class RDoc::MarkupReference

Class RDoc::MarkupReference exists only to provide a suitable home for a reference document for RDoc markup.

All objects defined in this class – classes, modules, methods, aliases, attributes, and constants – are solely for illustrating RDoc markup, and have no other legitimate use.

About the Examples

  • Examples in this reference are Ruby code and comments; certain differences from other sources (such as C code and comments) are noted.

  • Almost all examples on this page are all RDoc-like; that is, they have no explicit comment markers like Ruby # or C /* ... */.

  • An example that shows rendered HTML output displays that output in a blockquote:

    Some stuff

RDoc Sources

The sources of RDoc documentation vary according to the type of file:

  • .rb (Ruby code file):

    • Markup may be found in Ruby comments: A comment that immediately precedes the definition of a Ruby class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute becomes the documentation for that defined object.

    • An RDoc directive may be found in:

      • A trailing comment (on the same line as code); see :nodoc:, :doc:, and :notnew:.

      • A single-line comment; see other Directives.

    • Documentation may be derived from the Ruby code itself; see Documentation Derived from Ruby Code.

  • .c (C code file): markup is parsed from C comments. A comment that immediately precedes a function that implements a Ruby method, or otherwise immediately precedes the definition of a Ruby object, becomes the documentation for that object.

  • .rdoc (RDoc markup text file) or .md (RDoc markdown text file): markup is parsed from the entire file. The text is not associated with any code object, but may (depending on how the documentation is built) become a separate page.

An RDoc document:

  • A (possibly multi-line) comment in a Ruby or C file that generates RDoc documentation (as above).

  • The entire markup (.rdoc) file or markdown (.md) file (which is usually multi-line).

Blocks

It’s convenient to think of an RDoc document as a sequence of blocks of various types (details at the links):

  • Paragraph: an ordinary paragraph.

  • Verbatim text block: a block of text to be rendered literally.

  • Code block: a verbatim text block containing Ruby code, to be rendered with code highlighting.

  • Block quote: a longish quoted passage, to be rendered with indentation instead of quote marks.

  • List: items for a bullet list, numbered list, lettered list, or labeled list.

  • Heading: a heading.

  • Horizontal rule: a line across the rendered page.

  • Directive: various special directions for the rendering.

  • Text Markup: text to be rendered in a special way.

About the blocks:

  • Except for a paragraph, a block is distinguished by its indentation, or by unusual initial or embedded characters.

  • Any block may appear independently (that is, not nested in another block); some blocks may be nested, as detailed below.

  • In a multi-line block, RDoc looks for the block’s natural left margin, which becomes the base margin for the block and is the initial current margin for the block.

Paragraphs

A paragraph consists of one or more non-empty lines of ordinary text, each beginning at the current margin.

Note: Here, ordinary text means text that is not identified by indentation, or by unusual initial or embedded characters. See below.

Paragraphs are separated by one or more empty lines.

Example input:

\RDoc produces HTML and command-line documentation for Ruby projects.
\RDoc includes the rdoc and ri tools for generating and displaying
documentation from the command-line.

You'll love it.

Rendered HTML:

RDoc produces HTML and command-line documentation for Ruby projects. RDoc includes the rdoc and ri tools for generating and displaying documentation from the command-line.

You’ll love it.

A paragraph may contain nested blocks, including:

Verbatim Text Blocks

Text indented farther than the current margin becomes a verbatim text block (or a code block, described next). In the rendered HTML, such text:

  • Is indented.

  • Has a contrasting background color.

The verbatim text block ends at the first line beginning at the current margin.

Example input:

This is not verbatim text.

  This is verbatim text.
    Whitespace is honored.     # See?
      Whitespace is honored.     # See?

  This is still the same verbatim text block.

This is not verbatim text.

Rendered HTML:

This is not verbatim text.

This is verbatim text.
  Whitespace is honored.     # See?
    Whitespace is honored.     # See?

This is still the same verbatim text block.

This is not verbatim text.

A verbatim text block may not contain nested blocks of any kind – it’s verbatim.

Code Blocks

A special case of verbatim text is the code block, which is merely verbatim text that RDoc recognizes as Ruby code:

In the rendered HTML, the code block:

  • Is indented.

  • Has a contrasting background color.

  • Has syntax highlighting.

Example input:

Consider this method:

  def foo(name = '', value = 0)
    @name = name      # Whitespace is still honored.
    @value = value
  end

Rendered HTML:

Consider this method:

def foo(name = '', value = 0)
  @name = name      # Whitespace is still honored.
  @value = value
end

Pro tip: If your indented Ruby code does not get highlighted, it may contain a syntax error.

A code block may not contain nested blocks of any kind – it’s verbatim.

Block Quotes

You can use the characters >>> (unindented), followed by indented text, to treat the text as a block quote:

Example input:

Here's a block quote:
.
  Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer
  commodo quam iaculis massa posuere, dictum fringilla justo pulvinar.
  Quisque turpis erat, pharetra eu dui at, sollicitudin accumsan nulla.

  Aenean congue ligula eu ligula molestie, eu pellentesque purus
  faucibus. In id leo non ligula condimentum lobortis. Duis vestibulum,
  diam in pellentesque aliquet, mi tellus placerat sapien, id euismod
  purus magna ut tortor.

Rendered HTML:

Here’s a block quote:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer commodo quam iaculis massa posuere, dictum fringilla justo pulvinar. Quisque turpis erat, pharetra eu dui at, sollicitudin accumsan nulla.

Aenean congue ligula eu ligula molestie, eu pellentesque purus faucibus. In id leo non ligula condimentum lobortis. Duis vestibulum, diam in pellentesque aliquet, mi tellus placerat sapien, id euismod purus magna ut tortor.

Note that, unlike verbatim text, single newlines are not honored, but that a double newline begins a new paragraph in the block quote.

A block quote may contain nested blocks, including:

Lists

Each type of list item is marked by a special beginning:

  • Bullet list item: Begins with a hyphen or asterisk.

  • Numbered list item: Begins with digits and a period.

  • Lettered list item: Begins with an alphabetic character and a period.

