132 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
132 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
# Angular documentation project (https://angular.io)
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Everything in this folder is part of the documentation project. This includes
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* the web site for displaying the documentation
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* the dgeni configuration for converting source files to rendered files that can be viewed in the web site.
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* the tooling for setting up examples for development; and generating plunkers and zip files from the examples.
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## Developer tasks
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We use `yarn` to manage the dependencies and to run build tasks.
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You should run all these tasks from the `angular/aio` folder.
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Here are the most important tasks you might need to use:
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* `yarn` - install all the dependencies.
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* `yarn setup` - install all the dependencies, boilerplate, plunkers, zips and run dgeni on the docs.
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* `yarn setup-local` - same as `setup`, but use the locally built Angular packages for aio and docs examples boilerplate.
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* `yarn build` - create a production build of the application (after installing dependencies, boilerplate, etc).
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* `yarn build-local` - same as `build`, but use `setup-local` instead of `setup`.
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* `yarn start` - run a development web server that watches the files; then builds the doc-viewer and reloads the page, as necessary.
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* `yarn serve-and-sync` - run both the `docs-watch` and `start` in the same console.
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* `yarn lint` - check that the doc-viewer code follows our style rules.
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* `yarn test` - watch all the source files, for the doc-viewer, and run all the unit tests when any change.
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* `yarn e2e` - run all the e2e tests for the doc-viewer.
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* `yarn docs` - generate all the docs from the source files.
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* `yarn docs-watch` - watch the Angular source and the docs files and run a short-circuited doc-gen for the docs that changed.
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* `yarn docs-lint` - check that the doc gen code follows our style rules.
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* `yarn docs-test` - run the unit tests for the doc generation code.
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* `yarn boilerplate:add` - generate all the boilerplate code for the examples, so that they can be run locally. Add the option `--local` to use your local version of Angular contained in the "dist" folder.
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* `yarn boilerplate:remove` - remove all the boilerplate code that was added via `yarn boilerplate:add`.
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* `yarn generate-plunkers` - generate the plunker files that are used by the `live-example` tags in the docs.
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* `yarn generate-zips` - generate the zip files from the examples. Zip available via the `live-example` tags in the docs.
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* `yarn example-e2e` - run all e2e tests for examples
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- `yarn example-e2e --setup` - force webdriver update & other setup, then run tests
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- `yarn example-e2e --filter=foo` - limit e2e tests to those containing the word "foo"
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- `yarn example-e2e --setup --local` - run e2e tests with the local version of Angular contained in the "dist" folder
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* `yarn build-ie-polyfills` - generates a js file of polyfills that can be loaded in Internet Explorer.
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## Using ServiceWorker locally
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Since abb36e3cb, running `yarn start --prod` will no longer set up the ServiceWorker, which
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would require manually running `yarn sw-manifest` and `yarn sw-copy` (something that is not possible
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with webpack serving the files from memory).
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If you want to test ServiceWorker locally, you can use `yarn build` and serve the files in `dist/`
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with `yarn http-server dist -p 4200`.
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For more details see #16745.
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## Guide to authoring
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There are two types of content in the documentation:
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* **API docs**: descriptions of the modules, classes, interfaces, decorators, etc that make up the Angular platform.
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API docs are generated directly from the source code.
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The source code is contained in TypeScript files, located in the `angular/packages` folder.
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Each API item may have a preceding comment, which contains JSDoc style tags and content.
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The content is written in markdown.
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* **Other content**: guides, tutorials, and other marketing material.
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All other content is written using markdown in text files, located in the `angular/aio/content` folder.
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More specifically, there are sub-folders that contain particular types of content: guides, tutorial and marketing.
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* **Code examples**: code examples need to be testable to ensure their accuracy.
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Also, our examples have a specific look and feel and allow the user to copy the source code. For larger
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examples they are rendered in a tabbed interface (e.g. template, HTML, and TypeScript on separate
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tabs). Additionally, some are live examples, which provide links where the code can be edited, executed, and/or downloaded. For details on working with code examples, please read the [Code snippets](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#code-snippets), [Source code markup](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#source-code-markup), and [Live examples](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#live-examples) pages of the [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide).
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We use the [dgeni](https://github.com/angular/dgeni) tool to convert these files into docs that can be viewed in the doc-viewer.
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The [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide) prescribes guidelines for
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writing guide pages, explains how to use the documentation classes and components, and how to markup sample source code to produce code snippets.
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### Generating the complete docs
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The main task for generating the docs is `yarn docs`. This will process all the source files (API and other),
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extracting the documentation and generating JSON files that can be consumed by the doc-viewer.
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### Partial doc generation for editors
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Full doc generation can take up to one minute. That's too slow for efficient document creation and editing.
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You can make small changes in a smart editor that displays formatted markdown:
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>In VS Code, _Cmd-K, V_ opens markdown preview in side pane; _Cmd-B_ toggles left sidebar
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You also want to see those changes displayed properly in the doc viewer
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with a quick, edit/view cycle time.
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For this purpose, use the `yarn docs-watch` task, which watches for changes to source files and only
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re-processes the the files necessary to generate the docs that are related to the file that has changed.
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Since this task takes shortcuts, it is much faster (often less than 1 second) but it won't produce full
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fidelity content. For example, links to other docs and code examples may not render correctly. This is
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most particularly noticed in links to other docs and in the embedded examples, which may not always render
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correctly.
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The general setup is as follows:
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* Open a terminal, ensure the dependencies are installed; run an initial doc generation; then start the doc-viewer:
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```bash
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yarn
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yarn docs
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yarn start
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```
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* Open a second terminal and start watching the docs
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```bash
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yarn docs-watch
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```
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>Alternatively, try the consolidated `serve-and-sync` command that builds, watches and serves in the same terminal window
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```bash
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yarn serve-and-sync
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```
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* Open a browser at https://localhost:4200/ and navigate to the document on which you want to work.
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You can automatically open the browser by using `yarn start -o` in the first terminal.
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* Make changes to the page's associated doc or example files. Every time a file is saved, the doc will
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be regenerated, the app will rebuild and the page will reload.
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* If you get a build error complaining about examples or any other odd behavior, be sure to consult
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the [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide).
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