org-commentary
— generate or update conventional library headers using Org mode files.
If you have a README file with the description of your Emacs Lisp package (which you definetely should have), you may as well want to use that file as the canonical source of the documentation for the package. However, there is another place which needs this documentation: the commentary section of your main library file; you can update it manually, but it’s tedious and error prone (not to mention it’s a violation of the DRY principle).
Org mode has built-in export facilities which can be used to convert Org documents
into various formats, including a simple plain text format (ascii
backend).
This package employs these facilities to generate library headers from Org files automatically; it may be used either from inside of Emacs or from the command line.
You can skip this section if you’re going to use org-commentary
as a development dependency
of a Cask-managed project.
org-commentary
is available on both MELPA and MELPA Stable. Enable the corresponding
repository by adding an entry to package-archives
:
(require 'package)
;; you can enable MELPA Stable instead:
;; (add-to-list 'package-archives
;; '("melpa-stable" . "https://stable.melpa.org/packages/"))
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("melpa" . "https://melpa.org/packages/"))
(package-initialize)
See the documentation on more details about setting up MELPA repositories.
To install org-commentary
use Emacs’ package menu at M-x list-packages
or run
M-x package-install RET org-commentary RET
.
Note: these steps are written with assumption you’re using Cask for project management;
otherwise, see Not using Cask? section below for instructions on how to use org-commentary
CLI without Cask.
- [Optional] If you have installed
org-commentary
manually, create a link toorg-commentary
:$ cask link org-commentary path/to/org-commentary/installation
- Add
org-commentary
to the development dependencies of your library:(development (depends-on "org-commentary"))
Fetch dependencies:
$ cask install
- Put the library header boilerplate in your ELisp file.
- Generate Commentary section of the library headers:
$ cask exec org-commentary README.org your-package.el
- [Optional] Generate Change Log section of the library headers:
$ cask exec org-commentary --section changelog CHANGELOG.org your-package.el
- Commit.
org-commentary
provides an executable script which can be invoked like this:
$ cask exec org-commentary [OPTION]... ORG-FILE ELISP-FILE
Run cask exec org-commentary --help
to see available options.
Provided org-commentary
is installed via the built-in package manager, you can
invoke it from the shell like this:
$ emacs -Q --batch --eval '(package-initialize)' -l org-commentary-cli -f \
org-commentary -- [OPTION]... ORG-FILE ELISP-FILE
For example, to see available options, run
$ emacs -Q --batch --eval '(package-initialize)' -l org-commentary-cli -f org-commentary -- --help
Use M-x describe-function <NAME>
for details.
- command
org-commentary-update
Update library headers using the content of an Org document.
- function
org-commentary-export-buffer-as-string
.Export the Org document opened in the current buffer as a string.
- function
org-commentary-export-file-as-string
.Export an Org document as a string.
The user can set a number of options which affect the exporting process.
Each option can be set in several ways:
- in-file keyword
A line which starts with a
#+
followed by a keyword, a colon and then individual words defining a setting. Example:#+TITLE: the title of the document
- in-file option
An option in compact form using the
#+OPTIONS
keyword:#+OPTIONS: opt1 opt2 opt3 ... optN
opt
consists of a short key followed by a value. For example, optiontoc:
toggles inclusion of the table of contents; the following setting excludes the table of contens from export:#+OPTIONS: toc:nil
Accepted values vary from option to option.
To specify a rather long list if such options, one can use several
#+OPTIONS
lines. - property
An option specified via the optional property list
EXT-PLIST
passed as the last argument of the public functions (see the API section). For example, to enable export using UTF-8 characters, pass(list :ascii-charset 'utf-8)
as the last argument of an export function. - variable
A global variable.
This package also enables setting the options via command line arguments, which are mapped to the corresponding properties.
In-file settings take precedence over keyword properties, which in turn override global variables.
This section gives a brief description of common options; for more details, see the dedicated sections (Export settings, Publishing options) of the Org mode manual.
The table of content is normally inserted before the first headline of the file.
- in-file option
toc:
If this options is a number, use this number as the depth of the generated TOC. Setting this option to
nil
disables default TOC.Synonyms:
- property
:toc
- variable
org-commentary-with-toc
- property
- in-file keyword
#+TOC
Insert TOC at the current position.
See Table of contents for more details.
- in-file keyword
#+EXCLUDE_TAGS
The tags that exclude a tree from export (the default value is
:noexport:
).Alternatives:
- in-file option
exclude-tags:
- property
:exclude-tags
- variable
org-export-exclude-tags
- in-file option
- in-file keyword
#+INCLUDE_TAGS
The tags that select a tree for export (the default value is
:export:
). This setting takes precedence over#+EXCLUDE_TAGS
.Alternatives:
- in-file option
select-tags:
- property
:select-tags
- variable
org-export-select-tags
- in-file option
Note: you need to specify custom drawers using the #+DRAWERS
keyword for
Org mode versions prior to 8.3.
- in-file optons
d:
A list of drawers to include. If the first element is the atom
not
, specify drawers to exclude instead.Alternatives:
- property
:with-drawers
- variable
org-export-with-drawers
- property
- in-file option
tags:
Toggles inclusion of tags.
Alternatives:
- property
:with-tags
- variable
org-export-with-tags
- property
- property
:ascii-charset
The charset allowed to represent various elements and objects during export (the default value is
ascii
).Alternatives:
- variable
org-ascii-charset
, - command-line argument
--charset
(-c
)
- variable
You need Cask installed (see docs).
Clone the repository:
$ git clone [email protected]:smaximov/org-commentary.git
Install dependencies:
$ make dep-install
Make sure all tests pass:
$ make test
Update package’s commentary header if you have made changes to README.org (do not edit it by hand!):
$ make update-headers
Commit final changes and create a pull request, describing briefly what it does.
- org2elcomment - provides an interactive function to update the commentary section of an Emacs Lisp file using the contents of an Org file opened in the current buffer.
- make-readme-markdown - in contrast to
org-commentary
, this package treats an Emacs Lisp file as the canonical source of documentation. That file is used to generateREADME
in the Markdown format. The package provides additional features like auto-detected badges and API documentation of public functions.
This program is distributed under the terms of GNU General Public License, version 3 or any later version. See COPYING for details.