Research
Security News
Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
@vuedoc/parser
Advanced tools
Generate a JSON documentation for a Vue file component.
options.features
This package is ESM only : Node 16+ is needed to use it and it must be imported instead of required.
npm install --save @vuedoc/parser
name
field or from the filename)model
, props
, data
, computed properties
,
events
, slots
and methods
@type
,
@param
,
@returns
,
@version
,
@since
,
@deprecated
,
@see
,
@kind
,
@author
and
@ignore
tags)@param <param name>
, @return(s)
, @hidden
, @category
)Name | Description |
---|---|
filename | The filename to parse. Required unless filecontent is passed |
filecontent | The file content to parse. Required unless filename is passed |
encoding | The file encoding. Default is 'utf8' |
features | The component features to parse and extract. Default features: ['name', 'description', 'slots', 'props', 'data', 'computed', 'events', 'methods'] |
loaders | Use this option to define custom loaders for specific languages |
ignoredVisibilities | List of ignored visibilities. Default: ['protected', 'private'] |
composition | Additional composition tokens for advanced components. Default value: { data: [], methods: [], computed: [], props: [] } |
resolver | A resolver object used to resolve imports statements. See definition file types/ImportResolver.d.ts |
plugins | An array of plugins to activate. See Using Plugins section |
jsx | Set to true to enable JSX parsing. Default false |
Found TypeScript definition here.
Given the folowing SFC file test/examples/circle-drawer/circle-drawer-composition.vue, the parsing usage would be:
import { parseComponent } from '@vuedoc/parser';
const options = {
filename: 'test/examples/circle-drawer/circle-drawer-composition.vue',
};
parseComponent(options)
.then((component) => console.log(component))
.catch((err) => console.error(err));
This will print this JSON output:
{
"name": "CircleDrawer",
"description": "Circle Drawer’s goal is, among other things, to test how good the common\nchallenge of implementing an undo/redo functionality for a GUI application\ncan be solved.",
"see": "https://eugenkiss.github.io/7guis/tasks/#circle",
"inheritAttrs": true,
"errors": [],
"warnings": [],
"keywords": [
{
"name": "usage",
"description": "Click on the canvas to draw a circle. Click on a circle to select it.\nRight-click on the canvas to adjust the radius of the selected circle."
}
],
"props": [ /* ... */ ],
"data": [ /* ... */ ],
"computed": [ /* ... */ ],
"slots": [ /* ... */ ],
"events": [ /* ... */ ],
"methods": [ /* ... */ ]
}
Found the complete result here: test/examples/circle-drawer/parsing-result.json
Found more examples here: test/examples
-j, --join # Combine generated documentation for multiple component files into only one
-c, --config <filename> # Use this config file (if argument is used but value is unspecified, defaults to vuedoc.config.js)
-o, --output <file or dir> # The output directory. If absent, the STDOUT will be used
--ignore-name # Ignore the component name on parsing
--ignore-description # Ignore the component description on parsing
--ignore-keywords # Ignore the component keywords on parsing
--ignore-slots # Ignore the component slots on parsing
--ignore-props # Ignore the component props on parsing
--ignore-computed # Ignore the component computed properties on parsing
--ignore-data # Ignore the component data on parsing
--ignore-methods # Ignore the component methods on parsing
--ignore-events # Ignore the component events on parsing
Overwrite Vuedoc Parser configuration using vuedoc.config.js
// vuedoc.config.js
import { Loader } from '@vuedoc/parser';
import { PugLoader } from '@vuedoc/parser/loaders/pug';
export default {
output: 'docs/',
parsing: {
features: ['name', 'description', 'keywords', 'slots', 'model', 'props', 'events', 'methods'],
loaders: [
Loader.extend('pug', PugLoader),
],
},
};
# display the Vuedoc version
vuedoc-json --version
# this print documentation in the standard output
vuedoc-json components/textarea.vue
# generate a JSON documentation in a file docs/textarea.md
vuedoc-json components/textarea.vue --output docs/textarea.json
# generate a JSON documentation all components
vuedoc-json components/*.vue --output docs/
# combine generated documentations of all components into one
vuedoc-json --join components/*.vue --output components.json
# using pipe
cat components/textarea.vue | vuedoc-json -
# using a configuration file
vuedoc-json --config vuedoc.config.js components/*.vue
# using the configuration file vuedoc.config.js
vuedoc-json -c components/*.vue
By default, Vuedoc Parser uses the component's filename to generate the component name.