  • Labeled list item: Begins with one of:

    • Square-bracketed text.

    • A word followed by two colons.

A list begins with a list item and continues, even across blank lines, as long as list items of the same type are found at the same indentation level.

A new list resets the current margin inward. Additional lines of text aligned at that margin are part of the continuing list item.

A list item may be continued on additional lines that are aligned with the first line. See examples below.

A list item may contain nested blocks, including:

Bullet Lists

A bullet list item begins with a hyphen or asterisk.

Example input:

- An item.
- Another.
- An item spanning
  multiple lines.

* Yet another.
- Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  • An item.

  • Another.

  • An item spanning multiple lines.

  • Yet another.

  • Last one.

Numbered Lists

A numbered list item begins with digits and a period.

The items are automatically re-numbered.

Example input:

100. An item.
10. Another.
1. An item spanning
   multiple lines.

1. Yet another.
1000. Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  1. An item.

  2. Another.

  3. An item spanning multiple lines.

  4. Yet another.

  5. Last one.

Lettered Lists

A lettered list item begins with letters and a period.

The items are automatically “re-lettered.”

Example input:

z. An item.
y. Another.
x. An item spanning
   multiple lines.

x. Yet another.
a. Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  1. An item.

  2. Another.

  3. Yet another.

  4. Last one.

Labeled Lists

A labeled list item begins with one of:

  • Square-bracketed text: the label and text are on two lines.

  • A word followed by two colons: the label and text are on the same line.

Example input:

[foo] An item.
bat:: Another.
[bag] An item spanning
      multiple lines.

[bar baz] Yet another.
bam:: Last one.

Rendered HTML:

foo

An item.

bat

Another.

bag

An item spanning multiple lines.

bar baz

Yet another.

bam

Last one.

Headings

A heading begins with up to six equal-signs, followed by heading text. Whitespace between those and the heading text is optional.

Examples:

= Section 1
== Section 1.1
=== Section 1.1.1
=== Section 1.1.2
== Section 1.2
= Section 2
= Foo
== Bar
=== Baz
==== Bam
===== Bat
====== Bad
============Still a Heading (Level 6)
\== Not a Heading

A heading may contain only one type of nested block:

Horizontal Rules

A horizontal rule consists of a line with three or more hyphens and nothing more.

Example input:

---
--- Not a horizontal rule.

-- Also not a horizontal rule.
---

Rendered HTML:


— Not a horizontal rule.

– Also not a horizontal rule.


Directives

Directives for Allowing or Suppressing Documentation
  • # :stopdoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should ignore markup until next :startdoc: directive or end-of-file.

  • # :startdoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should resume parsing markup.

  • # :enddoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should ignore markup to end-of-file regardless of other directives.

  • # :nodoc::

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute.

    • Specifies that the defined object should not be documented.

    • For a method definition in C code, it the directive must be in the comment line immediately preceding the definition:

      /* :nodoc: */
      static VALUE
      some_method(VALUE self)
      {
          return self;
      }

      Note that this directive has no effect at all when placed at the method declaration:

      /* :nodoc: */
      rb_define_method(cMyClass, "do_something", something_func, 0);

      The above comment is just a comment and has nothing to do with RDoc. Therefore, do_something method will be reported as “undocumented” unless that method or function is documented elsewhere.

    • For a constant definition in C code, this directive can not work because there is no “implementation” place for a constant.

  • # :nodoc: all:

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class or module.

    • Specifies that the class or module should not be documented. By default, however, a nested class or module will be documented.

  • # :doc::

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute.

    • Specifies the defined object should be documented, even if it otherwise would not be documented.

  • # :notnew: (aliased as :not_new: and :not-new:):

    • Appended to a line of code that defines instance method initialize.

    • Specifies that singleton method new should not be documented. By default, Ruby fakes a corresponding singleton method new, which RDoc includes in the documentation. Note that instance method initialize is private, and so by default is not documented.

For Ruby code, but not for other RDoc sources, there is a shorthand for :stopdoc: and :startdoc::

# Documented.
#--
# Not documented.
#++
# Documented.

For C code, any of directives :startdoc:, :stopdoc:, and :enddoc: may appear in a stand-alone comment:

/* :startdoc: */
/* :stopdoc: */
/* :enddoc: */
Directive for Specifying RDoc Source Format
  • # :markup: type:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the format for the RDoc input; parameter type is one of markdown, rd, rdoc, tomdoc.

Directives for HTML Output
  • # :title: text:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the title for the HTML output.

  • # :main: filename:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the HTML file to be displayed first.

Directives for Method Documentation
  • # :call-seq::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the calling sequence to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual calling sequence in the code. See method call_seq_directive.

    Note that RDoc can build the calling sequence for a Ruby-coded method, but not for other languages. You may want to override that by explicitly giving a :call-seq: directive if you want to include:

    • A return type, which is not automatically inferred.

    • Multiple calling sequences.

    For C code, the directive may appear in a stand-alone comment.

  • # :args: arg_names (aliased as :arg:):

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the arguments to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual arguments in the code. See method args_directive.

  • # :yields: arg_names (aliased as :yield:):

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the yield arguments to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual yield in the code. See method yields_directive.

Directives for Organizing Documentation

By default, RDoc groups:

  • Singleton methods together in alphabetical order.

  • Instance methods and their aliases together in alphabetical order.

  • Attributes and their aliases together in alphabetical order.

You can use directives to modify those behaviors.

  • # :section: section_title:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that following methods are to be grouped into the section with the given section_title, or into the default section if no title is given. The directive remains in effect until another such directive is given, but may be temporarily overridden by directive :category:. See below.

    The comment block containing this directive:

    • Must be separated by a blank line from the documentation for the next item.

    • May have one or more lines preceding the directive. These will be removed, along with any trailing lines that match them. Such lines may be visually helpful.

    • Lines of text that are not so removed become the descriptive text for the section.

    Example:

    # ----------------------------------------
    # :section: My Section
    # This is the section that I wrote.
    # See it glisten in the noon-day sun.
    # ----------------------------------------
    
    ##
    # Comment for some_method
    def some_method
      # ...
    end
    

    You can use directive :category: to temporarily override the current section.

