
| There are a few formatting rules that Godoc uses when converting comments to HTML: |
| |
| - Subsequent lines of text are considered part of the same paragraph; |
| you must leave a blank line to separate paragraphs. |
| |
| - Pre-formatted text must be indented relative to the surrounding comment |
| text (see gob's [doc.go](https://golang.org/src/pkg/encoding/gob/doc.go) for an example). |
| |
| - URLs will be converted to HTML links; no special markup is necessary. |
| |
| Note that none of these rules requires you to do anything out of the ordinary. |
| |
| In fact, the best thing about godoc's minimal approach is how easy it is to use. |
| As a result, a lot of Go code, including all of the standard library, |
| already follows the conventions. |
| |
| Your own code can present good documentation just by having comments as described above. |
| Any Go packages installed inside `$GOROOT/src/pkg` and any `GOPATH` work |
| spaces will already be accessible via godoc's command-line and HTTP interfaces, |
| and you can specify additional paths for indexing via the `-path` flag or |
| just by running `"godoc ."` in the source directory. |
| See the [godoc documentation](https://golang.org/cmd/godoc/) for more details. |