How to Document Your Code Properly

From OpenEMR Project Wiki

We're glad you're interested in developing for OpenEMR, but before you start adding, it's important that you remember to document your code. What follows, is a basic guide for how to document what you are doing.

What is a 'DocBlock'?

A DocBlock is format that evolved from C++. It is a clean, standards compliant way of documenting your code, which allows for easy reading and parsing. A DocBlock begins with the three character line /** and each line of the body begins with a space-asterisk * and the characters */ make the last line of the DocBlock. A DocBlock is placed immediately above the element being documented. A Page-level DocBlock is the first DocBlock and contains the @package tag. Ordinarily there would be an element-level DocBlock next following the page-level DocBlock.

Short DocBlock

A basic DocBlock looks like:

/**
 * Short Description
 * 
 * @since          version number  
 * @param type     argument for a function and what it takes as input
 * @return type    what it returns
 */

Example:

/**
 * test for uppercase
 * 
 * @since            version 0.2  
 * @param string     text to be tested
 * @return boolean   if not obvious, false if not uppercase
 */
function is_caps($my_word) 
{
  return ($my_word === strtoupper($my_word));
}

Long DocBlock

A longer example look like:

/**
 * Short desc
 *
 * Long description first sentence starts here
 * and continues on this line for a while
 * finally concluding here at the end of
 * this paragraph
 *
 * The blank line above denotes a paragraph break
 * 
 * @author       author name <author@email>
 * @since        version number 
 * @param type   argument for a function and what it takes as input
 * @return type  what it returns
 */

Most Available Tags

Here is a partial list of tags available in PhpDocumentor. See PhpDocumentor Manual Listing them as Page- or Element-Level is not meant to restrict usage, but some tags are indeed intended for certain DocBlock levels.

Page Level Doc Block:

The page level DocBlock should appear at the top of the file, after the opening <?php. PhpDocumentor parses a DocBlock as a page-level DocBlock if it precedes another DocBlock or if it is the first DocBlock and contains the @package tag.

 * @author       authorName <author@email>
 * @copyright    authorName date
 * @license      URL name of license (e.g. http://opensource.org/licenses/gpl-license.php GNU General Public License, Version 3) 
 * @package      packageName         groups the class or elements in the file into a "package" in the documentation
 ****** optional tags   
 * @category     categoryName        organize groups of packages, if used include @package tag in DocBlock
 * @subpackage   singleWordName      groupings inside of a package, @package tag must also be present
 * @filesource   The tag can only be used in a page-level DocBlock, 
                    parses the file source of the current file, outputs syntax-highlighted source, creates link
 * @version      version
 * @link         URL, a complete url e.g. http://www.domain.ten/page
Element Level DocBlock:

PhpDocumentor is capable of automatically documenting include statements, define statements, functions, procedural pages, classes, class variables, and class methods. The element level DocBlock is placed immediately above the element.

 * @package      packageName         only for classes at element level

 ****** usually required ******
 * @param        type [$varname]     description (one for each function argument)
 * @return       type                description
 
 ****** optional
 * @author       author name <author@email>
 * @deprecated   notify users of elements that should not be used any longer
 * @example      /path/to/example description, your example for using your code
 * @global       refer to manual -- two usages of @global: definition and function usage.
 * @ignore       to prevent phpDocumentor from documenting an element, such as a duplicate element.
 * @since        version or date when element introduced (e.g. @since Version 21.1)

 * @link         URL, a complete url e.g. http://www.domain.ten/page
 * @see          element reference    create a link to element in the documentation
 * @uses         element reference    ( e.g. @uses my_util_func() )
                   creates link to element documentation and a pseudo-link 'usedby' in the element documentation 

 * @staticvar    type    description of static variable usage in a function
 * @var          type    a data type for a class variable

 ****** special case
 * @access       public or private, if private, element will not be documented, default is public
 * @internal     should not be displayed in public documentation, private information for advanced developers only
In-line DocBlock Tags

Inline tags display in the documentation text flow where they appear. My guess is the {@inheritdoc} is of the most interest, since it can simplify documentation of parent and child classes. PhpDocumentor will automatically inherit the @author tag, @version tag, and @copyright tag from a parent class. Reference the manual for more information.

/**
 * inline tags demonstration
 *
 * This class generates bars using the main algorithm, which also 
 * works heavily with {@link foo()} to rule the world. If I want
 * to use the characters "{@link" in a docblock, I just use "{@}link."  If
 * I want the characters "{@*}" I use "{@}*}"
 *
 * @author ahobbit
 * @copyright middleearth.org XVII
 * @version 1.2.3
 */
class bar
{

}

/**
 * Makes chocolate bars
 *
 * There are two aspects to this class.
 * {@inheritdoc }  In addition, the foo class
 * makes the bars chocolate
 */
class foo extends bar
{

}

The documentation for class foo will include the documentation from class bar.

Where to Use a DocBlock

  • All Files should begin with a page-level DocBlock with at least:
  • @package OpenEMR
  • @license GNU/GPL (the full license will be listed in license.txt and should no longer be included with every file)
  • Classes - For classes you want to use a long description with at least an @author and @since tag
  • Functions - For functions you want to use a short description
  • Use a @param tag for each field your function accepts
  • Use a @return tag to explain the data to be returned

Documentation in Your Development Repository

The API documentation will actually be produced in the main repository. However, you will benefit by having your own documentation capability in your git branch repository on your computer. The PhpDocumentor is available as a Pear package and there are other documentation programs as well. PhpDocumentor is the program of choice, but it does not handle the namespace or closure in PHP and will crash if it encounters these new features.

  • phpDocumentor2 (requires php-5.3 minimum, but not quite ready for prime-time IMHO
  • PHPDoctor download and unpack in your working directory
  • ApiGen uses Nette framework, create API documentation from PHP source (php-5.3 min)
  • doxygen (DockBlock capability assumed, not verified)

Each program, to my knowledge, has an output parameter which lets you store the documentation in the specified directory. In your git repository, I suggest including the documentation directory in the .gitignore file.

The various tags may not be recognized by all programs. See NetBeans wiki for some discussion on this topic.

Inline Documentation

Obviously classes and functions aren't the only places where things are going that need some documentation. For, foreach, while and if statements all can get quite large and might need a little note above them. If you think you have a statement like this that needs a note, please make sure to do so.

External Links