# Haddock, a Haskell Documentation Tool [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/haskell/haddock.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/haskell/haddock) ## About haddock See [Description on Hackage](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/haddock). ## Source code documentation Full documentation can be found in the `doc/` subdirectory, in [reStructedText format](http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/rest.html) format. ## Contributing Please create issues when you have any problems and pull requests if you have some code. ## Hacking To get started you'll need a latest GHC release installed. Clone the repository: ```bash git clone https://github.com/haskell/haddock.git cd haddock ``` and then proceed using your favourite build tool. #### Using [`cabal new-build`](http://cabal.readthedocs.io/en/latest/nix-local-build-overview.html) ```bash cabal new-build -w ghc-8.2.1 # build & run the test suite cabal new-test -w ghc-8.2.1 ``` #### Using Cabal sandboxes ```bash cabal sandbox init cabal sandbox add-source haddock-library cabal sandbox add-source haddock-api cabal sandbox add-source haddock-test # adjust -j to the number of cores you want to use cabal install -j4 --dependencies-only --enable-tests cabal configure --enable-tests cabal build -j4 # run the test suite export HADDOCK_PATH="dist/build/haddock/haddock" cabal test ``` #### Using Stack ```bash stack init stack install # run the test suite export HADDOCK_PATH="$HOME/.local/bin/haddock" stack test ``` ### Git Branches If you're a GHC developer and want to update Haddock to work with your changes, you should be working on `ghc-head` branch instead of `master`. See instructions at https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/WorkingConventions/Git/Submodules for an example workflow. The `master` branch usually requires a GHC from the latest GHC stable branch. The required GHC version can be inferred from the version bounds on `ghc` in the respective `.cabal` files.