  • # :category: section_title:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that just one following method is to be included in the given section, or in the default section if no title is given. Subsequent methods are to be grouped into the current section.

Directive for Including a File
  • # :include: filepath:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that the contents of the given file are to be included at this point. The file content is shifted to have the same indentation as the colon at the start of the directive.

      The file is searched for in the directory containing the current file, and then in each of the directories given with the --include command-line option.

    For C code, the directive may appear in a stand-alone comment

Text Markup

Text markup is metatext that affects HTML rendering:

  • Typeface: italic, bold, monofont.

  • Character conversions: copyright, trademark, certain punctuation.

  • Links.

  • Escapes: marking text as “not markup.”

Typeface Markup

Typeface markup can specify that text is to be rendered as italic, bold, or monofont.

Typeface markup may contain only one type of nested block:

  • More typeface markup: italic, bold, monofont.

Italic

Text may be marked as italic via HTML tag <i> or <em>.

Example input:

<i>Italicized words</i> in a paragraph.

.
  <i>Italicized words in a block quote</i>.

- <i>Italicized words</i> in a list item.

====== <i>Italicized words</i> in a Heading

<i>Italicized passage containing *bold* and +monofont+.</i>

Rendered HTML:

Italicized words in a paragraph.

Italicized words in a block quote.

  • Italicized words in a list item.

Italicized words in a Heading

Italicized passage containing bold and monofont.

A single word may be italicized via a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed underscores.

Example input:

_Italic_ in a paragraph.

.
  _Italic_ in a block quote.

- _Italic_ in a list item.

====== _Italic_ in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Italic in a paragraph.

Italic in a block quote.

  • Italic in a list item.

Italic in a Heading
Bold

Text may be marked as bold via HTML tag <b>.

Example input:

<b>Bold words</b> in a paragraph.

.
  <b>Bold words</b> in a block quote.

- <b>Bold words</b> in a list item.

====== <b>Bold words</b> in a Heading

<b>Bold passage containing _italics_ and +monofont+.</b>

Rendered HTML:

Bold words in a paragraph.

Bold words in a block quote.

  • Bold words in a list item.

Bold words in a Heading

Bold passage containing italics and monofont.

A single word may be made bold via a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed asterisks.

Example input:

*Bold* in a paragraph.

.
  *Bold* in a block quote.

- *Bold* in a list item.

===== *Bold* in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Bold in a paragraph.

Bold in a block quote.

  • Bold in a list item.

Bold in a Heading
Monofont

Text may be marked as monofont – sometimes called ‘typewriter font’ – via HTML tag <tt> or <code>.

Example input:

<tt>Monofont words</tt> in a paragraph.

.
  <tt>Monofont words</tt> in a block quote.

- <tt>Monofont words</tt> in a list item.

====== <tt>Monofont words</tt> in heading

<tt>Monofont passage containing _italics_ and *bold*.</tt>

Rendered HTML:

Monofont words in a paragraph.

Monofont words in a block quote.

  • Monofont words in a list item.

Monofont words in heading

Monofont passage containing italics and bold.

A single word may be made monofont by a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed plus-signs.

Example input:

+Monofont+ in a paragraph.

.
  +Monofont+ in a block quote.

- +Monofont+ in a list item.

====== +Monofont+ in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Monofont in a paragraph.

Monofont in a block quote.

  • Monofont in a list item.

Monofont in a Heading

Character Conversions

Certain combinations of characters may be converted to special characters; whether the conversion occurs depends on whether the special character is available in the current encoding.

  • (c) converts to © (copyright character); must be lowercase.

  • (r) converts to ® (registered trademark character); must be lowercase.

  • 'foo' converts to ‘foo’ (smart single-quotes).

  • "foo" converts to “foo” (smart double-quotes).

  • foo ... bar converts to foo … bar (1-character ellipsis).

  • foo -- bar converts to foo – bar (1-character en-dash).

  • foo --- bar converts to foo — bar (1-character em-dash).

Certain strings in RDoc text are converted to links. Any such link may be suppressed by prefixing a backslash. This section shows how to link to various targets.

Class
  • On-page: DummyClass links to DummyClass.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias links to RDoc::Alias.

Module
Constant
  • On-page: DUMMY_CONSTANT links to DUMMY_CONSTANT.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Text::MARKUP_FORMAT links to RDoc::Text::MARKUP_FORMAT.

Singleton Method
  • On-page: ::dummy_singleton_method links to ::dummy_singleton_method.

  • Off-pageRDoc::TokenStream::to_html links to RDoc::TokenStream::to_html.

Note: Occasionally RDoc is not linked to a method whose name has only special characters. Check whether the links you were expecting are actually there. If not, you’ll need to put in an explicit link; see below.

Pro tip: The link to any method is available in the alphabetical table of contents at the top left of the page for the class or module.

Instance Method
  • On-page: #dummy_instance_method links to dummy_instance_method.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#html_name links to RDoc::Alias#html_name.

    See the Note and Pro Tip immediately above.

Attribute
  • On-page: #dummy_attribute links to dummy_attribute.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#name links to RDoc::Alias#name.

Alias
  • On-page: #dummy_instance_alias links to dummy_instance_alias.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#new_name links to RDoc::Alias#new_name.

Protocol http
  • Linked: http://yahoo.com links to yahoo.com.

Protocol https
Protocol www
Protocol ftp
Protocol mailto
Protocol irc
Image Filename Extensions
  • Link: https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png is converted to an in-line HTML img tag, which displays the image in the HTML:

    Also works for bmp, gif, jpeg, and jpg files.

    Note: Works only for a fully qualified URL.

Heading
  • Link: RDoc::RD@LICENSE links to LICENSE at RDoc::RDoc::RD.

Note that spaces in the actual heading are represented by + characters in the linkable text.

  • Link: RDoc::Options@Saved+Options links to Saved Options at RDoc::Options.

Punctuation and other special characters must be escaped like CGI.escape.

