remove the scribble portion of the style guide in preparation for bringing back its history

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Robby Findler 2017-01-06 11:53:06 -06:00
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#lang scribble/doc
@(require scribble/eval
"shared.rkt"
(for-label (except-in scribble/manual link)
scribble/eval))
@title[#:tag "reference-style"]{Scribbling Documentation}
This section describes good style for Racket documentation writing.
@section{Prose and Terminology}
In the descriptive body of @racket[defform], @racket[defproc], etc.,
do not start with ``This ...'' Instead, start with a sentence whose
implicit subject is the form or value being described (but only start
the first sentence that way). Capitalize the first word. Thus, the
description will often start with ``Returns'' or ``Produces.'' Refer
to arguments and sub-forms by name.
Do not use the word ``argument'' to describe a sub-form in a syntactic
form; use the term ``sub-form'' instead, reserving ``argument'' for
values or expressions in a function call. Refer to libraries and
languages as such, rather than as ``modules'' (even though the form to
typeset a library or language name is called @racket[racketmodname]).
Do not call an identifier (i.e., a syntactic element) a ``variable''
or a ``symbol.'' Do not use the word ``expression'' for a form that is
a definition or might be a definition; use the word ``form,'' instead.
Prefer ``function'' to ``procedure.''
Use the word ``list'' only when you mean a run-time value consisting
of the empty list and cons cells; use the word ``sequence'' in other
cases, if you must use any word. For example, do not write that
@racket[begin] has a ``list of sub-forms;'' instead, it has a
``sequence of sub-forms.'' Similarly, do not refer to a ``list of
arguments'' in a function call; just write ``arguments'' if possible,
or write ``sequence of argument expressions.'' (Unfortunately,
``@tech[#:doc '(lib
"scribblings/reference/reference.scrbl")]{sequence}'' has acquired a
specific run-time meaning, too, but the collision is less severe than
the historical confusion between lists and other entities in Lisp.)
Avoid cut-and-paste for descriptive text. If two functions are
similar, consider documenting them together with
@racket[deftogether]. To abstract a description, consider using
explicit prose abstraction, such as ``@racket[x] is like @racket[y],
except that ...,'' instead of abstracting the source and instantiating
it multiple times; often, a prose abstraction is clearer to the reader
than a hidden abstraction in the document implementation.
Hyphenate the words ``sub-form'' and ``sub-expression.''
Use ``Windows,'' ``Mac OS,'' and ``Unix'' for the three
``platforms'' (as opposed to ``systems'') on which Racket runs. Use
``Unix'' as a generic term for Unix-like operating systems---notably
including Linux---other than Mac OS. Use ``Unix'' even when ``Gtk''
or ``the X11 windowing system'' would be more precisely correct, but
use ``X11'' as adjective when necessary, such as ``X11 display.''
Racket runs ``on'' a platform, as opposed to ``under'' a platform.
Avoid using a predicate as a noun that stands for a value
satisfying the predicate. Instead, use @racket[tech] and
@racket[deftech] to establish a connection between an
English word or phrase that describes the class of values
and the predicate (or
@tech[#:doc '(lib "scribblings/reference/reference.scrbl")]{
contract}). For example, avoid ``supply a
@racket[path-string?]''; prefer ``supply a
@tech[#:doc '(lib "scribblings/reference/reference.scrbl")]{
path or string}.''
@section{Typesetting Code}
Use @racketidfont{id} or a name that ends @racketidfont{-id} in
@racket[defform] to mean an identifier, not @racketidfont{identifier},
@racketidfont{variable}, @racketidfont{name}, or
@racketidfont{symbol}. Similarly, use @racketidfont{expr} or something
that ends @racketidfont{-expr} for an expression position within a
syntactic form. Use @racketidfont{body} for a form (definition or
expression) in an internal-definition position---always followed by
@racket[...+] in a grammar description. Do not use
@racketidfont{expr} for something that isn't exactly an expression,
@racket[id] for something that isn't exactly an identifier, etc.;
instead, use @racket[defform/subs] to define a new non-terminal.
Beware of using @racket[deftogether] to define multiple variants of a
syntactic form or procedure, because each @racket[defform] or
@racket[defproc] creates a definition point, but each form or
procedure should have a single definition point. (Scribble issues a
warning when a binding has multiple definition points.) Instead, use
@racket[defproc*] or @racket[defform*].
For function arguments, use @racket[v] as the meta-variable for ``any
value.'' Use @racket[x] as a meta-variable only for numerical
values. Other conventions include @racket[lst] for a list and
@racket[proc] for a procedure.
