The Rails API documentation is generated with RDoc 2.5. Please consult the documentation for help with the "markup":http://rdoc.rubyforge.org/RDoc/Markup.html, and take into account also these "additional directives":http://rdoc.rubyforge.org/RDoc/Parser/Ruby.html.
Write simple, declarative sentences. Brevity is a plus: get to the point.
Write in present tense: "Returns a hash that...", rather than "Returned a hash that..." or "Will return a hash that...".
Start comments in upper case, follow regular punctuation rules:
<ruby>
# Declares an attribute reader backed by an internally-named instance variable.
def attr_internal_reader(*attrs)
...
end
</ruby>
Communicate to the reader the current way of doing things, both explicitly and implicitly. Use the recommended idioms in edge, reorder sections to emphasize favored approaches if needed, etc. The documentation should be a model for best practices and canonical, modern Rails usage.
Documentation has to be concise but comprehensive. Explore and document edge cases. What happens if a module is anonymous? What if a collection is empty? What if an argument is nil?
The proper names of Rails components have a space in between the words, like "Active Support". +ActiveRecord+ is a Ruby module, whereas Active Record is an ORM. All Rails documentation should consistently refer to Rails components by their proper name, and if in your next blog post or presentation you remember this tidbit and take it into account that'd be phenomenal.
Spell names correctly: Arel, Test::Unit, RSpec, HTML, MySQL, JavaScript, ERB. When in doubt, please have a look at some authoritative source like their official documentation.
Please use American English (<em>color</em>, <em>center</em>, <em>modularize</em>, etc.). See "a list of American and British English spelling differences here":http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_and_British_English_spelling_differences.
WARNING: Using a pair of ++...++ for fixed-width font only works with *words*; that is: anything matching <tt>\A\w+\z</tt>. For anything else use +<tt>...</tt>+, notably symbols, setters, inline snippets, etc:
When "true" and "false" are English words rather than Ruby keywords use a regular font:
<ruby>
# If <tt>reload_plugins?</tt> is false, add this to your plugin's <tt>init.rb</tt>
# to make it reloadable:
#
# Dependencies.load_once_paths.delete lib_path
</ruby>
h3. Description Lists
In lists of options, parameters, etc. use a hyphen between the item and its description (reads better than a colon because normally options are symbols):
<ruby>
# * <tt>:allow_nil</tt> - Skip validation if attribute is +nil+.
</ruby>
The description starts in upper case and ends with a full stop—it's standard English.
h3. Dynamically Generated Methods
Methods created with +(module|class)_eval(STRING)+ have a comment by their side with an instance of the generated code. That comment is 2 spaces apart from the template: