Shalabh Chaturvedi wrote: > Josh Cronemeyer wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I have very little experience programming in python but considerable >> experience with java. One thing that is frustrating me is the >> differences in the documentation style. Javadocs, at the top level >> are just a list of packages. Drilling down on a package reveals a >> list of classes in that package, and drilling down on a class reveals >> a list of methods for that class. Is there something similar for >> python? >> The closest thing I have found to this for python is >> http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.2/modindex.html which really isn't the >> same thing at all. >> >> wxpython has their documentation like this >> http://www.wxpython.org/docs/api/ is there something like this for >> the rest of python? > > > Here is the Python 2.3 standard lib docs generated using epydoc: > > http://epydoc.sourceforge.net/stdlib/ > > In look and feel it's more like javadoc. However always check the > standard library documentation for usage and examples that might not be > in this. > > Cheers, > Shalabh > One of the entries for the object type is:
__init__(...) x.__init__(...) initializes x; see x.__class__.__doc__ for signature... How do we find the __doc__ in the epy material? Colin W. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list