Pro tip: The link to any heading is available in the alphabetical table of contents at the top left of the page for the class or module.

Section

See Directives for Organizing Documentation.

  • Link: RDoc::Markup::ToHtml@Visitor links to Visitor at RDoc::Markup::ToHtml.

If a section and a heading share the same name, the link target is the section.

Single-Word Text Link

Use square brackets to create single-word text link:

  • GitHub[https://github.com] links to GitHub.

Multi-Word Text Link

Use square brackets and curly braces to create a multi-word text link.

rdoc-ref Scheme

A link with the rdoc-ref: scheme links to the referenced item, if that item exists. The referenced item may be a class, module, method, file, etc.

  • Class: Alias[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Alias] links to RDoc::Alias.

  • Module: RDoc[rdoc-ref:RDoc] links to RDoc.

  • Method: foo[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml#handle_regexp_RDOCLINK] links to foo.

  • Constant: bar[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml::LIST_TYPE_TO_HTML] links to bar.

  • Attribute: baz[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml#code_object] links to baz.

  • Alias: bad[rdoc-ref:RDoc::MarkupReference#dummy_instance_alias] links to bad.

If the referenced item does not exist, no link is generated and entire rdoc-ref: square-bracketed clause is removed from the resulting text.

  • Nosuch[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Nosuch] is rendered as Nosuch.

rdoc-label Scheme
Simple

You can specify a link target using this form, where the second part cites the id of an HTML element.

This link refers to the constant DUMMY_CONSTANT on this page:

  • {DUMMY_CONSTANT}[rdoc-label:DUMMY_CONSTANT]

Thus:

DUMMY_CONSTANT

With Return

You can specify both a link target and a local label that can be used as the target for a return link. These two links refer to each other:

  • {go to addressee}[rdoc-label:addressee:sender]

  • {return to sender}[rdoc-label:sender:addressee]

Thus:

go to addressee

Some text.

return to sender

link: Scheme
rdoc-image Scheme

Use the rdoc-image scheme to display an image that is also a link:

# {rdoc-image:path/to/image}[link_target]
  • Link: {rdoc-image:https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png}[https://www.ruby-lang.org] displays image https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png as a link to https://www.ruby-lang.org.

A relative path as the target also works:

  • Link: {rdoc-image:https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png}[./Alias.html] links to ./Alias.html

Escaping Text

Text that would otherwise be interpreted as markup can be “escaped,” so that it is not interpreted as markup; the escape character is the backslash ('\').

In a verbatim text block or a code block, the escape character is always preserved:

Example input:

This is not verbatim text.

  This is verbatim text, with an escape character \.

This is not a code block.

  def foo
    'String with an escape character.'
  end

Rendered HTML:

This is not verbatim text.

This is verbatim text, with an escape character \.

This is not a code block.

def foo
  'This is a code block with an escape character \.'
end

In typeface markup (italic, bold, or monofont), an escape character is preserved unless it is immediately followed by nested typeface markup.

Example input:

This list is about escapes; it contains:

- <tt>Monofont text with unescaped nested _italic_</tt>.
- <tt>Monofont text with escaped nested \_italic_</tt>.
- <tt>Monofont text with an escape character \</tt>.

Rendered HTML:

This list is about escapes; it contains:

  • Monofont text with unescaped nested italic.

  • Monofont text with escaped nested _italic_.

  • Monofont text with an escape character \ .

In other text-bearing blocks (paragraphs, block quotes, list items, headings):

  • A single escape character immediately followed by markup escapes the markup.

  • A single escape character followed by whitespace is preserved.

  • A single escape character anywhere else is ignored.

  • A double escape character is rendered as a single backslash.

    Example input:

    This list is about escapes; it contains:
    
    - An unescaped class name, RDoc, that will become a link.
    - An escaped class name, \RDoc, that will not become a link.
    - An escape character followed by whitespace \ .
    - An escape character \that is ignored.
    - A double escape character \\ that is rendered
      as a single backslash.

    Rendered HTML:

    This list is about escapes; it contains:

    • An unescaped class name, RDoc, that will become a link.

    • An escaped class name, RDoc, that will not become a link.

    • An escape character followed by whitespace \ .

    • An escape character that is ignored.

    • A double escape character \ that is rendered as a single backslash.

Documentation Derived from Ruby Code

Class

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Class name.

  • Parent class.

  • Singleton methods.

  • Instance methods.

  • Aliases.

  • Constants.

  • Attributes.

Module

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Module name.

  • Singleton methods.

  • Instance methods.

  • Aliases.

  • Constants.

  • Attributes.

Method

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Method name.

  • Arguments.

  • Yielded values.

See method.

Alias

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Alias name.

  • Aliased name.

See dummy_instance_alias and dummy_instance_method.

Constant

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Constant name.

See DUMMY_CONSTANT.

Attribute

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Attribute name.

  • Attribute type ([R], [W], or [RW])

See dummy_attribute.

Class RDoc::MarkupReference exists only to provide a suitable home for a reference document for RDoc markup.

All objects defined in this class – classes, modules, methods, aliases, attributes, and constants – are solely for illustrating RDoc markup, and have no other legitimate use.

About the Examples

  • Examples in this reference are Ruby code and comments; certain differences from other sources (such as C code and comments) are noted.

  • Almost all examples on this page are all RDoc-like; that is, they have no explicit comment markers like Ruby # or C /* ... */.

  • An example that shows rendered HTML output displays that output in a blockquote:

    Some stuff

RDoc Sources

The sources of RDoc documentation vary according to the type of file:

  • .rb (Ruby code file):

    • Markup may be found in Ruby comments: A comment that immediately precedes the definition of a Ruby class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute becomes the documentation for that defined object.

    • An RDoc directive may be found in:

      • A trailing comment (on the same line as code); see :nodoc:, :doc:, and :notnew:.

      • A single-line comment; see other Directives.

    • Documentation may be derived from the Ruby code itself; see Documentation Derived from Ruby Code.

  • .c (C code file): markup is parsed from C comments. A comment that immediately precedes a function that implements a Ruby method, or otherwise immediately precedes the definition of a Ruby object, becomes the documentation for that object.

