An HTML version of this documentation can be found
at https://docs.perl6.org/ and also
at perl6docs.github.io
(which is
actually updated more frequently).
This is currently the recommended way to consume the documentation.
There is also a command line tool called p6doc
, which you can use to
browse the documentation once it's installed (see below).
This documentation is updated frequently to a GitHub mirror https://perl6docs.github.io but that might be out of sync with the official one.
This documentation is also published as
the
jjmerelo/perl6-doc
Docker
container. It includes a copy of the web published on port 3000, so you
can run it with:
docker run --rm -it -p 3000:3000 jjmerelo/perl6-doc
or
docker run --rm -it -p 31415:3000 jjmerelo/perl6-doc
in case you want it published somewhere else. You can direct your browser to http://localhost:3000 (or 31415, as the case may be).
- README in Chinese
- README in Dutch
- README in French
- README in German
- README in Italian
- README in Japanese
- README in Portuguese
- README in Spanish
This module is available via the Raku module ecosystem. Use:
$ zef install p6doc
to install the "binaries" and make them available in your binaries execution path.
Note: Please note that, due to changes in the parsing of Pod6,
this will fail in versions of Raku older than 2018.06. Please upgrade to that
version, or install using --force
.
With a Rakudo perl6
executable in the PATH
, try:
$ ./bin/p6doc Str
to see the documentation for class Str
, or:
$ ./bin/p6doc Str.split
to see the documentation for method split
in class Str
. You can
skip the ./bin
part if you have installed it via
zef
. You can also do:
$ p6doc -f slurp
to browse the documentation of standard functions (which, in this particular case, will actually return multiple matches, which you can check individually). Depending on your disk speed and Rakudo version, it might take a while.
The documentation can be rendered to static HTML pages and/or served in a local web site.
Building the documentation has a number of prerequisites, which is might you might not want to do it yourself. However, if you need a local copy of the HTML documentation, please download it by cloning https://github.com/perl6docs/perl6docs.github.io
These are the prerequisites you need to install to generate documentation.
- perl 5.20 or later
- node 10 or later.
- graphviz.
- Documentable.
Please follow these instructions (in Ubuntu) to install them
sudo apt install perl graphviz # perl not installed by default in 18.04
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_12.x | sudo -E bash -
sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
cpanm --installdeps .
zef install Documentable
You can install perl and node any way you want, including version managers, as long as they're available to run from the command line.
This should install all needed requisites, now you can clone this repository and start building process:
git clone https://github.com/Raku/doc.git # clone the repo
cd doc # move to the clone of the repo
make for-documentable # Generates CSS and JS, installs highlighting modules
documentable start -a -v --highlight # Builds cache and generates pages.
You need to do this only the first time to build the cache. When there's some change in the source (done by yourself or pulled form the repo),
documentable update
will re-generate only affected pages.
Documentation will be generated in the html
subdirectory. You can use it
pointing any static web server at that directory, or use the development server
based on Mojolicious using
make run
This will serve the documentation in port 3000.
Latest version of the generated documentation consists only of static HTML pages
. All pages are generated with .html
at the end; however, most internal links
don't use that suffix. Most places (for instance, GitHub pages) will add it
automatically for you. A bare server will not. This is what you have to add to
the configuration to make it work:
location / {
try_files $uri $uri/ $uri.html /404.html;
}
This will rewrite the URLs for you. Equivalent configuration might have to be made in other servers.
Raku is not a small language, and documenting it takes a lot of effort. Any help is appreciated.
Here are some ways to help us:
- Add missing documentation for classes, roles, methods or operators.
- Add usage examples to existing documentation.
- Proofread and correct the documentation.
- Tell us about missing documentation by opening issues on Github.
- Do a
git grep TODO
in this repository, and replace the TODO items by actual documentation.
Issues page has a list of current issues and documentation parts that are known to be missing and the CONTRIBUTING document explains briefly how to get started contributing documentation.
Q: Why aren't you embedding the docs in the CORE sources?
A: Several reasons:
- This documentation is intended to be universal with respect to a given version of the specification, and not necessarily tied to any specific Raku implementation.
- Implementations' handling of embedded Pod is still a bit uneven; this avoids potential runtime impacts.
- A separate repo in the perl6 Github account invites more potential contributors and editors.
Q: Should I include methods from superclasses or roles?
A: No. The HTML version already includes methods from superclasses and
roles, and the p6doc
script will be taught about those as well.
I want p6doc and docs.raku.org to become the No. 1 resource to consult when you want to know something about a Raku feature, be it from the language, or built-in types and routines. I want it to be useful to every Raku programmer.
-- moritz
P6_DOC_TEST_VERBOSE
to a true value to display verbose messages during test suite run. Helpful when debugging failing test suite.P6_DOC_TEST_FUDGE
fudgesskip-test
code examples as TODO inxt/examples-compilation.t
test.
The code in this repository is available under the Artistic License 2.0 as published by The Perl Foundation. See the LICENSE file for the full text.
This repository also contains code authored by third parties that may be licensed under a different license. Such files indicate the copyright and license terms at the top of the file. Currently these include:
- jQuery and jQuery UI libraries: Copyright 2015 jQuery Foundation and other contributors; MIT License
- jQuery Cookie plugin: Copyright 2006, 2015 Klaus Hartl & Fagner Brack; MIT License
- Examples from Stack Overflow MIT License; (ref #1 for 1f7cc4e)
- Table sorter plugin from https://github.com/christianbach/tablesorter ; MIT License