typedoc-plugin-external-module-map
v2.1.0
Published
Specify the Typedoc Module of a file using a regular expression on the filename
Downloads
29,529
Readme
typedoc-plugin-external-module-map
What
A plugin for Typedoc
When trying to unify documentation for multiple modules residing inside a shared source repository, the default way Typedoc assignes top-level module names might not satisfy.
This plugin allows you to specify a regular expression with a capture group. This is then used to collect related items into one module.
This plugin is inspired by, and based on, https://github.com/christopherthielen/typedoc-plugin-external-module-name , but does not require you to add additional annotations to each .ts file in your project.
Suppose you have
module/@mycompany/thing1/index.ts
module/@mycompany/thing1/src/otherfiles.ts
module/@mycompany/thing2/index.ts
module/@mycompany/thing2/src/otherfiles.ts
Typedoc will create four "External Modules", named for each .ts file.
- "@mycompany/thing1/index"
- "@mycompany/thing1/src/otherfiles"
- "@mycompany/thing2/index"
- "@mycompany/thing1/src/otherfiles"
This plugin allows each file to specify the Typedoc External Module its code should belong to. If multiple files belong to the same module, they are merged.
This allows more control over the modules that Typedoc generates. Instead of the four modules above, we could group them into two:
- thing1
- thing2
Installing
Typedoc 0.4 has the ability to discover and load typedoc plugins found in node_modules. Simply install the plugin and run typedoc.
However, Typedoc 0.24 did away with that, so now you have to specify it explicitly every time.
npm install --save typedoc-plugin-external-module-map
typedoc --plugin typedoc-plugin-external-module-map
Usage
This plugin adds a new input option
--external-modulemap ".*\/modules\/@mycompany\/([\\w\\-_]+)\/"
If you specify it from the command line, be sure to escape the input string so bash doesn't expand it.
It is probably easier to create a typedoc options file (typedoc.json) and add it there:
{
"name": "My Library",
"mode": "modules",
"out": "doc",
"theme": "default",
"ignoreCompilerErrors": "false",
"preserveConstEnums": "true",
"exclude": "*.spec.ts",
"external-modulemap": ".*\/modules\/@mycompany\/([\\w\\-_]+)\/",
"stripInternal": "false"
}
If your pattern is not expressable in a single regexp, you can provide an array of regexps in the .json file. First to match will return the value.
Example:
{
"name": "My Library",
"mode": "modules",
"out": "doc",
"theme": "default",
"ignoreCompilerErrors": "false",
"preserveConstEnums": "true",
"exclude": "*.spec.ts",
"external-modulemap": [
".*/(types/[\\w\\-_]+)/",
".*/(core/decorators/[\\w\\-_]+)/",
".*/subfolder/(core/[\\w\\-_]+)/",
],
"stripInternal": "false"
}
Entrypoint Strategy "Packages"
The new features in Typedoc of "entryPointStrategy": "packages"
, or using @group
or @category
with the appropriate base plugins have mostly superseeded this plugin, but there are still a few cases in which it makes sense. Ie if you have sub-packages, or multiple entry points.
In these cases, you use the entrypoint strategy for the top level navigation, and then in the individual projects, place a typedoc.json with the external-modulemap configuration specific to the package.
The configuration will not be picked up from the top-level typedoc.json