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OCAMLDOC

NAME

ocamldoc − The Objective Caml documentation generator

SYNOPSIS

ocamldoc [ −html ] [ −latex ] [ −texi ] [ −man ] [ −dot ] [ −g file ] [ −d dir ] [ −dump file ] [ −hide modules ] [ −inv−merge−ml−mli ] [ −keep−code ] [ −load file ] [ −m flags ] [ −o file ] [ −I directory ] [ ... ] filename ...

DESCRIPTION

The Objective Caml documentation generator ocamldoc(1) generates documentation from special comments embedded in source files. The comments used by OCamldoc are of the form (**...*) and follow the format described in the The Objective Caml user’s manual.

OCamldoc can produce documentation in various formats: HTML, LaTeX, TeXinfo, Unix man pages, and dot(1) dependency graphs. Moreover, users can add their own custom generators.

In this manpage, we use the word element to refer to any of the following parts of an OCaml source file: a type declaration, a value, a module, an exception, a module type, a type constructor, a record field, a class, a class type, a class method, a class value or a class inheritance clause.

OPTIONS

The following command-line options determine the format for the generated documentation generated by ocamldoc(1).

Options for choosing the output format

−html

Generate documentation in HTML default format. The generated HTML pages are stored in the current directory, or in the directory specified with the −d option. You can customize the style of the generated pages by editing the generated style.css file, or by providing your own style sheet using option −css−style style.css is not generated if it already exists.

−latex

Generate documentation in LaTeX default format. The generated LaTeX document is saved in file ocamldoc.out, or in the file specified with the -o option. The document uses the style file ocamldoc.sty. This file is generated when using the −latex option, if it does not already exist. You can change this file to customize the style of your LaTeX documentation.

−texi

Generate documentation in TeXinfo default format. The generated LaTeX document is saved in file ocamldoc.out, or in the file specified with the -o option.

−man

Generate documentation as a set of Unix man pages. The generated pages are stored in the current directory, or in the directory specified with the −d option.

−dot

Generate a dependency graph for the toplevel modules, in a format suitable for displaying and processing by dot. The dot(1) tool is available from http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/graphviz/. The textual representation of the graph is written to the file ocamldoc.out, or to the file specified with the -o option. Use dot ocamldoc.out to display it.

−g file

Dynamically load the given file (which extension usually is .cmo or .cma), which defines a custom documentation generator. This option is supported by the ocamldoc(1) command, but not by its native-code version ocamldoc.opt. If the given file is a simple one and does not exist in the current directory, then ocamldoc looks for it in the custom generators default directory.

−customdir

Display the custom generators default directory.

−i directory

Add the given directory to the path where to look for custom generators.

General options

−d dir

Generate files in directory dir, rather than in the current directory.

−dump file

Dump collected information into file. This information can be read with the -load option in a subsequent invocation of ocamldoc(1).

−hide modules

Hide the given complete module names in the generated documentation. modules is a list of complete module names are separated by ’,’, without blanks. For instance: Pervasives,M2.M3.

−inv−merge−ml−mli

Inverse implementations and interfaces when merging. All elements in implementation files are kept, and the −m option indicates which parts of the comments in interface files are merged with the comments in implementation files.

−keep−code

Always keep the source code for values, methods and instance variables, when available. The source code is always kept when a .ml file is given, but is by default discarded when a .mli is given. This option allows to always keep the source code.

−load file

Load information from file, which has been produced by ocamldoc −dump. Several -load options can be given.

−mflags

Specify merge options between interfaces and implementations. flags can be one or several of the following characters:

d merge description

a merge @author

v merge @version

l merge @see

s merge @since

o merge @deprecated

p merge @param

e merge @raise

r merge @return

A merge everything

−no−custom−tags

Do not allow custom @-tags.

−no−stop

Keep elements placed after the (**/**) special comment.

−o file

Output the generated documentation to file instead of ocamldoc.out. This option is meaningful only in conjunction with the −latex, −texi, or −dot options.