To set a custom name, use the name
option:
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
name: 'my-checkbox',
};
</script>
You can also use the @name
tag:
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
/**
* @name my-checkbox
*/
export default {
// ...
};
</script>
Composition usage
When using <script setup>
, you need to define a comment block as a first
node of your script.
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script setup>
/**
* @name my-checkbox
*/
import { ref } from 'vue';
const checked = ref(false);
</script>
To add a component description, just add a comment before the export default
statement like:
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
/**
* My awesome custom checkbox component
*/
export default {
// ...
};
</script>
When using <script setup>
, you need to define a comment block as a first
node of your script.
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script setup>
/**
* My awesome custom checkbox component
* @name my-checkbox
*/
import { ref } from 'vue';
const checked = ref(false);
</script>
To document props, annotate your code like:
Legacy usage
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
props: {
/**
* Element ID
*/
id: {
type: String,
required: true,
},
/**
* Element initial value
*/
value: {
type: String,
default: '',
},
},
};
</script>
Vuedoc Parser will automatically extract type
, required
and default
values for
properties.
Composition usage
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script setup>
const props = defineProps({
/**
* Element ID
*/
id: {
type: String,
required: true,
},
/**
* Element initial value
*/
value: {
type: String,
default: '',
},
});
</script>
Vuedoc Parser will automatically extract type
, required
and default
values for
properties.
Composition usage with TypeScript
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script lang="ts" setup>
type Props = {
/**
* Element ID
*/
id: string;
/**
* Element initial value
*/
value?: string;
};
const props = withDefaults(defineProps<Props>(), {
value: '',
});
</script>
Vuedoc Parser will automatically extract type
, required
and default
values from
the type definition.
v-model
propLegacy usage
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
props: [
/**
* The input model value
*/
'modelValue',
],
emits: ['update:modelValue'],
};
</script>
Composition usage
To document a v-model
prop using Composition API, use
defineProps()
macro.
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script setup>
const props = defineProps([
/**
* The input model value
*/
'modelValue',
]);
const emit = defineEmits(['update:modelValue']);
</script>
Vue 2 usage
To document a v-model
prop legacy Vue, use the Vue's
model field.
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
/**
* Use `v-model` to define a reactive value of the checkbox
*/
model: {
prop: 'checked',
event: 'change',
},
props: {
checked: Boolean,
},
};
</script>
To document Vue array string props, just attach a Vuedoc comment to each prop:
Legacy usage
<!-- CustomInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
props: [
/**
* ELement ID
*/
'id',
/**
* The element model value
*/
'value',
],
};
</script>
Composition usage
<script setup>
const props = defineProps([
/**
* ELement ID
*/
'id',
/**
* The element model value
*/
'value',
]);
</script>
@type {typeName}
@default {value}
@kind function
<!-- NumberInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
props: {
/**
* Custom default value
* @type Complex.Object
* @default { anything: 'custom default value' }
*/
custom: {
type: Object,
default: () => {
// complex code
return anythingExpression();
},
},
/**
* The input validation function
* @kind function
* @param {any} value - User input value to validate
* @returns {boolean} - `true` if validation succeeds; `false` otherwise.
