Issue
I'm working a lot with spyder and the object inspector, which I find pretty convenient as an instant help function. Some modules seem to profit very nicely from this function. For example a pretty basic numpy function (numpy.absolute) produces the following view in the object inspector:
I want to know, how I can write my own modules in such a way, that such a nice view is produced when I call my functions in spyder.
Solution
For your documentation to render as nicely as the numpy one, you need to follow the NumpyDoc standard. Suppose you have a function called func
with two arguments like this:
def func(arg1, arg2):
return True
To add documentation to it you need to write a multiline string below its definition (called in the Python world docstring), like this
def func(arg1, arg2):
"""Summary line.
Extended description of function.
Parameters
----------
arg1 : int
Description of arg1
arg2 : str
Description of arg2
Returns
-------
bool
Description of return value
Examples
--------
>>> func(1, "a")
True
"""
return True
What Spyder does is that it takes this plain text description, parses and renders it as html and finally shows it in the Object Inspector.
To see it you just need to call func
somewhere else in your code and press Ctrl+i next to it, like this:
func<Ctrl+i>(1, "a")
This is also shown automatically when you write a left parenthesis next to func
.
Answered By - Carlos Cordoba
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