  • .rdoc (RDoc markup text file) or .md (RDoc markdown text file): markup is parsed from the entire file. The text is not associated with any code object, but may (depending on how the documentation is built) become a separate page.

An RDoc document:

  • A (possibly multi-line) comment in a Ruby or C file that generates RDoc documentation (as above).

  • The entire markup (.rdoc) file or markdown (.md) file (which is usually multi-line).

Blocks

It’s convenient to think of an RDoc document as a sequence of blocks of various types (details at the links):

  • Paragraph: an ordinary paragraph.

  • Verbatim text block: a block of text to be rendered literally.

  • Code block: a verbatim text block containing Ruby code, to be rendered with code highlighting.

  • Block quote: a longish quoted passage, to be rendered with indentation instead of quote marks.

  • List: items for a bullet list, numbered list, lettered list, or labeled list.

  • Heading: a heading.

  • Horizontal rule: a line across the rendered page.

  • Directive: various special directions for the rendering.

  • Text Markup: text to be rendered in a special way.

About the blocks:

  • Except for a paragraph, a block is distinguished by its indentation, or by unusual initial or embedded characters.

  • Any block may appear independently (that is, not nested in another block); some blocks may be nested, as detailed below.

  • In a multi-line block, RDoc looks for the block’s natural left margin, which becomes the base margin for the block and is the initial current margin for the block.

Paragraphs

A paragraph consists of one or more non-empty lines of ordinary text, each beginning at the current margin.

Note: Here, ordinary text means text that is not identified by indentation, or by unusual initial or embedded characters. See below.

Paragraphs are separated by one or more empty lines.

Example input:

\RDoc produces HTML and command-line documentation for Ruby projects.
\RDoc includes the rdoc and ri tools for generating and displaying
documentation from the command-line.

You'll love it.

Rendered HTML:

RDoc produces HTML and command-line documentation for Ruby projects. RDoc includes the rdoc and ri tools for generating and displaying documentation from the command-line.

You’ll love it.

A paragraph may contain nested blocks, including:

Verbatim Text Blocks

Text indented farther than the current margin becomes a verbatim text block (or a code block, described next). In the rendered HTML, such text:

  • Is indented.

  • Has a contrasting background color.

The verbatim text block ends at the first line beginning at the current margin.

Example input:

This is not verbatim text.

  This is verbatim text.
    Whitespace is honored.     # See?
      Whitespace is honored.     # See?

  This is still the same verbatim text block.

This is not verbatim text.

Rendered HTML:

This is not verbatim text.

This is verbatim text.
  Whitespace is honored.     # See?
    Whitespace is honored.     # See?

This is still the same verbatim text block.

This is not verbatim text.

A verbatim text block may not contain nested blocks of any kind – it’s verbatim.

Code Blocks

A special case of verbatim text is the code block, which is merely verbatim text that RDoc recognizes as Ruby code:

In the rendered HTML, the code block:

  • Is indented.

  • Has a contrasting background color.

  • Has syntax highlighting.

Example input:

Consider this method:

  def foo(name = '', value = 0)
    @name = name      # Whitespace is still honored.
    @value = value
  end

Rendered HTML:

Consider this method:

def foo(name = '', value = 0)
  @name = name      # Whitespace is still honored.
  @value = value
end

Pro tip: If your indented Ruby code does not get highlighted, it may contain a syntax error.

A code block may not contain nested blocks of any kind – it’s verbatim.

Block Quotes

You can use the characters >>> (unindented), followed by indented text, to treat the text as a block quote:

Example input:

Here's a block quote:
.
  Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer
  commodo quam iaculis massa posuere, dictum fringilla justo pulvinar.
  Quisque turpis erat, pharetra eu dui at, sollicitudin accumsan nulla.

  Aenean congue ligula eu ligula molestie, eu pellentesque purus
  faucibus. In id leo non ligula condimentum lobortis. Duis vestibulum,
  diam in pellentesque aliquet, mi tellus placerat sapien, id euismod
  purus magna ut tortor.

Rendered HTML:

Here’s a block quote:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer commodo quam iaculis massa posuere, dictum fringilla justo pulvinar. Quisque turpis erat, pharetra eu dui at, sollicitudin accumsan nulla.

Aenean congue ligula eu ligula molestie, eu pellentesque purus faucibus. In id leo non ligula condimentum lobortis. Duis vestibulum, diam in pellentesque aliquet, mi tellus placerat sapien, id euismod purus magna ut tortor.

Note that, unlike verbatim text, single newlines are not honored, but that a double newline begins a new paragraph in the block quote.

A block quote may contain nested blocks, including:

Lists

Each type of list item is marked by a special beginning:

  • Bullet list item: Begins with a hyphen or asterisk.

  • Numbered list item: Begins with digits and a period.

  • Lettered list item: Begins with an alphabetic character and a period.

  • Labeled list item: Begins with one of:

    • Square-bracketed text.

    • A word followed by two colons.

A list begins with a list item and continues, even across blank lines, as long as list items of the same type are found at the same indentation level.

A new list resets the current margin inward. Additional lines of text aligned at that margin are part of the continuing list item.

A list item may be continued on additional lines that are aligned with the first line. See examples below.

A list item may contain nested blocks, including:

Bullet Lists

A bullet list item begins with a hyphen or asterisk.

Example input:

- An item.
- Another.
- An item spanning
  multiple lines.

* Yet another.
- Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  • An item.

  • Another.

  • An item spanning multiple lines.

  • Yet another.

  • Last one.

Numbered Lists

A numbered list item begins with digits and a period.

The items are automatically re-numbered.

Example input:

100. An item.
10. Another.
1. An item spanning
   multiple lines.

1. Yet another.
1000. Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  1. An item.

  2. Another.

  3. An item spanning multiple lines.

  4. Yet another.

  5. Last one.

Lettered Lists

A lettered list item begins with letters and a period.

The items are automatically “re-lettered.”

Example input:

z. An item.
y. Another.
x. An item spanning
   multiple lines.

x. Yet another.
a. Last one.

