Python packages don't really have a convention where to put the documentation. The main documentation of a package may be built with a range of different tools, sometimes based on the docstrings, sometimes not. What you see with pydoc -p
is the package contents and the docstrings only, not the main documentation. If this is all you want, you can also use Sphinx for this purpose. Here's sphinx-server
, a shell script I just coded up:
#!/bin/sh
sphinx-apidoc -F -o "$2" "$1"
cd "$2"
make html
cd _build/html
python -mSimpleHTTPServer 2345
Call this with the package directory of the package you want to have information on as the first argument and the directory where to build the new documentation as the second argument. Then, point your browser to http://localhost:2345/
(Note: You probably want to remove the webserver invocation from the script. It's more for the purpose of demonstrattion. This is assuming Python 2.x.)