*/
validator: {
type: Function,
default: (value) => !Number.isNaN(value),
},
},
};
</script>
interface PropEntry {
kind: 'prop';
name: string;
type: string | string[];
default: string;
required: boolean;
description?: string;
describeModel: boolean;
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
To document data, annotate your code like:
Legacy usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
/**
* Indicates that the control is checked
*/
checked: false,
};
},
};
</script>
Composition usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
import { ref } from 'vue';
export default {
setup() {
return {
/**
* Indicates that the control is checked
*/
checked: ref(false),
};
},
};
</script>
Vuedoc Parser will automatically detect type for each defined data field and catch their initial value.
Special tags for data
@type {typeName}
@initialValue {value}
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
/**
* A data with a complex expression
* @type boolean
* @initialValue false
*/
checked: ExternalHelper.getDefaultValue(),
};
},
};
</script>
Data Entry Interface
interface DataEntry {
kind: 'data';
name: string;
type: string;
initialValue: string;
description?: string;
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
To document computed properties, annotate your code like:
Legacy usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
props: {
checked: Boolean,
},
computed: {
/**
* Indicates that the control is selected
*/
selected () {
return this.checked;
},
},
};
</script>
Vuedoc Parser will automatically extract computed properties dependencies.
Composition usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
import { computed } from 'vue';
export default {
props: {
checked: Boolean,
},
setup(props) {
return {
/**
* Indicates that the control is selected
*/
selected: computed(() => props.checked),
};
},
};
</script>
Usage with <script setup>
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script setup>
import { computed } from 'vue';
const props = defineProps({
checked: Boolean,
});
/**
* Indicates that the control is selected
*/
const selected = computed(() => props.checked);
</script>
Computed Property Entry Interface
interface ComputedEntry {
kind: 'computed';
name: string;
type: string;
dependencies: string[];
description?: string;
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
To document methods, simply use JSDoc tags
@param
and
@returns
:
Legacy usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
methods: {
/**
* Submit form
*
* @param {object} data - Data to submit
* @returns {boolean} true on success; otherwise, false
*/
submit(data) {
return true;
},
},
};
</script>
Composition usage
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script setup>
/**
* Submit form
*
* @param {object} data - Data to submit
* @returns {boolean} true on success; otherwise, false
*/
function submit(data) {
return true;
}
</script>
Special tags for methods
@method <method name>
You can use special tag @method
for non primitive name:
<script>
const METHODS = {
CLOSE: 'closeModal',
};
export default {
methods: {
/**
* Close modal
* @method closeModal
*/
[METHODS.CLOSE] () {},
},
};
</script>
@syntax <custom method syntax>
By default, Vuedoc Parser automatically generates method syntax with typing.
For example, the previous example will generate:
{
kind: 'method',
name: 'closeModal',
params: [],
returns: { type: 'void', description: undefined },
syntax: [
'closeModal(): void'
],
category: undefined,
version: undefined,
description: undefined,
keywords: [],
visibility: 'public'
}
You can overwrite syntax generation by using tag @syntax
. You can also
define multiple syntax examples:
<script>
export default {
methods: {
/**
* @syntax target.addEventListener(type, listener [, options]);
* @syntax target.addEventListener(type, listener [, useCapture]);
* @syntax target.addEventListener(type, listener [, useCapture, wantsUntrusted ]); // Gecko/Mozilla only
*/
addEventListener(type, listener, options, useCapture) {},
},
};
</script>
Method Entry Interface
interface MethodEntry {
kind: 'method';
name: string;
params: MethodParam[];
returns: MethodReturn;
syntax: string[];
description?: string;
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
type MethodParam = {
name: string;
type: NativeTypeEnum | string;
description?: string;
defaultValue?: string;
rest: boolean;
};
type MethodReturn = {
type: string;
description?: string;
};
Legacy usage
To document events using the legacy syntax, use the
emits
field and tags @arg
or @argument
to define arguments:
Array syntax:
<script>
export default {
emits: [
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
*
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
