dokka

Project Url: Kotlin/dokka
Introduction: Documentation Engine for Kotlin
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Dokka is an API documentation engine for Kotlin.

Just like Kotlin itself, Dokka supports mixed-language projects. It understands Kotlin's KDoc comments and Java's Javadoc comments.

Dokka can generate documentation in multiple formats, including its own modern HTML format, multiple flavors of Markdown, and Java's Javadoc HTML.

Some libraries that use Dokka for their API reference documentation:

You can run Dokka using Gradle, Maven or from the command line. It is also highly pluggable.

Documentation

Comprehensive documentation for Dokka is available on kotlinlang.org

Get started with Dokka

Gradle

Kotlin DSL Apply the Gradle plugin for Dokka in the root build script of your project: kotlin plugins { id("org.jetbrains.dokka") version "1.9.20" } When documenting multi-project builds, you need to apply the Gradle plugin for Dokka within subprojects as well: kotlin subprojects { apply(plugin = "org.jetbrains.dokka") }
Groovy DSL Apply Gradle plugin for Dokka in the root project: groovy plugins { id 'org.jetbrains.dokka' version '1.9.20' } When documenting multi-project builds, you need to apply the Gradle plugin for Dokka within subprojects as well: groovy subprojects { apply plugin: 'org.jetbrains.dokka' }

To generate documentation, run the following Gradle tasks:

  • dokkaHtml for single-project builds
  • dokkaHtmlMultiModule for multi-project builds

By default, the output directory is set to /build/dokka/html and /build/dokka/htmlMultiModule respectively.

To learn more about the Gradle plugin for Dokka, see documentation for Gradle.

Maven

Add the Dokka Maven plugin to the plugins section of your POM file:

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.jetbrains.dokka</groupId>
            <artifactId>dokka-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>1.9.20</version>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <phase>pre-site</phase>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>dokka</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

To generate documentation, run the dokka:dokka goal.

By default, the output directory is set to target/dokka.

To learn more about using Dokka with Maven, see documentation for Maven.

CLI

It is possible to run Dokka from the command line without having to use any of the build tools, but it's more difficult to set up and for that reason it is not covered in this section.

Please consult documentation for the command line runner to learn how to use it.

Android

In addition to applying and configuring Dokka, you can apply Dokka's Android documentation plugin, which aims to improve documentation experience on the Android platform:

Gradle Kotlin DSL kotlin dependencies { dokkaPlugin("org.jetbrains.dokka:android-documentation-plugin:1.9.20") }
Gradle Groovy DSL groovy dependencies { dokkaPlugin 'org.jetbrains.dokka:android-documentation-plugin:1.9.20' }
Maven xml <plugin> <groupId>org.jetbrains.dokka</groupId> <artifactId>dokka-maven-plugin</artifactId> ... <configuration> <dokkaPlugins> <plugin> <groupId>org.jetbrains.dokka</groupId> <artifactId>android-documentation-plugin</artifactId> <version>1.9.20</version> </plugin> </dokkaPlugins> </configuration> </plugin>

Output formats

HTML

HTML is Dokka's default and recommended output format. You can see an example of the output by browsing documentation for kotlinx.coroutines.

HTML format is configurable and, among other things, allows you to modify stylesheets, add custom image assets, change footer message and revamp the structure of the generated HTML pages through templates.

For more details and examples, see documentation for HTML format.

Markdown

Dokka is able to generate documentation in GitHub Flavored and Jekyll compatible Markdown. However, both of these formats are still in Alpha, so you might encounter bugs and migration issues.

For more details and examples, see documentation for Markdown formats.

Javadoc

Dokka's Javadoc output format is a lookalike of Java's Javadoc HTML format. This format is still in Alpha, so you might encounter bugs and migration issues.

Javadoc format tries to visually mimic HTML pages generated by the Javadoc tool, but it's not a direct implementation or an exact copy. In addition, all Kotlin signatures are translated to Java signatures.

For more details and examples, see documentation for Javadoc format.

Dokka plugins

Dokka was built from the ground up to be easily extensible and highly customizable, which allows the community to implement plugins for missing or very specific features that are not provided out of the box.

Learn more about Dokka plugins and their configuration in Dokka plugins.

If you want to learn how to develop Dokka plugins, see Developer guides.

Community

Dokka has a dedicated #dokka channel in Kotlin Community Slack where you can chat about Dokka, its plugins and how to develop them, as well as get in touch with maintainers.

Building and Contributing

See Contributing Guidelines

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