Natural Docs

Natural Docs
Original author(s) Greg Valure
Stable release 1.52 / April 21, 2011
Written in Perl
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Documentation generator
License Affero General Public License
Website NaturalDocs.org

Natural Docs is a multi-language documentation generator. It is written in Perl and is available as free software under the terms of the Affero General Public License. It attempts to keep the comments written in source code just as readable as the generated documentation. It is written and maintained by Greg Valure.

Background

Theoretically, Natural Docs can generate documentation from any language that can support comments, or from plain text files. When executed, it can automatically document functions, variables, classes, and inheritance from ActionScript, C#, and Perl regardless of existing documentation in the source code. In all other languages, these need to be explicitly documented for them to be generated. It can generate documentation in HTML, either with frames or without.

Unlike Javadoc, it is not considered an industry standard for documenting in any language, although it can incorporate Javadoc documentation for languages with "full support."[1] It is used by some hobbyists and companies, such as CNET Networks, Inc. and Iron Realms Entertainment.[2][3] It has gained popularity amongst ActionScript developers because no other free documentation generator exists that fully supports ActionScript and because it generates higher-quality output than similar generators that partially support the language, such as ROBODoc.

Example

This is an example of the documentation style:

/*
 * Function: Multiply
 * 
 * Multiplies two integers.
 *
 * Parameters:
 *    x - The first integer.
 *    y - The second integer.
 *
 * Returns:
 *    The two integers multiplied together.
 *
 * See Also:
 *    <Divide>
 */

int Multiply (int x, int y)
   {  return x * y;  };

For comparison, this is how the same thing would be documented with Javadoc:

/** 	 
 * Multiplies two integers. 	 
 * 	 
 * @param x The first integer. 	 
 * @param y The second integer. 	 
 * @return The two integers multiplied together. 	 
 * @see Divide 	 
 */ 	 

int Multiply (int x, int y) 	 
   { return x * y; };

See also

Notes and references

Further reading

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