Provided by: monodoc-base_6.8.0.105+dfsg-3.6ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       monodocer - ECMA Documentation Format Support

SYNOPSIS

       monodocer [OPTIONS]*

OPTIONS

       -assembly:ASSEMBLY
              ASSEMBLY is a .NET assembly to generate documentation stubs for.

              Specify a file path or the name of a GAC'd assembly.

       -delete
              Allow  monodocer  to  delete  members  from documentation files.  The only members deleted are for
              members which are no longer present within the assembly.

              If a type is no longer present, the documentation file is not deleted, but is instead  renamed  to
              have a .remove extension.

       -?, -help
              Show program argument information.

       -ignoremembers
              Do not update members.

              This  will  add  documentation stubs for added types, but will not add or remove documentation for
              any members of any type (including any added types).

       -importslashdoc:FILE
              FILE is an XML file generated with the /doc:FILE C# compiler flag (e.g.  mcs  -doc:foo.xml  foo.cs
              ).   Import  the  member documentation contained within FILE into the documentation format used by
              monodoc.

       -name:NAME
              NAME is the name of the project this documentation is for.

              This sets the /Overview/Title element within the index.xml file created at the directory specified
              by -path .  This is used by some programs for title information (e.g.  monodocs2html ).

       -namespace:NAMESPACE
              Only update the types within the namespace NAMESPACE .

       -overrides
              Include overridden methods in documentation.

              This normally isn't necessary, as the Mono Documentation Browser will provide a link to  the  base
              type members anyway, as will monodocs2html if the base type is within the same assembly.

       -path:OUTPUT_DIR
              OUTPUT_DIR is the directory which will contain the new/updated documentation stubs.

       -pretty
              Indent the XML files nicely.

       -since:SINCE
              Create a <since/> element for added types and members with the value SINCE .

              For  example,  when  given -since:"Gtk# 2.4" an element will be inserted into the Docs element for
              all added types and type members:
                   <since version="Gtk# 2.4" />
              The Mono Documentation Browser and monodocs2html will use this element to specify in which version
              a member was added.

       -type:TYPE
              Only create/update documentation for the type TYPE .

       -updateto:PATH
              When updating documentation, write the updated documentation files into the directory PATH .

       -V, -version
              Display version and licensing information.

DESCRIPTION

       monodocer has been obsoleted by mdoc(1).  See the mdoc-update(1) man page.

       monodocer is a program that creates XML documentation stubs in the ECMA Documentation  Format.   It  does
       not rely on documentation found within the source code.

       The advantages are:

       *      Code  readability.   Good  documentation  is frequently (a) verbose, and (b) filled with examples.
              (For comparison, compare Microsoft .NET Framework documentation, which is often a page or more  of
              docs for each member, to JavaDoc documentation, which can often be a sentence for each member.)

              Inserting  good  documentation  into  the source code can frequently bloat the source file, as the
              documentation can be longer than the actual method that is being documented.

       *      Localization.  In-source documentation formats (such as /doc ) have no support for multiple  human
              languages.   If  you  need  to  support  more  than one human language for documentation purposes,
              monodocer is useful as it permits each language to get its own directory, and  monodocer  can  add
              types/members for each separate documentation directory.

       *      Administration.  It's not unusual to have separate documentation and development teams.  It's also
              possible  that  the  documentation team will have minimal experience with the programming language
              being used.  In such circumstances, inline documentation is not  desirable  as  the  documentation
              team  could  inadvertantly  insert an error into the source code while updating the documentation.
              Alternatively, you may not want the documentation team to have  access  to  the  source  code  for
              security  reasons.  monodocer allows the documentation to be kept completely separate and distinct
              from the source code used to create the assembly.