Pay attention to the difference between identifiers and meta-variables
when using @racket[racket], especially outside of @racket[defproc] or
@racket[defform]. Prefix a meta-variable with @litchar{_}; for
example,
@verbatim[#:indent 2]|{@racket[(rator-expr rand-expr ...)]}|
would be the wrong way to refer to the grammar of a function call,
because it produces @racket[(rator-expr rand-expr ...)], where
@racketidfont{rator-expr} and @racketidfont{rand-expr} are
typeset as variables. The correct description is
@verbatim[#:indent 2]|{@racket[(_rator-expr _rand-expr ...)]}|
which produces @racket[(_rator-expr _rand-expr ...)], where
@racketidfont{rator-expr} and @racketidfont{rand-expr} are typeset as
meta-variables. The @racket[defproc], @racket[defform], @|etc| forms
greatly reduce this burden in descriptions, since they automatically
set up meta-variable typesetting for non-literal identifiers. In
@racket[defform], be sure to include literal identifiers (i.e., those
not meant as variables, other than the form name being defined) in a
@racket[#:literals] clause.
To typeset an identifier with no particular interpretation---syntax,
variable, meta-variable, etc.---use @racket[racketidfont] (e.g., as in
@racketidfont{rand-expr} above). Otherwise, use @racket[litchar],
not merely @racket[racketfont] or @racket[verbatim], to refer to a
specific sequence of characters.
When a syntactic form synthesizes an identifier from a given
identifier, use a combination of @racket[racketidfont] and
@racket[racket] to describe the identifiers. For example, if
@racket[_id] is combined with @racketidfont{is-} and @racketidfont{?}
to form @racketidfont{is-}@racket[_id]@racketidfont{?}, then implement
that identifier as
@code[#:lang "at-exp racket"]|{@racketidfont{is-}@racket[id]@racketidfont{?}}|.
When using @racket[defform] to describe a syntactic form, don't
confuse the @racket[#:contracts] clause with a grammar
specification. Use @racket[#:contracts] only for expressions within the
syntactic form, and the contract is a run-time constraint---not a
syntactic constraint, such as requiring a sub-form to be an identifier.
Use @racket[defform/subs] for syntactic constraints.
When showing example evaluations, use the REPL-snapshot style:
@verbatim[#:indent 2]|{
@examples[
(+ 1 2)
]
}|
See also the @racketmodname[scribble/example] library and @secref["examples-style"].
Use four dots, @litchar{....}, in place of omitted code, since
@litchar{...} means repetition.
@section{Typesetting Prose}
Refrain from referring to documentation ``above'' or ``below,'' and
instead have a hyperlink point to the right place.
In prose, use @litchar{``} and @litchar{''} quotation marks instead of
@litchar{"}. Use @litchar{---} for an em dash, and do not include
spaces on either side. Use American style for quotation marks and punctuation
@; [Eli] BTW, I've asked several people about this, and the general
@; agreement that I've seen is that this is a rather arbitrary rule
@; and there's no harm in doing the more logical thing of putting
@; the punctuations outside quotations and parens. Just like you
@; did at the end of this sentence...
@; [Matthew] See intro of this section.
at the end of quotation marks (i.e., a sentence-terminating period
goes inside the quotation marks). Of course, this rule does not apply
for quotation marks that are part of code.
Do not use a citation reference (as created by @racket[cite]) as a
noun; use it as an annotation.
Do not start a sentence with a Racket variable name, since it is
normally lowercase. For example, use ``The @racket[_thing] argument
is...'' instead of ``@racket[_thing] is...''
Use @racket[etc] for ``@|etc|'' when it does not end a sentence, and
include a comma after ``@|etc|'' unless it ends a sentence of is
followed by other punctuation (such as a parenthesis).
@section{Section Titles}
Capitalize all words except articles (``the,'' ``a,'' etc.),
prepositions, and conjunctions that are not at the start of the title.
A manual title should normally start with a suitable keyword or key
phrase (such as ``Scribble'' for this manual) that is in boldface. If
the key word is primarily an executable name, use @racket[exec]
instead of @racket[bold]. Optionally add further descriptive text in
the title after a colon, where the text starting with the colon is not
in boldface.
@section{Indexing}
Document and section titles, identifiers that are documented with
@racket[defproc], @racket[defform], etc. are automatically indexed, as
are terms defined with @racket[deftech].
Symbols are not indexed automatically. Use @racket[indexed-racket]
instead of @racket[racket] for the instance of a symbol that roughly
defines the use. For an example, try searching for ``truncate'' to
find @racket['truncate] as used with @racket[open-output-file]. Do not
use something like @racket[(index "'truncate")] to index a symbol,
because it will not typeset correctly (i.e., in a fixed-width font
with the color of a literal).
Use @racket[index], @racket[as-index], and @racket[section-index] as a
last resort. Create index entries for terms that are completely
different from terms otherwise indexed. Do not try to index minor
variations of a term or phrase in an attempt to improve search
results; if search fails to find a word or phrase due to a minor
variation, then the search algorithm should be fixed, not the index
entry.
@section[#:tag "examples-style"]{Examples}
Strive to include examples (using @racket[examples]) with the
documentation of every function and syntactic form. When writing
examples, refrain from using nonsense words like ``foo'' and ``bar.''
For example, when documenting @racket[member], resist the temptation
to write
@interaction[
(member "foo" '("bar" "foo" "baz"))
]
and instead write something like
@interaction[
(member "Groucho" '("Harpo" "Groucho" "Zeppo"))
]