An HTML version of this documentation can be found at https://docs.perl6.org/. This is currently the recommended way to consume the documentation.
There is also a command line tool called "p6doc".
(If you are browsing this repository via GitHub, it will not display most files correctly, because this is Perl 6 Pod, and GitHub assumes Perl 5 POD).
This module is available via the Perl 6 module ecosystem. Use
zef install p6doc
to install the binaries and make it available in your binaries execution path.
With a Rakudo perl6
executable in 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 panda
or
zef
. You can also do
p6doc -f slurp
to browse the documentation of standard functions. Depending on your disk speed and Rakudo version, it might take a while.
Install dependencies by running the following in the checkout directory:
zef --depsonly install .
If you use rakudobrew
, also run the
following, to update the shims for installed executables:
rakudobrew rehash
In addition to the Perl 6 dependencies, you need to have graphviz
installed, which
on Debian you can do by running
sudo apt-get install graphviz
To build the documentation web pages, simply run
$ make html
After the pages have been generated, you can view them on your local
computer by starting the included app.pl
program:
$ make run
You can then view the examples documentation by pointing your web browser at http://localhost:3000.
You will need at least Mojolicious installed and you will need nodejs to perform highlighting.
Perl 6 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 CONTRIBUTING 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 Perl 6 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.
Q: Which license is this stuff under?
A: Both code and documentation are available under the Artistic License 2.0
as published by The Perl Foundation. See the LICENSE file for the full
text.
I want p6doc and doc.perl6.org to become the No. 1 resource to consult when you want to know something about a Perl 6 feature, be it from the language, or built-in types and routines. I want it to be useful to every Perl 6 programmer.
-- moritz
-
Perl 6 implementations could embed
P<...>
tags in their source code that would then inline the corresponding entry fromp6doc
. This would enable things like&say.WHY
to (dynamically!) retrieve the documentation string fromp6doc
, without having to duplicate the documentation in theCORE.setting
sources or to encode the documentation into the binaries.Example:
# In Rakudo's src/core/IO.pm: #= P<p6doc/&print> sub print(|$) { ... } #= P<p6doc/&say> sub say(|$) { ... } #= P<p6doc/¬e> sub note(|$) { ... }
See LICENSE file for the details of the license of the code in this repository.
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)