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documentize

v3.0.2

Published

Generate a README.md from package.json contents

Downloads

3

Readme

documentize

Generate a README.md from package.json contents. Works with node and io.js.

Why?

Every project worth its salt has a README that answers (at least) the following questions:

  • What's it called?
  • What is it for?
  • How do I install it?
  • How do I use it?
  • How do I test it?
  • What is the license?

With npm modules, most of that info can be gleaned from properties in the package.json file: name, description, scripts.test, preferGlobal, etc. That's why documentize exists. Use it to generate a decent boilerplate README, then iterate from there.

Installation

npm i -g documentize

Usage

# Write to stdout
documentize package.json

# Pipe output into a new file
documentize package.json > README.md

# Add a Travis badge
documentize package.json --travis

# Run tests and add their output
documentize package.json --tests

# Use a custom template
documentize package.json --template template.md

# Do it all
documentize package.json --tests --travis > README.md

# If your package has an example.sh or example.js file, it will be used to
# generate a usage section like this one.

# If your example.js has a require("./") statement, the relative path will be
# replaced with the package name.

Tests

npm install
npm test

Dependencies

  • github-url-to-object: Extract user, repo, and other interesting properties from GitHub URLs
  • hogan.js: A mustache compiler.
  • strip-ansi: Strip ANSI escape codes
  • sync-exec: Synchronous exec with status code support. Requires no external dependencies, no need for node-gyp compilations etc.
  • yargs: Light-weight option parsing with an argv hash. No optstrings attached.

Dev Dependencies

  • mocha: simple, flexible, fun test framework
  • nixt: Simple and powerful testing for command-line apps

License

MIT

See Also

  • mos, a pluggable module that injects content into your markdown files via hidden JavaScript snippets.