问题
Sphinx doesn't generate docs for __init__(self) by default. I have tried the following:
.. automodule:: mymodule
:members:
and
..autoclass:: MyClass
:members:
In conf.py, setting the following only appends the __init__(self) docstring to the class docstring (the Sphinx autodoc documentation seems to agree that this is the expected behavior, but mentions nothing regarding the problem I'm trying to solve):
autoclass_content = 'both'
回答1:
Here are three alternatives:
To ensure that
__init__()is always documented, you can use autodoc-skip-member in conf.py. Like this:def skip(app, what, name, obj, would_skip, options): if name == "__init__": return False return would_skip def setup(app): app.connect("autodoc-skip-member", skip)This explicitly defines
__init__not to be skipped (which it is by default). This configuration is specified once, and it does not require any additional markup for every class in the .rst source.The special-members option was added in Sphinx 1.1. It makes "special" members (those with names like
__special__) be documented by autodoc.Since Sphinx 1.2, this option takes arguments which makes it more useful than it was previously.
Use
automethod:.. autoclass:: MyClass :members: .. automethod:: __init__This has to be added for every class (cannot be used with
automodule, as pointed out in a comment to the first revision of this answer).
回答2:
You were close. You can use the autoclass_content option in your conf.py file:
autoclass_content = 'both'
回答3:
Over the past years I've written several variants of autodoc-skip-member callbacks for various unrelated Python projects because I wanted methods like __init__(), __enter__() and __exit__() to show up in my API documentation (after all, these "special methods" are part of the API and what better place to document them than inside the special method's docstring).
Recently I took the best implementation and made it part of one of my Python projects (here's the documentation). The implementation basically comes down to this:
def setup(app):
"""Enable Sphinx customizations."""
enable_special_methods(app)
def enable_special_methods(app):
"""
Enable documenting "special methods" using the autodoc_ extension.
:param app: The Sphinx application object.
This function connects the :func:`special_methods_callback()` function to
``autodoc-skip-member`` events.
.. _autodoc: http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/ext/autodoc.html
"""
app.connect('autodoc-skip-member', special_methods_callback)
def special_methods_callback(app, what, name, obj, skip, options):
"""
Enable documenting "special methods" using the autodoc_ extension.
Refer to :func:`enable_special_methods()` to enable the use of this
function (you probably don't want to call
:func:`special_methods_callback()` directly).
This function implements a callback for ``autodoc-skip-member`` events to
include documented "special methods" (method names with two leading and two
trailing underscores) in your documentation. The result is similar to the
use of the ``special-members`` flag with one big difference: Special
methods are included but other types of members are ignored. This means
that attributes like ``__weakref__`` will always be ignored (this was my
main annoyance with the ``special-members`` flag).
The parameters expected by this function are those defined for Sphinx event
callback functions (i.e. I'm not going to document them here :-).
"""
if getattr(obj, '__doc__', None) and isinstance(obj, (types.FunctionType, types.MethodType)):
return False
else:
return skip
Yes, there's more documentation than logic :-). The advantage of defining an autodoc-skip-member callback like this over the use of the special-members option (for me) is that the special-members option also enables documentation of properties like __weakref__ (available on all new-style classes, AFAIK) which I consider noise and not useful at all. The callback approach avoids this (because it only works on functions/methods and ignores other attributes).
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5599254/how-to-use-sphinxs-autodoc-to-document-a-classs-init-self-method