Rendered HTML:

  1. An item.

  2. Another.

  3. Yet another.

  4. Last one.

Labeled Lists

A labeled list item begins with one of:

  • Square-bracketed text: the label and text are on two lines.

  • A word followed by two colons: the label and text are on the same line.

Example input:

[foo] An item.
bat:: Another.
[bag] An item spanning
      multiple lines.

[bar baz] Yet another.
bam:: Last one.

Rendered HTML:

foo

An item.

bat

Another.

bag

An item spanning multiple lines.

bar baz

Yet another.

bam

Last one.

Headings

A heading begins with up to six equal-signs, followed by heading text. Whitespace between those and the heading text is optional.

Examples:

= Section 1
== Section 1.1
=== Section 1.1.1
=== Section 1.1.2
== Section 1.2
= Section 2
= Foo
== Bar
=== Baz
==== Bam
===== Bat
====== Bad
============Still a Heading (Level 6)
\== Not a Heading

A heading may contain only one type of nested block:

Horizontal Rules

A horizontal rule consists of a line with three or more hyphens and nothing more.

Example input:

---
--- Not a horizontal rule.

-- Also not a horizontal rule.
---

Rendered HTML:


— Not a horizontal rule.

– Also not a horizontal rule.


Directives

Directives for Allowing or Suppressing Documentation
  • # :stopdoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should ignore markup until next :startdoc: directive or end-of-file.

  • # :startdoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should resume parsing markup.

  • # :enddoc::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that RDoc should ignore markup to end-of-file regardless of other directives.

  • # :nodoc::

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute.

    • Specifies that the defined object should not be documented.

    • For a method definition in C code, it the directive must be in the comment line immediately preceding the definition:

      /* :nodoc: */
      static VALUE
      some_method(VALUE self)
      {
          return self;
      }

      Note that this directive has no effect at all when placed at the method declaration:

      /* :nodoc: */
      rb_define_method(cMyClass, "do_something", something_func, 0);

      The above comment is just a comment and has nothing to do with RDoc. Therefore, do_something method will be reported as “undocumented” unless that method or function is documented elsewhere.

    • For a constant definition in C code, this directive can not work because there is no “implementation” place for a constant.

  • # :nodoc: all:

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class or module.

    • Specifies that the class or module should not be documented. By default, however, a nested class or module will be documented.

  • # :doc::

    • Appended to a line of code that defines a class, module, method, alias, constant, or attribute.

    • Specifies the defined object should be documented, even if it otherwise would not be documented.

  • # :notnew: (aliased as :not_new: and :not-new:):

    • Appended to a line of code that defines instance method initialize.

    • Specifies that singleton method new should not be documented. By default, Ruby fakes a corresponding singleton method new, which RDoc includes in the documentation. Note that instance method initialize is private, and so by default is not documented.

For Ruby code, but not for other RDoc sources, there is a shorthand for :stopdoc: and :startdoc::

# Documented.
#--
# Not documented.
#++
# Documented.

For C code, any of directives :startdoc:, :stopdoc:, and :enddoc: may appear in a stand-alone comment:

/* :startdoc: */
/* :stopdoc: */
/* :enddoc: */
Directive for Specifying RDoc Source Format
  • # :markup: type:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the format for the RDoc input; parameter type is one of markdown, rd, rdoc, tomdoc.

Directives for HTML Output
  • # :title: text:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the title for the HTML output.

  • # :main: filename:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the HTML file to be displayed first.

Directives for Method Documentation
  • # :call-seq::

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the calling sequence to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual calling sequence in the code. See method call_seq_directive.

    Note that RDoc can build the calling sequence for a Ruby-coded method, but not for other languages. You may want to override that by explicitly giving a :call-seq: directive if you want to include:

    • A return type, which is not automatically inferred.

    • Multiple calling sequences.

    For C code, the directive may appear in a stand-alone comment.

  • # :args: arg_names (aliased as :arg:):

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the arguments to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual arguments in the code. See method args_directive.

  • # :yields: arg_names (aliased as :yield:):

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies the yield arguments to be reported in the HTML, overriding the actual yield in the code. See method yields_directive.

Directives for Organizing Documentation

By default, RDoc groups:

  • Singleton methods together in alphabetical order.

  • Instance methods and their aliases together in alphabetical order.

  • Attributes and their aliases together in alphabetical order.

You can use directives to modify those behaviors.

  • # :section: section_title:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that following methods are to be grouped into the section with the given section_title, or into the default section if no title is given. The directive remains in effect until another such directive is given, but may be temporarily overridden by directive :category:. See below.

    The comment block containing this directive:

    • Must be separated by a blank line from the documentation for the next item.

    • May have one or more lines preceding the directive. These will be removed, along with any trailing lines that match them. Such lines may be visually helpful.

    • Lines of text that are not so removed become the descriptive text for the section.

    Example:

    # ----------------------------------------
    # :section: My Section
    # This is the section that I wrote.
    # See it glisten in the noon-day sun.
    # ----------------------------------------
    
    ##
    # Comment for some_method
    def some_method
      # ...
    end
    

    You can use directive :category: to temporarily override the current section.

  • # :category: section_title:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that just one following method is to be included in the given section, or in the default section if no title is given. Subsequent methods are to be grouped into the current section.

Directive for Including a File
  • # :include: filepath:

    • Appears on a line by itself.

    • Specifies that the contents of the given file are to be included at this point. The file content is shifted to have the same indentation as the colon at the start of the directive.

      The file is searched for in the directory containing the current file, and then in each of the directories given with the --include command-line option.

    For C code, the directive may appear in a stand-alone comment

Text Markup

Text markup is metatext that affects HTML rendering:

  • Typeface: italic, bold, monofont.

  • Character conversions: copyright, trademark, certain punctuation.

  • Links.

  • Escapes: marking text as “not markup.”

Typeface Markup

Typeface markup can specify that text is to be rendered as italic, bold, or monofont.

Typeface markup may contain only one type of nested block:

  • More typeface markup: italic, bold, monofont.

Italic

Text may be marked as italic via HTML tag <i> or <em>.

