Docco: Quick JavaScript Documentation

By  on  

Docco is a free Node.js-powered JavaScript documentation generation tool.  I was never big into documenting JavaScript methods within the source files themselves, but my team made the decision to go that route for a new project and I've come full swing.  Pair the in-source documentation with the Docco and you have pretty JavaScript documentation along side the source code.

You can install Docco using npm or grab the repo directly.  With Docco available, you can create code structures a la:

// The code in `oninstall` and `onactivate` force the service worker to
// control the clients ASAP.
self.oninstall = function(event) {
  event.waitUntil(self.skipWaiting());
};

self.onactivate = function(event) {
  event.waitUntil(self.clients.claim());
};

// When fetching, distinguish if this is a resource fetch. If so,
// apply the server selection algorithm. Else, let the request reach the
// network. Could should be autoexplanatory.
self.onfetch = function(event) {
  var request = event.request;
  if (isResource(request)) {
    event.respondWith(fetchFromBestServer(request));
  } else {
    event.respondWith(fetch(request));
  }
};

// A request is a resource request if it is a `GET` for something inside `imgs`.
function isResource(request) {
  return request.url.match(/\/imgs\/.*$/) && request.method === 'GET';
}

// Fetching from the best server consists of getting the server loads,
// selecting the server with lowest load, and compose a new request to
// find the resource in the selected server.
function fetchFromBestServer(request) {
  var session = request.url.match(/\?session=([^&]*)/)[1];
  return getServerLoads(session)
    .then(selectServer)
    .then(function(serverUrl) {
      // Get the resource path and combine with `serverUrl` to get
      // the resource URL but **in the selected server**.
      var resourcePath = request.url.match(/\/imgs\/[^?]*/)[0];
      var serverRequest = new Request(serverUrl + resourcePath);
      return fetch(serverRequest);
    });
}

Running Docco on the contents above generates a nicely formatted page with "inline" comments on the left and comment-less code on the right:

Docco Sample

Docco has a few parameters for customization but the conversion is fairly simple and there are extension for gulp, grunt, and other utilities.  This type of doc generation and display is awesome for both teaching JavaScript and for maintenance amongst a team.  You can see Docco used within the Service Worker Cookbook code examples.

Recent Features

Incredible Demos

  • By
    Adding Events to Adding Events in MooTools

    Note: This post has been updated. One of my huge web peeves is when an element has click events attached to it but the element doesn't sport the "pointer" cursor. I mean how the hell is the user supposed to know they can/should click on...

  • By
    Highlighter: A MooTools Search & Highlight Plugin

    Searching within the page is a major browser functionality, but what if we could code a search box in JavaScript that would do the same thing? I set out to do that using MooTools and ended up with a pretty decent solution. The MooTools JavaScript Class The...

Discussion

  1. Nibin

    Is there any workaround to support block comments in docco?

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!