'loading',
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
'input',
],
};
</script>
Object syntax with validation:
<script>
export default {
emits: {
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
*
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
loading: null, // no validation
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
input: (payload) => {
if (payload.email && payload.password) {
return true
} else {
console.warn(`Invalid submit event payload!`)
return false
}
},
},
};
</script>
Composition usage
Array syntax:
<script setup>
const emit = defineEmits([
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
*
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
'loading',
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
'input',
]);
</script>
Object syntax with validation:
<script setup>
const emit = defineEmits({
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
*
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
loading: null, // no validation
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
input: (payload) => {
if (payload.email && payload.password) {
return true
} else {
console.warn(`Invalid submit event payload!`)
return false
}
},
});
</script>
Composition usage with TypeScript
<script setup>
const emit = defineEmits<{
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
*
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
(e: 'loading', value: boolean): void
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
(e: 'input', value: boolean): void
}>()
</script>
Vue 2 usage
Vuedoc Parser automatically extracts events from component template, hooks and methods when using Vue 2:
<script>
export default {
created() {
/**
* Emit the `loading` event on submit
* @arg {boolean} status - The loading status
*/
this.$emit('loading', true);
},
methods: {
submit() {
/**
* Emit the `input` event on submit
*/
this.$emit('input', true);
},
},
};
</script>
<template>
<div>
<!-- Emit the `click` event on submit -->
<button @click="$emit('click', $event)">Submit</button>
</div>
</template>
You can use special keyword @event
for non primitive name:
<script>
const EVENTS = {
CLOSE: 'close',
};
export default {
methods: {
closeModal() {
/**
* Emit the `close` event on click
* @event close
*/
this.$emit(EVENTS.CLOSE, true);
},
},
};
</script>
Event Entry Interface
interface EventEntry {
kind: 'event';
name: string;
description?: string;
arguments: EventArgument[];
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
type EventArgument = {
name: string;
type: NativeTypeEnum | string;
description?: string;
rest: boolean;
};
Vuedoc Parser automatically extracts slots from template. You must use @prop
tag to define properties of a slot:
<template>
<div>
<!-- Default slot -->
<slot></slot>
<!-- Use this slot to set the checkbox label -->
<slot name="label">Unnamed checkbox</slot>
<!--
Slot with keywords and
multiline description
@prop {User} user - The current user
@prop {UserProfile} profile - The current user's profile
-->
<slot name="header" v-bind:user="user" v-bind:profile="profile"/>
</div>
</template>
Annotate slots defined in Render Functions
To annotate slots defined in Render Functions, just attach the tag @slot
to the component definition:
<script>
/**
* A functional component with slots defined in render function
* @slot title - A title slot
* @slot default - A default slot
*/
export default {
functional: true,
render(h, { slots }) {
return h('div', [
h('h1', slots().title),
h('p', slots().default),
]);
},
};
</script>
You can also use the tag @slot
to define dynamic slots on template:
<template>
<div>
<template v-for="name in ['title', 'default']">
<!--
@slot title - A title slot
@slot default - A default slot
-->
<slot :name="name"></slot>
</template>
</div>
</template>
Slot Entry Interface
interface SlotEntry {
kind: 'slot';
name: string;
description?: string;
props: SlotProp[];
keywords: Keyword[];
category?: string;
version?: string;
since?: string;
visibility: 'public' | 'protected' | 'private';
}
type Keyword = {
name: string;
description?: string;
};
type SlotProp = {
name: string;
type: string;
description?: string;
};
Use the JSDoc's tag @ignore
to keeps the
subsequent code from being documented.
<!-- CheckboxInput.vue -->
<script>
export default {
data: () => ({
/**
* This will be ignored on parsing
* @ignore
*/
checked: false,
}),
};
</script>
You can also use the TypeDoc's tag @hidden
.
You can attach keywords (or tags) to any comment and then extract them using the parser.
Usage
<script>
/**
* Component description
*
* @license MIT
*/
export default { /* ... */ };
</script>
Note that the description must always appear before keywords definition.
Parsing result:
{
"name": "my-checkbox",
"description": "Component description",
"keywords": [
{
"name": "license",
"description": "MIT"
}
]
}
Tag | Scope | Description |
---|---|---|
@name | component | Provide a custom name of the component |
@type | props , data , computed | Provide a type expression identifying the type of value that a prop or a data may contain |
@default | props | Provide a default value of a prop |
@kind | props | Used to document what kind of symbol is being documented |
@initialValue | data | Provide an initial value of a data |
@method | methods | Force the name of a specific method |
@syntax | methods | Provide the custom method syntax |
@param | methods | Provide the name, type, and description of a function parameter |
@returns , @return | methods | Document the value that a function returns |
@event | events | Force the name of a specific event |
@arg , @argument | events | Provide the name, type, and description of an event argument |
@slot | slots | Document slot defined in render function |
@prop | slots | Provide the name, type, and description of a slot prop |
@mixin deprecated | component | Force parsing of the exported item as a mixin component. This is deprecated since v4.0.0 |
@version | all | Assign a version to an item |
@since | all | Indicate that an item was added in a specific version |
@author | all | Identify authors of an item |
@deprecated | all | Mark an item as being deprecated |
@see | all | Allow to refer to a resource that may be related to the item being documented |
@ignore | * | Keep the subsequent code from being documented |
TypeDoc | ||
@category | all | Attach a category to an item |
@hidden | * | Keep the subsequent code from being documented |
Visibilities | ||
@public | * | Mark a symbol as public |
@protected | * | Mark a symbol as private |
@private | * | Mark a symbol as protected |
*
stand forprops
,data
,methods
,events
,slots
Starting v4.0.0
, Vuedoc Parser implements a mechanism to automatically
load needed import declarations to parse and extract metadata.
With this new capability, Vuedoc Parser is now able to handle Vue mixins automatically.
options.features
options.features
lets you select which Vue Features you want to parse and
extract.
The default value is defined by VuedocParser.SUPPORTED_FEATURES
array.
Usage
Only parse name
, props
, computed properties
, slots
and events
:
import { parseComponent } from '@vuedoc/parser';
const options = {
filename: 'test/examples/circle-drawer/circle-drawer-composition.vue',
features: [ 'name', 'props', 'computed', 'slots', 'events' ],
};
parseComponent(options)
.then((component) => Object.keys(component))
.then((keys) => console.log(keys));
// => [ 'name', 'props', 'computed', 'slots', 'events' ]
Parse all features except data
:
import { parseComponent, VuedocParser } from '@vuedoc/parser';
const options = {
filename: 'test/examples/circle-drawer/circle-drawer-composition.vue',
features: VuedocParser.SUPPORTED_FEATURES.filter((feature) => feature !== 'data'),
};
parseComponent(options)
.then((component) => Object.keys(component))
.then((keys) => console.log(keys));
// => [ 'name', 'description', 'keywords', 'model',
// 'props', 'computed', 'events', 'methods', 'slots' ]
Vuedoc can be extended using plugins.
To use a plugin, it needs to be added to the devDependencies
of the project
and included in the plugins array options.plugins
. For example, to provide
support of Vue Router, the official @vuedoc/plugin-vue-router
can be used:
$ npm add -D @vuedoc/plugin-vue-router
// main.js
import { parseComponent } from '@vuedoc/parser';
import { VueRouterPlugin } from '@vuedoc/plugin-vue-router';
const component = await parseComponent({
plugins: [
VueRouterPlugin,
],
// ...
});
Name | Description | Documentation |
---|---|---|
Vue Router Plugin | The Vue Router plugin for Vuedoc | @vuedoc/plugin-vue-router |
Vuex Plugin | The Vuex plugin for Vuedoc | @vuedoc/plugin-vuex |
Plugins Overview
A Vuedoc plugin is an object with one or more of the properties, parsing hooks described below, and which follows our conventions. A plugin should be distributed as a package which exports a function that can be called with plugin specific options and returns such an object.
Plugins allow you to customise Vuedoc's behaviour by, for example,
handling and parse parsing result object before sending the final result, or
adding support of a third-party modules in your node_modules
folder.