Example input:

<i>Italicized words</i> in a paragraph.

.
  <i>Italicized words in a block quote</i>.

- <i>Italicized words</i> in a list item.

====== <i>Italicized words</i> in a Heading

<i>Italicized passage containing *bold* and +monofont+.</i>

Rendered HTML:

Italicized words in a paragraph.

Italicized words in a block quote.

  • Italicized words in a list item.

Italicized words in a Heading

Italicized passage containing bold and monofont.

A single word may be italicized via a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed underscores.

Example input:

_Italic_ in a paragraph.

.
  _Italic_ in a block quote.

- _Italic_ in a list item.

====== _Italic_ in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Italic in a paragraph.

Italic in a block quote.

  • Italic in a list item.

Italic in a Heading
Bold

Text may be marked as bold via HTML tag <b>.

Example input:

<b>Bold words</b> in a paragraph.

.
  <b>Bold words</b> in a block quote.

- <b>Bold words</b> in a list item.

====== <b>Bold words</b> in a Heading

<b>Bold passage containing _italics_ and +monofont+.</b>

Rendered HTML:

Bold words in a paragraph.

Bold words in a block quote.

  • Bold words in a list item.

Bold words in a Heading

Bold passage containing italics and monofont.

A single word may be made bold via a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed asterisks.

Example input:

*Bold* in a paragraph.

.
  *Bold* in a block quote.

- *Bold* in a list item.

===== *Bold* in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Bold in a paragraph.

Bold in a block quote.

  • Bold in a list item.

Bold in a Heading
Monofont

Text may be marked as monofont – sometimes called ‘typewriter font’ – via HTML tag <tt> or <code>.

Example input:

<tt>Monofont words</tt> in a paragraph.

.
  <tt>Monofont words</tt> in a block quote.

- <tt>Monofont words</tt> in a list item.

====== <tt>Monofont words</tt> in heading

<tt>Monofont passage containing _italics_ and *bold*.</tt>

Rendered HTML:

Monofont words in a paragraph.

Monofont words in a block quote.

  • Monofont words in a list item.

Monofont words in heading

Monofont passage containing italics and bold.

A single word may be made monofont by a shorthand: prefixed and suffixed plus-signs.

Example input:

+Monofont+ in a paragraph.

.
  +Monofont+ in a block quote.

- +Monofont+ in a list item.

====== +Monofont+ in a Heading

Rendered HTML:

Monofont in a paragraph.

Monofont in a block quote.

  • Monofont in a list item.

Monofont in a Heading

Character Conversions

Certain combinations of characters may be converted to special characters; whether the conversion occurs depends on whether the special character is available in the current encoding.

  • (c) converts to © (copyright character); must be lowercase.

  • (r) converts to ® (registered trademark character); must be lowercase.

  • 'foo' converts to ‘foo’ (smart single-quotes).

  • "foo" converts to “foo” (smart double-quotes).

  • foo ... bar converts to foo … bar (1-character ellipsis).

  • foo -- bar converts to foo – bar (1-character en-dash).

  • foo --- bar converts to foo — bar (1-character em-dash).

Certain strings in RDoc text are converted to links. Any such link may be suppressed by prefixing a backslash. This section shows how to link to various targets.

Class
  • On-page: DummyClass links to DummyClass.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias links to RDoc::Alias.

Module
Constant
  • On-page: DUMMY_CONSTANT links to DUMMY_CONSTANT.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Text::MARKUP_FORMAT links to RDoc::Text::MARKUP_FORMAT.

Singleton Method
  • On-page: ::dummy_singleton_method links to ::dummy_singleton_method.

  • Off-pageRDoc::TokenStream::to_html links to RDoc::TokenStream::to_html.

Note: Occasionally RDoc is not linked to a method whose name has only special characters. Check whether the links you were expecting are actually there. If not, you’ll need to put in an explicit link; see below.

Pro tip: The link to any method is available in the alphabetical table of contents at the top left of the page for the class or module.

Instance Method
  • On-page: #dummy_instance_method links to dummy_instance_method.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#html_name links to RDoc::Alias#html_name.

    See the Note and Pro Tip immediately above.

Attribute
  • On-page: #dummy_attribute links to dummy_attribute.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#name links to RDoc::Alias#name.

Alias
  • On-page: #dummy_instance_alias links to dummy_instance_alias.

  • Off-page: RDoc::Alias#new_name links to RDoc::Alias#new_name.

Protocol http
  • Linked: http://yahoo.com links to yahoo.com.

Protocol https
Protocol www
Protocol ftp
Protocol mailto
Protocol irc
Image Filename Extensions
  • Link: https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png is converted to an in-line HTML img tag, which displays the image in the HTML:

    Also works for bmp, gif, jpeg, and jpg files.

    Note: Works only for a fully qualified URL.

Heading
  • Link: RDoc::RD@LICENSE links to LICENSE at RDoc::RDoc::RD.

Note that spaces in the actual heading are represented by + characters in the linkable text.

  • Link: RDoc::Options@Saved+Options links to Saved Options at RDoc::Options.

Punctuation and other special characters must be escaped like CGI.escape.

Pro tip: The link to any heading is available in the alphabetical table of contents at the top left of the page for the class or module.

Section

See Directives for Organizing Documentation.

  • Link: RDoc::Markup::ToHtml@Visitor links to Visitor at RDoc::Markup::ToHtml.

If a section and a heading share the same name, the link target is the section.

Single-Word Text Link

Use square brackets to create single-word text link:

  • GitHub[https://github.com] links to GitHub.

Multi-Word Text Link

Use square brackets and curly braces to create a multi-word text link.

rdoc-ref Scheme

A link with the rdoc-ref: scheme links to the referenced item, if that item exists. The referenced item may be a class, module, method, file, etc.

  • Class: Alias[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Alias] links to RDoc::Alias.

  • Module: RDoc[rdoc-ref:RDoc] links to RDoc.

  • Method: foo[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml#handle_regexp_RDOCLINK] links to foo.

  • Constant: bar[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml::LIST_TYPE_TO_HTML] links to bar.