       To turn the monodocer documentation into something that can be consumed by the Mono Documentation Browser
       (the desktop help browser, or the web interface for it) it is necessary to compile the documentation into
       a packed format.  This is done with the mdassembler tool, for example, you could use this toolchain  like
       this:

            $ monodocer -assembly:MyWidgets -path:generated_docs
            $ mdassembler --ecma generated_docs -out:MyWidgets

       The  above  would generate a MyWidgets.zip and a MyWidgets.tree that can then be installed in the system.
       In addition to the two files (.zip and .tree) you must provide a .sources file which describes  where  in
       the help system the documentation should be hooked up, it is a very simple XML file, like this:

       <?xml version="1.0"?>
       <monodoc>
         <source provider="ecma" basefile="MyWidgets" path="classlib-gnome"/>
       </monodoc>

       The  above  configuration  file describes that the documentation is in ECMA format (the compiled version)
       that the base file name is MyWidgets and that it should be hooked up in the "classlib-gnome" part of  the
       tree.    If  you  want  to  look  at  the  various  nodes  defined  in the documentation, you can look at
       monodoc.xml file which is typically installed in /usr/lib/monodoc/monodoc.xml.

       Once you have all of your files (.zip, .tree and .sources) you can install them into the system with  the
       following command:

               $ cp MyWidgets.tree MyWidgets.zip MyWidgets.source `pkg-config monodoc --variable sourcesdir`

       The  above  will  copy  the  files  into  the  directory that Monodoc has registered (you might need root
       permissions to do this).   The actual directory is returned by the pkg-config invocation.

STRING ID FORMAT

       String IDs are used to refer to a type or member of a type.  String IDs are documented  in  ECMA-334  3rd
       Edition,  Annex  E.3.1.   They  consist  of  a member type prefix , the full type name (namespace + name,
       separated by '.'), possibly followed by the member name and other information.

       Member type prefixes:

       E:     The   String   ID   refers   to   an   event.    The   event   name   follows   the   type   name:
              E:System.AppDomain.AssemblyLoad

       F:     The    String   ID   refers   to   a   field.    The   field   name   follows   the   type   name:
              F:System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute.SetLastError

       M:     Refers to a constructor or method.  Constructors append .ctor to  the  type  name,  while  methods
              append the method name (with an optional count of the number of generic parameters).

              If  the  constructor  or  method  take  arguments,  these  are listed within parenthesis after the
              constructor/method name:

              M:System.Object..ctor             ,             M:System.String..ctor(System.Char[])             ,
              M:System.String.Concat(System.Object)          ,          M:System.Array.Sort``1(``0[])          ,
              M:System.Collections.Generic.List`1..ctor , M:System.Collections.Generic.List`1.Add(`0) .

       N:     Refers to a namespace, e.g.  N:System

       P:     Refers to a property.  If the property is an indexer or takes parameters, the parameter types  are
              appended   to   the   property  name  and  enclosed  with  parenthesis:  P:System.String.Length  ,
              P:System.String.Chars(System.Int32) .

       T:     The String ID refers to a type, with the number  of  generic  types  appended:  T:System.String  ,
              T:System.Collections.Generic.List`1

       To  make  matters  more  interesting,  generic  types  &  members have two representations: the "unbound"
       representation (shown in examples above), in which class names  have  the  count  of  generic  parameters
       appended  to  their  name.   There  is  also  a  "bound"  representation, in which the binding of generic
       parameters is listed within '{' and '}'.

       Unbound: T:System.Collections.Generic.List`1 , T:System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary`2 .

       Bound:                                                    T:System.Collections.Generic.List{System.Int32}
       T:System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.String,System.Collections.Generic.List{System.Predicate{System.String}}}
       .

       As you can see, bound variants can be arbitrarily complex (just like generics).

       Furthermore, if a generic parameter is bound to the generic parameter of a type or method, the "index" of
       the type/method's generic parameter is used as the binding, so given
            class FooType {
              public static void Foo<T> (System.Predicate<T> predicate) {}
            }
       The  String  ID  for  this  method is M:FooType.Foo``1(System.Predicate{``0}) , as ``0 is the 0th generic
       parameter index which is bound to System.Predicate<T> .