Conventions
vuedoc-plugin-
prefix.vuedoc-plugin
keyword in package.json
.Interface
type Plugin = (parser: Parser) => PluginDefinition;
interface PluginDefinition {
/**
* Custom import resolver
*/
resolver?: ImportResolver;
/**
* List of resource files to preload before parsing
*/
preload?: string[];
/**
* Additional composition tokens for advanced components
*/
composition?: Partial<ParsingComposition>;
/**
* Handle parsing result
*/
handleParsingResult?(component: ParseResult): void;
}
interface Parser extends EventTarget {
/**
* Resolved options
*/
readonly options: ResolvedOptions;
addEventListener(
type: EventType,
callback: EventListener<EntryEvent<EventType>>,
options?: boolean | AddEventListenerOptions
): void;
addEventListener<T extends MessageEventType>(
type: EventType,
callback: EventListener<MessageEvent<EventType>>,
options?: boolean | AddEventListenerOptions
): void;
addEventListener(
type: 'end',
callback: EventListener<EndEvent>,
options?: boolean | AddEventListenerOptions
): void;
): void;
addEventListener(
type: 'fatal',
callback: EventListener<FatalErrorEvent>,
options?: boolean | AddEventListenerOptions
): void;
}
type EventType = 'computed' | 'data' | 'description' | 'event' | 'inheritAttrs' | 'keyword' | 'method' | 'model' | 'name' | 'prop';
Please see PluginInterface from types/index.d.ts from detailled types.
Please see TypeScript definition file for the Loader class.
Language | Load by default? | Module |
---|---|---|
HTML | Yes | @vuedoc/parser/loaders/html |
JavaScript | Yes | @vuedoc/parser/loaders/javascript |
Pug | No | @vuedoc/parser/loaders/pug |
TypeScript | Yes | @vuedoc/parser/loaders/typescript |
Vue | Yes | @vuedoc/parser/loaders/vue |
The example below uses the abstract Vuedoc.Loader
class to create a
specialized class to handle a template with the
CoffeeScript language.
It uses the built-in PugLoader
to load Pug template:
import { parseComponent, Loader } from '@vuedoc/parser';
import { PugLoader } from '@vuedoc/parser/loaders/pug';
import { compile } from 'coffeescript';
class CoffeeScriptLoader extends Loader {
load (source) {
const outputText = compile(source);
this.emitScript(outputText);
}
}
const options = {
filecontent: `
<template lang="pug">
div.page
h1 Vuedoc Parser with Pug
// Use this slot to define a subtitle
slot(name='subtitle')
</template>
<script lang="coffee">
###
# Description of MyInput component
###
export default
name: 'MyInput'
</script>
`,
loaders: [
/**
* Register CoffeeScriptLoader
* Note that the name of the loader is either the extension
* of the file or the value of the attribute `lang`
*/
Loader.extend('coffee', CoffeeScriptLoader),
// Register the built-in Pug loader
Loader.extend('pug', PugLoader),
],
};
parseComponent(options).then((component) => {
console.log(component);
});
Output
{
name: 'MyInput',
description: 'Description of MyInput component',
slots: [
{
kind: 'slot',
visibility: 'public',
description: 'Use this slot to define a subtitle',
keywords: [],
name: 'subtitle',
props: []
}
],
// ...
}
Please see TypeScript definition file.
To generate a markdown documentation, please use the @vuedoc/md package.
Please follow CONTRIBUTING.md.
Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
, increment the:
MAJOR
version when you make incompatible API changes,MINOR
version when you add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner,
andPATCH
version when you make backwards-compatible bug fixes.Additional labels for pre-release and build metadata are available as extensions
to the MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
format.
See SemVer.org for more details.
Under the MIT license. See LICENSE file for more details.
FAQs
Generate a JSON documentation for a Vue file
The npm package @vuedoc/parser receives a total of 2,501 weekly downloads. As such, @vuedoc/parser popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @vuedoc/parser demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.