Docs Readme Markdown File Auto-Generation
Stencil is able to auto-generate readme.md
files in markdown. This is an opt-in feature and will save the readme files as a sibling to the component within the same directory. When this feature is used it can be useful for others to easily find and read formatted docs about one component. In particular, when a
readme.md
file is placed within a directory on Github, it will default the readme markdown file as the primary content of the page.
To auto-generate readme files, add the docs-readme
output target to your
stencil.config.ts
:
import { Config } from '@stencil/core';
export const config: Config = {
outputTargets: [
{ type: 'docs-readme' }
]
};
Another option would be to add the flag --docs-readme
, such as:
stencil build --docs-readme
Adding Custom Markdown to Auto-Generated Files
Once you've generated a readme.md
file you can customize it with your own markdown content. Simply add your own markdown above the comment that reads:
<!-- Auto Generated Below -->
.
Custom Footer
Removing or customizing the footer can be done by adding a
footer
property to the output target. Markdown can be used to enhance the footer if needed.
import { Config } from '@stencil/core';
export const config: Config = {
outputTargets: [
{
type: 'docs-readme',
footer: '*Built with love!*',
}
]
};
Generating to a Directory
By default, a readme file will be generated in its corresponding component directory. This behavior can be changed through the
dir
property of the output target configuration. Specifying a directory will create the structure
{dir}/{component}/readme.md
.
import { Config } from '@stencil/core';
export const config: Config = {
outputTargets: [
{
type: 'docs-readme',
dir: 'output'
}
]
};
Strict Mode
Adding
strict: true
to the output target configuration will cause Stencil to output a warning whenever the project is built with missing documentation.
import { Config } from '@stencil/core';
export const config: Config = {
outputTargets: [
{
type: 'docs-readme',
strict: true
}
]
};