DOCUMENTATION FORMAT

       monodocer generates documentation similar to the Ecma documentation format, as described in ECMA-335  3rd
       Edition, Partition IV, Chapter 7.

       The  principal  difference  from  the ECMA format is that each type gets its own file, within a directory
       identical to the namespace of the type.

       Most of the information within the documentation should not be edited.  This includes  the  type  name  (
       /Type/@FullName    ),    implemented    interfaces   (   /Type/Interfaces   ),   member   information   (
       /Type/Members/Member/@MemberName , /Type/Members/Member/MemberSignature , /Type/Members/Member/MemberType
       , /Type/Members/Member/Parameters , etc.).

       What should be modified are all elements with the text To be added.  , which are present under the //Docs
       elements (e.g.  /Type/Docs , /Type/Members/Member/Docs ).  The contents of the Docs element is  identical
       in semantics and structure to the inline C# documentation format, consisting of these elements (listed in
       ECMA-334 3rd Edition, Annex E, Section 2).  The following are used within the element descriptions:

       CREF   Refers  to  a  class  (or  member) reference, and is a string in the format described above in the
              STRING ID FORMAT section.

       TEXT   Non-XML text, and XML should not be nested.

       XML    Only XML elements should be nested (which indirectly may contain text),  but  non-whitespace  text
              should not be an immediate child node.

       XML_TEXT
              Free-form text and XML, so that other XML elements may be nested.

       The following elements are used in documentation:

       <block subset="SUBSET" type="TYPE">XML_TEXT</block>
              Create  a block of text, similar in concept to a paragraph, but is used to create divisions within
              the text.  To some extent, a <block/> is equivalent to the HTML <h2/> tag.

              SUBSET should always be the value none .

              TYPE specifies the heading and formatting to use.  Recognized types are:

              behaviors Creates a section with the heading Operation .

              note Creates a section with the heading Note: .

              overrides Creates a section with the heading Note to Inheritors .

              usage Creates a section with the heading Usage .

       <c>XML_TEXT</c>
              Set text in a code-like font (similar to the HTML <tt/> element).

       <code lang="LANGUAGE">TEXT</code>
              Display multiple lines of text in a code-like font (similar to the HTML <pre/> element).  LANGUAGE
              is the language this code block is for.  For example, if LANGUAGE is  C#  ,  then  TEXT  will  get
              syntax highlighting for the C# language within the Mono Documentation Browser.

       <example>XML_TEXT</example>
              Indicates an example that should be displayed specially.  For example:
                   <example>
                     <para>An introductory paragraph.</para>
                     <code lang="C#">
                       class Example {
                         public static void Main ()
                         {
                           System.Console.WriteLine ("Hello, World!");
                         }
                       }
                     </code>
                   </example>

       <exception cref="CREF">XML_TEXT</exception>
              Identifies an exception that can be thrown by the documented member.

              <exception/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              CREF  is  the  exception type that is thrown, while XML_TEXT contains the circumstances that would
              cause CREF to be thrown.
                   <exception cref="T:System.ArgumentNullException">
                     <paramref name="foo" /> was <see langword="null" />.
                   </exception>

       <list>XML</list>
              Create  a  list  or  table  of  items.   <list/>  makes   use   of   nested   <item>XML</item>   ,
              <listheader>XML</listheader>  ,  <term>XML_TEXT</term>  ,  and <description>XML_TEXT</description>
              elements.

