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Here are some tips and conventions for the writing of documentation strings. You can check many of these conventions by running the command M-x checkdoc-minor-mode.
apropos
.
You can fill the text if that looks good. Emacs Lisp mode fills
documentation strings to the width specified by
emacs-lisp-docstring-fill-column
. However, you can sometimes
make a documentation string much more readable by adjusting its line
breaks with care. Use blank lines between sections if the
documentation string is long.
For a function, the first line should briefly answer the question, “What does this function do?” For a variable, the first line should briefly answer the question, “What does this value mean?”
Don't limit the documentation string to one line; use as many lines as you need to explain the details of how to use the function or variable. Please use complete sentences for the rest of the text too.
eval
refers to its first argument as ‘FORM’, because the
actual argument name is form
:
Evaluate FORM and return its value.
Also write metasyntactic variables in capital letters, such as when you show the decomposition of a list or vector into subunits, some of which may vary. ‘KEY’ and ‘VALUE’ in the following example illustrate this practice:
The argument TABLE should be an alist whose elements have the form (KEY . VALUE). Here, KEY is ...
foo
, write “foo”, not
“Foo” (which is a different symbol).
This might appear to contradict the policy of writing function argument values, but there is no real contradiction; the argument value is not the same thing as the symbol that the function uses to hold the value.
If this puts a lower-case letter at the beginning of a sentence and that annoys you, rewrite the sentence so that the symbol is not at the start of it.
t
and nil
without surrounding punctuation. For example:
CODE can be ‘lambda’, nil, or t.
See Quotation Marks, for how to enter curved single quotes.
Documentation strings can also use an older single-quoting convention, which quotes symbols with grave accent ` and apostrophe ': `like-this' rather than ‘like-this’. This older convention was designed for now-obsolete displays in which grave accent and apostrophe were mirror images. Documentation using this convention is converted to the user's preferred format when it is copied into a help buffer. See Keys in Documentation.
Help mode automatically creates a hyperlink when a documentation string uses a single-quoted symbol name, if the symbol has either a function or a variable definition. You do not need to do anything special to make use of this feature. However, when a symbol has both a function definition and a variable definition, and you want to refer to just one of them, you can specify which one by writing one of the words ‘variable’, ‘option’, ‘function’, or ‘command’, immediately before the symbol name. (Case makes no difference in recognizing these indicator words.) For example, if you write
This function sets the variable `buffer-file-name'.
then the hyperlink will refer only to the variable documentation of
buffer-file-name
, and not to its function documentation.
If a symbol has a function definition and/or a variable definition, but those are irrelevant to the use of the symbol that you are documenting, you can write the words ‘symbol’ or ‘program’ before the symbol name to prevent making any hyperlink. For example,
If the argument KIND-OF-RESULT is the symbol `list', this function returns a list of all the objects that satisfy the criterion.
does not make a hyperlink to the documentation, irrelevant here, of the
function list
.
Normally, no hyperlink is made for a variable without variable documentation. You can force a hyperlink for such variables by preceding them with one of the words ‘variable’ or ‘option’.
Hyperlinks for faces are only made if the face name is preceded or followed by the word ‘face’. In that case, only the face documentation will be shown, even if the symbol is also defined as a variable or as a function.
To make a hyperlink to Info documentation, write the single-quoted name of the Info node (or anchor), preceded by ‘info node’, ‘Info node’, ‘info anchor’ or ‘Info anchor’. The Info file name defaults to ‘emacs’. For example,
See Info node `Font Lock' and Info node `(elisp)Font Lock Basics'.
Finally, to create a hyperlink to URLs, write the single-quoted URL, preceded by ‘URL’. For example,
The home page for the GNU project has more information (see URL `https://www.gnu.org/').
forward-char
.
(This is normally ‘C-f’, but it may be some other character if the
user has moved key bindings.) See Keys in Documentation.
It is not practical to use ‘\\[...]’ very many times, because display of the documentation string will become slow. So use this to describe the most important commands in your major mode, and then use ‘\\{...}’ to display the rest of the mode's keymap.
The argument FOO can be either a number \(a buffer position) or a string (a file name).
This prevents the open-parenthesis from being treated as the start of a defun (see Defuns).
dired-find-file
is:
In Dired, visit the file or directory named on this line.
defcustom
. See Defining Variables.
nil
values are equivalent and indicate explicitly what
nil
and non-nil
mean.