# gleedoc
[](https://hex.pm/packages/gleedoc)
[](https://hexdocs.pm/gleedoc/)
A **doc test** library for Gleam, inspired by Rust and Elixir's doctest tooling.
Doc tests let you write executable examples in your documentation comments (`///`). These examples are extracted, compiled, and run as part of your test suite, ensuring your documentation never goes out of date.
> 🚩 Disclaimer: This project contains substantial LLM-generated code, and I used LLMs for research and design. But I (as a Gleam amateur) have tried my best to review line by line, adjust, and refactor.
## How it works
1. **Extract** `///` doc comments from your `.gleam` source files.
2. **Find** fenced code blocks tagged with `gleam` inside those comments.
3. **Generate** test modules in your `test/` directory.
4. **Run** the generated tests with `gleam test`.
### How other languages do it
| Language | Approach | Key Difference from Gleam |
| ---------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- |
| **Rust** | `cargo test` compiles ` ```rust ` blocks from `///` comments. No REPL needed. | Gleam follows this model closely. |
| **Elixir** | `doctest Module` parses `iex>` prompts from `@doc` strings. | Elixir has a REPL; Gleam does not. |
| **Python** | `doctest` parses `>>>` prompts from docstrings. | Python is interpreted; Gleam is compiled. |
Because Gleam is a compiled language with no built-in REPL, **gleedoc** adopts Rust's approach: doc blocks are treated as standalone Gleam code that gets compiled and executed. If a block panics, the test fails.
## Installation
```sh
gleam add gleedoc --dev
```
## Usage
Write doc comments with `gleam` code blocks in your source files:
````gleam
// src/math.gleam
/// Adds two numbers together.
///
/// ```gleam
/// let result = add(1, 2)
/// assert result == 3
/// ```
pub fn add(a: Int, b: Int) -> Int {
a + b
}
````
Then run gleedoc to generate tests:
```sh
gleam run -m gleedoc
```
This creates `test/gleedoc/math_gleedoc_test.gleam` containing:
```gleam
// Generated by gleedoc - do not edit manually
import math.{add}
// From: src/math.gleam:4
pub fn add_1_test() {
let result = add(1, 2)
assert result == 3
}
```
Now run your tests as usual:
```sh
gleam test
```
### Imports in generated tests
Each generated test file receives imports from three sources, merged and deduplicated automatically:
1. **The source module itself** — `gleedoc` scans the module's public names with `glance` and generates a list of unqualified imports that include **all** public functions/types/constants, so you can call functions directly in your snippets.
2. **The source module's own top-level imports** — any `import` statements at the top of the source file are carried over, so your snippets can use the same types and helpers the module itself uses without restating them.
3. **Imports written inside the code block** — you can always add an explicit `import` line inside a snippet for anything extra.
For example, given this source file `src/user.gleam`:
````gleam
import gleam/option.{type Option} // 1️⃣
/// Returns a greeting for the user.
///
/// ```gleam
/// import gleam/option.{Some} // 2️⃣
///
/// let name = Some("Alice")
/// assert greet(name) == "Hello, Alice!"
/// ```
pub fn greet(name: Option(String)) -> String { // 3️⃣
name
|> option.map(fn(n) { "Hello, " <> n <> "!" })
|> option.unwrap("")
}
````
The generated test file `fixtures_user_gleedoc_test.gleam` will contain imports merged from all three sources:
```gleam
// Generated by gleedoc - do not edit manually
import fixtures/user.{greet} // source module public definitions (3️⃣)
import gleam/option.{type Option, Some} // source module imports (1️⃣) + gleam code block imports (2️⃣)
// From: test/fixtures/user.gleam:5
pub fn greet_1_test() {
let name = Some("Alice")
assert greet(name) == "Hello, Alice!"
}
```
If the same module is imported in multiple places (e.g. `gleam/option` appears in both the source file and a code block), the unqualified names from all of them are merged into a single import line.
> There are more examples in [`test/fixtures`](./test/fixtures/) and [`test/integration/gleedoc`](./test/integration/gleedoc/).
## API
You can also use gleedoc programmatically from your test suite:
```gleam
// test/gleedoc_setup.gleam
import gleedoc
pub fn main() {
let config = gleedoc.GleedocConfig(
output_dir: "test",
source_dir: "src",
)
case gleedoc.run(config) {
Ok(Nil) -> Nil
Error(snag) -> panic as snag.issue
}
}
```
## Architecture
```
src/
gleedoc.gleam # Main entry point and CLI
gleedoc/
extract.gleam # Line-based doc comment extraction
parse.gleam # Markdown code block parsing
generate.gleam # Test file generation
scan.gleam # Public names and imports extraction with glance
```
### Key dependencies
| Package | Role |
| ------------ | -------------------------- |
| `glance` | Gleam source parser |
| `simplifile` | Cross-target file I/O |
| `snag` | Lightweight error handling |
## Development
```sh
gleam run -m prepare_tests && gleam test
```
You can also run the tests with the JavaScript target:
```sh
gleam run -m prepare_tests && gleam test -t javascript
```
### Windows
On Windows, you probably want to make sure that `autocrlf` is false **before** checking out this repo:
```sh
git config --global core.autocrlf false
```
### Contributing
Please kindly create an issue in your human voice, clearly describe the feature request or bug with reproduction steps, and ideally include a proposed solution **before** creating any PR.
## Roadmap
### Implemented
- [x] Extract `///` doc comments from source files
- [x] Parse ` ```gleam ` fenced code blocks
- [x] Generate compatible `gleeunit` test files
- [x] Multi-file source discovery
- [x] Use `glance` to extract public names for unqualified imports
- [x] Cross-module imports: `import` statements in code blocks are merged inside the generated tests
- [x] Single-command `gleam run -m gleedoc` CLI experience
- [x] Reduce file reads by enriching `extract` results so subsequent steps don't need to read files from disk again
- [x] Test file generation with OS-native line breaks: `\n` on Linux and Mac, `\r\n` on Windows
### Missing Features (compared to Rust, Elixir, and Python)
| Feature | Rust | Elixir | Python | **gleedoc** |
| -------------------------------------- | ---------- | ----------- | ---------- | ----------- |
| `ignore` / skip attribute | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
| `no_run` (compile only) | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| `should_panic` | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Hidden setup lines (`#`) | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Output assertions (`// ->`) | ❌ | ✅ (`iex>`) | ✅ (`>>>`) | ❌ |
| Module-level doc tests | ✅ (`//!`) | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
| `compile_fail` | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Multi-target (`erlang` / `javascript`) | ✅ (`cfg`) | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Incremental / cached generation | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
| Source-mapped error reporting | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
### ❗ Know Issues
- [x] ~~Doesn't work on Windows due to different path separators~~
- [x] ~~Generated tests will contain unused imports~~
- [x] ~~Test file generation is not OS-agnostic (some types of tests would fail on Windows)~~
## The Name
`gleeunit` for **unit** tests, `gleedoc` for **doc** tests! 😸