Logtalk automatically generates a documentation file for each compiled entity (object, protocol, or category) in XML format. Contents of the XML file include the entity name, type, and compilation mode (static or dynamic), the entity relations with other entities, and a description of any declared predicates (name, compilation mode, scope, ...).
The XML documentation files can be enriched with arbitrary user-defined information, either about an entity or about its predicates, by using the two directives described below.
Logtalk supports two documentation directives for providing arbitrary user-defined information about an entity or a predicate. These two directives complement other Logtalk directives that also provide important documentation information like uses/1
, calls/1
, or mode/2
.
Arbitrary user-defined entity information can be represented using the info/1
directive:
:- info([ Key1 is Value1, Key2 is Value2, ...]).
In this pattern, keys should be atoms and values should be ground terms. The following keys are pre-defined and may be processed specially by Logtalk:
comment
author
{entity}
where entity
is the name of a XML entity defined in the custom.ent
file).version
date
parameters
parnames
copyright
{entity}
where entity
is the name of a XML entity defined in the custom.ent
file).license
{entity}
where entity
is the name of a XML entity defined in the custom.ent
file).remarks
-
Text. Both the topic and the text must be atoms.For example:
:- info([ version is 2.1, author is 'Paulo Moura', date is 2000/4/20, comment is 'Building representation.', diagram is 'UML Class Diagram #312']).
Use only the keywords that make sense for your application and remember that you are free to invent your own keywords.
Arbitrary user-defined predicate information can be represented using the
info/2
directive:
:- info(Functor/Arity, [ Key1 is Value1, Key2 is Value2, ...]).
Keys should be atoms and values should be ground terms. The following keys are pre-defined and may be processed specially by Logtalk:
comment
arguments
argnames
allocation
container
, descendants
, instances
, classes
, subclasses
, and any
.redefinition
never
, free
, specialize
, call_super_first
, call_super_last
.exceptions
-
Exception term. The description must be an atom. The exception term must be a non-variable term.examples
-
Predicate call -
Variable bindings. The description must be an atom. The predicate call term must be a non-variable term. The variable bindings term uses the format {
Variable=
Term, ...}
. When there are no variable bindings, the success or failure of the predicate call should be represented by the terms {yes}
or {no}
, respectively.For example:
:- info(color/1, [ comment is 'Table of defined colors.', argnames is ['Color'], constraint is 'Only a maximum of four visible colors allowed.']).
Use only the keywords that make sense for your application and remember that you are free to invent your own keywords.
The XML documenting files are (by default) automatically generated when you compile a Logtalk entity. For example, assuming the default filename extensions, compiling a trace
object and a sort(_)
parametric object contained in a source file will result in trace_0.xml
and sort_1.xml
XML files.
Each XML file contains references to two other files, a XML specification file and a XSL style-sheet file. The XML specification file can be either a DTD file (logtalk.dtd
) or a XML Scheme file (logtalk.xsd
). The XSL style-sheet file is responsible for converting the XML files to some desired format such as HTML or PDF. The default names for the XML specification file and the XSL style-sheet file are defined in the configuration files. The xml
sub-directory in the Logtalk installation directory contains the XML specification files described above, along with several sample XSL style-sheet files and sample scripts for converting XML documenting files to several formats. Please read the NOTES
file included in the directory for details. You may use the supplied sample files as a starting point for generating the documentation of your Logtalk applications.
The Logtalk DTD file, logtalk.dtd
, contains a reference to a user-customizable file, custom.ent
, which declares XML entities for source code author names, license terms, and copyright string. After editing the custom.ent
file to reflect your personal data, you may use the XML entities on info/1
documenting directives. For example, assuming that the XML entities are named author, license, and copyright we may write:
:- info([ version is 1.1, author is {author}, license is {license}, copyright is {copyright}).
The entity references are replaced by the value of the corresponding XML entity when the XML documenting files are processed (not when they are generated; this notation is just a shortcut to take advantage of XML entities).
There is a set of compilers options, used with the Logtalk logtalk_load/2
or the logtalk_compile/2
built-in predicates, that can be used to control the generation of the XML documentation files. Please see the Running Logtalk section of this manual for details.