  • Attribute: baz[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Markup::ToHtml#code_object] links to baz.

  • Alias: bad[rdoc-ref:RDoc::MarkupReference#dummy_instance_alias] links to bad.

If the referenced item does not exist, no link is generated and entire rdoc-ref: square-bracketed clause is removed from the resulting text.

  • Nosuch[rdoc-ref:RDoc::Nosuch] is rendered as Nosuch.

rdoc-label Scheme
Simple

You can specify a link target using this form, where the second part cites the id of an HTML element.

This link refers to the constant DUMMY_CONSTANT on this page:

  • {DUMMY_CONSTANT}[rdoc-label:DUMMY_CONSTANT]

Thus:

DUMMY_CONSTANT

With Return

You can specify both a link target and a local label that can be used as the target for a return link. These two links refer to each other:

  • {go to addressee}[rdoc-label:addressee:sender]

  • {return to sender}[rdoc-label:sender:addressee]

Thus:

go to addressee

Some text.

return to sender

link: Scheme
rdoc-image Scheme

Use the rdoc-image scheme to display an image that is also a link:

# {rdoc-image:path/to/image}[link_target]
  • Link: {rdoc-image:https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png}[https://www.ruby-lang.org] displays image https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png as a link to https://www.ruby-lang.org.

A relative path as the target also works:

  • Link: {rdoc-image:https://www.ruby-lang.org/images/header-ruby-logo@2x.png}[./Alias.html] links to ./Alias.html

Escaping Text

Text that would otherwise be interpreted as markup can be “escaped,” so that it is not interpreted as markup; the escape character is the backslash ('\').

In a verbatim text block or a code block, the escape character is always preserved:

Example input:

This is not verbatim text.

  This is verbatim text, with an escape character \.

This is not a code block.

  def foo
    'String with an escape character.'
  end

Rendered HTML:

This is not verbatim text.

This is verbatim text, with an escape character \.

This is not a code block.

def foo
  'This is a code block with an escape character \.'
end

In typeface markup (italic, bold, or monofont), an escape character is preserved unless it is immediately followed by nested typeface markup.

Example input:

This list is about escapes; it contains:

- <tt>Monofont text with unescaped nested _italic_</tt>.
- <tt>Monofont text with escaped nested \_italic_</tt>.
- <tt>Monofont text with an escape character \</tt>.

Rendered HTML:

This list is about escapes; it contains:

  • Monofont text with unescaped nested italic.

  • Monofont text with escaped nested _italic_.

  • Monofont text with an escape character \ .

In other text-bearing blocks (paragraphs, block quotes, list items, headings):

  • A single escape character immediately followed by markup escapes the markup.

  • A single escape character followed by whitespace is preserved.

  • A single escape character anywhere else is ignored.

  • A double escape character is rendered as a single backslash.

    Example input:

    This list is about escapes; it contains:
    
    - An unescaped class name, RDoc, that will become a link.
    - An escaped class name, \RDoc, that will not become a link.
    - An escape character followed by whitespace \ .
    - An escape character \that is ignored.
    - A double escape character \\ that is rendered
      as a single backslash.

    Rendered HTML:

    This list is about escapes; it contains:

    • An unescaped class name, RDoc, that will become a link.

    • An escaped class name, RDoc, that will not become a link.

    • An escape character followed by whitespace \ .

    • An escape character that is ignored.

    • A double escape character \ that is rendered as a single backslash.

Documentation Derived from Ruby Code

Class

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Class name.

  • Parent class.

  • Singleton methods.

  • Instance methods.

  • Aliases.

  • Constants.

  • Attributes.

Module

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Module name.

  • Singleton methods.

  • Instance methods.

  • Aliases.

  • Constants.

  • Attributes.

Method

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Method name.

  • Arguments.

  • Yielded values.

See method.

Alias

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Alias name.

  • Aliased name.

See dummy_instance_alias and dummy_instance_method.

Constant

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Constant name.

See DUMMY_CONSTANT.

Attribute

By default, RDoc documents:

  • Attribute name.

  • Attribute type ([R], [W], or [RW])

See dummy_attribute.

Constants

DUMMY_CONSTANT

Example constant.

Attributes

dummy_attribute[RW]

Example attribute.

dummy_attribute_alias[RW]

Example attribute.

Public Class Methods

dummy_singleton_method(foo, bar) click to toggle source

Example singleton method.

# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1219
def self.dummy_singleton_method(foo, bar); end

Public Instance Methods

args_directive(baz) click to toggle source

The :args: directive overrides the actual arguments found in the Ruby code.

Click on the calling sequence to see the code.

# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1267
def args_directive(foo, bar) # :args: baz
  nil
end
call_seq_directive(foo, bar) click to toggle source
Can be anything → bar
Also anything more → baz or bat

The :call-seq: directive overrides the actual calling sequence found in the Ruby code.

  • It can specify anything at all.

  • It can have multiple calling sequences.

This one includes Can be anything -> foo, which is nonsense.

Note that the “arrow” is two characters, hyphen and right angle-bracket, which is made into a single character in the HTML.

Click on the calling sequence to see the code.

Here is the :call-seq: directive given for the method:

:call-seq:
  call_seq_directive(foo, bar)
  Can be anything -> bar
  Also anything more -> baz or bat
# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1259
def call_seq_directive
  nil
end
dummy_instance_alias(foo, bar)
dummy_instance_method(foo, bar) click to toggle source

Example instance method.

# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1222
def dummy_instance_method(foo, bar); end
Also aliased as: dummy_instance_alias, dummy_instance_alias
method(foo, bar) { |'baz'| ... } click to toggle source

This method is documented only by RDoc, except for these comments.

Click on the calling sequence to see the code.

# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1283
def method(foo, bar)
  yield 'baz'
end
yields_directive(foo, bar) { |'bat'| ... } click to toggle source

The :yields: directive overrides the actual yield found in the Ruby code.

Click on the calling sequence to see the code.

# File rdoc/markup_reference.rb, line 1275
def yields_directive(foo, bar) # :yields: 'bat'
  yield 'baz'
end