−pp command

Pipe sources through preprocessor command.

−sort

Sort the list of top-level modules before generating the documentation.

−stars

Remove blank characters until the first asterisk (’*’) in each line of comments.

−t title

Use title as the title for the generated documentation.

−intro file

Use content of file as ocamldoc text to use as introduction (HTML, LaTeX and TeXinfo only). For HTML, the file is used to create the whole "index.html" file.

−v

Verbose mode. Display progress information.

−warn-error

Treat warnings as errors.

Type-checking options

ocamldoc(1) calls the Objective Caml type-checker to obtain type informations. The following options impact the type-checking phase. They have the same meaning as for the ocamlc(1) and ocamlopt(1) commands.
−I 
directory

Add directory to the list of directories search for compiled interface files (.cmi files).

−nolabels

Ignore non-optional labels in types.

−rectypes

Allow arbitrary recursive types. (See the −rectypes option to ocamlc(1).)

Options for generating HTML pages

The following options apply in conjunction with the −html option:
−all-params

Display the complete list of parameters for functions and methods.

−css-style filename

Use filename as the Cascading Style Sheet file.

−colorize-code

Colorize the OCaml code enclosed in [ ] and \{[ ]\}, using colors to emphasize keywords, etc. If the code fragments are not syntactically correct, no color is added.

−index-only

Generate only index files.

Options for generating LaTeX files

The following options apply in conjunction with the −latex option:
−latex-value-prefix prefix

Give a prefix to use for the labels of the values in the generated LaTeX document. The default prefix is the empty string. You can also use the options -latex-type-prefix, -latex-exception-prefix, -latex-module-prefix, -latex-module-type-prefix, -latex-class-prefix, -latex-class-type-prefix, -latex-attribute-prefix and -latex-method-prefix.

These options are useful when you have, for example, a type and a value with the same name. If you do not specify prefixes, LaTeX will complain about multiply defined labels.

−latextitle n,style

Associate style number n to the given LaTeX sectioning command style, e.g. section or subsection. (LaTeX only.) This is useful when including the generated document in another LaTeX document, at a given sectioning level. The default association is 1 for section, 2 for subsection, 3 for subsubsection, 4 for paragraph and 5 for subparagraph.

−noheader

Suppress header in generated documentation.

−notoc

Do not generate a table of contents.

−notrailer

Suppress trailer in generated documentation.

−sepfiles

Generate one .tex file per toplevel module, instead of the global ocamldoc.out file.

Options for generating TeXinfo files

The following options apply in conjunction with the -texi option:

−esc8

Escape accented characters in Info files.

−info-entry

Specify Info directory entry.

−info-section

Specify section of Info directory.

−noheader

Suppress header in generated documentation.

−noindex

Do not build index for Info files.

−notrailer

Suppress trailer in generated documentation.

Options for generating dot graphs

The following options apply in conjunction with the −dot option:
−dot-colors 
colors

Specify the colors to use in the generated dot code. When generating module dependencies, ocamldoc(1) uses different colors for modules, depending on the directories in which they reside. When generating types dependencies, ocamldoc(1) uses different colors for types, depending on the modules in which they are defined. colors is a list of color names separated by ’,’, as in Red,Blue,Green. The available colors are the ones supported by the dot(1) tool.

−dot-include-all

Include all modules in the dot(1) output, not only modules given on the command line or loaded with the −load option.

−dot-reduce

Perform a transitive reduction of the dependency graph before outputting the dot code. This can be useful if there are a lot of transitive dependencies that clutter the graph.

−dot-types

Output dot code describing the type dependency graph instead of the module dependency graph.

Options for generating man files

The following options apply in conjunction with the −man option:
−man-mini

Generate man pages only for modules, module types, classes and class types, instead of pages for all elements.

−man-suffix

Set the suffix used for generated man filenames. Default is ’o’, like in List.o.

SEE ALSO

ocaml(1), ocamlc(1), ocamlopt(1).
The Objective Caml user’s manual
, chapter "The documentation generator".

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