              Lists have the syntax:
                   <list type="bullet"> <!-- or type="number" -->
                     <item><term>Bullet 1</term></item>
                     <item><term>Bullet 2</term></item>
                     <item><term>Bullet 3</term></item>
                   </list>

              Tables have the syntax:
                   <list type="table">
                     <listheader> <!-- listheader bolds this row -->
                       <term>Column 1</term>
                       <description>Column 2</description>
                       <description>Column 3</description>
                     </listheader>
                     <item>
                       <term>Item 1-A</term>
                       <description>Item 1-B</description>
                       <description>Item 1-C</description>
                     </item>
                     <item>
                       <term>Item 2-A</term>
                       <description>Item 2-B</description>
                       <description>Item 2-C</description>
                     </item>
                   </list>

       <para>XML_TEXT</para>
              Insert a paragraph of XML_TEXT
               .  This is for use within other tags, such as <example/> , <remarks/> , <returns/> , <term/>  and
              <description/> (see <list/> , above), and most other elements.

              For example,
                   <para>This is a paragraph of text.</para>

       <param name="NAME">XML_TEXT</param>
              <param/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Describes the parameter NAME of the current constructor, method, or property:
                   <param name="count">
                     A <see cref="T:System.Int32" /> containing the number
                     of widgets to process.
                   </param>

       <paramref name="NAME" />
              Indicates that NAME is a parameter.

              This  usually  renders  NAME  as italic text, so it is frequently (ab)used as an equivalent to the
              HTML <i/> element.  See the <exception/> documentation (above) for an example.

       <permission cref="CREF">XML_TEXT</permission>
              Documentes the security accessibility requirements of the current member.

              <permission/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              CREF is a type reference to the security permission required, while XML_TEXT is a  description  of
              why the permission is required.
                   <permission cref="T:System.Security.Permissions.FileIOPermission">
                     Requires permission for reading and writing files. See
                     <see cref="F:System.Security.Permissions.FileIOPermissionAccess.Read" />,
                     <see cref="F:System.Security.Permissions.FileIOPermissionAccess.Write" />.
                   </permission>

       <remarks>XML_TEXT</remarks>
              Contains detailed information about a member.

              <remarks/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.
                   <remarks>Insert detailed information here.</remarks>

       <returns>XML_TEXT</returns>

              <remarks/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Describes the return value of a method:
                   <returns>
                     A <see cref="T:System.Boolean" /> specifying whether
                     or not the process can access
                     <see cref="P:Mono.Unix.UnixFileSystemInfo.FullName" />.
                   </returns>

       <see cref="CREF" />
              Creates a link to the specified member within the current text:
                   <see cref="M:Some.Namespace.With.Type.Method" />

       <seealso cref="CREF" />

              <seealso/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Allows  an  entry  to  be generated for the See Also subclause.  Use <see/> to specify a link from
              within text.
                   <seealso cref="P:System.Exception.Message" />

       <since version="VERSION" />

              <since/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Permits specification of which version introduced the specified type or member.
                   <since version="Gtk# 2.4" />

       <summary>DESCRIPTION</summary>

              <summary/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Provides a (brief!) overview about a type or type member.

              This is usually displayed as part of a  class  declaration,  and  should  be  a  reasonably  short
              description of the type/member.  Use <remarks/> for more detailed information.

       <typeparam name="NAME">DESCRPITION</typeparam>
              <typeparam/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              This is used to describe type parameter for a generic type or generic method.

              NAME  is the name of the type parameter, while DESCRIPTION contains a description of the parameter
              (what it's used for, what restrictions it must meet, etc.).
                   <typeparam name="T">The type of the underlying collection</typeparam>

       <typeparamref>
              Used to indicate that a word is a type parameter, for use within other text  blocks  (e.g.  within
              <para/> ).
                   <para>If <typeparamref name="T" /> is a struct, then...</para>

       <value>DESCRIPTION</value>
              <value/> is a top-level element, and should be nested directly under the <Docs/> element.

              Allows a property to be described.
                   <value>
                     A <see cref="T:System.String" /> containing a widget name.
                   </value>

SEE ALSO

       mdassembler(1), mdcs2ecma(1), mdnormalizer(1), mdvalidator(1), monodocs2html(1)

MAILING LISTS

       Visit http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-docs-list for details.

WEB SITE

       Visit http://www.mono-project.com for details

                                                                                                    monodocer(1)