Generates HTML pages of API documentation from Java source files. Synopsis javadoc {packages|source-files} [options] [@argfiles] packages Names of packages that you want to document, separated by spaces, for example java.lang java.lang.reflect java.awt. If you want to also document the subpackages, use the -subpackages option to specify the packages. By default, javadoc looks for the specified packages in the current directory and subdirectories. Use the -sourcepath option to specify the list of directories where to look for packages. source-files Names of Java source files that you want to document, separated by spaces, for example Class.java Object.java Button.java. By default, javadoc looks for the specified classes in the current directory. However, you can specify the full path to the class file and use wildcard characters, for example /home/src/java/awt/Graphics*.java. You can also specify the path relative to the current directory. options Command-line options, separated by spaces. See Options. @argfiles Names of files that contain a list of javadoc command options, package names and source file names in any order. Description The javadoc command parses the declarations and documentation comments in a set of Java source files and produces a corresponding set of HTML pages that describe (by default) the public and protected classes, nested classes (but not anonymous inner classes), interfaces, constructors, methods, and fields. You can use the javadoc command to generate the API documentation or the implementation documentation for a set of source files. You can run the javadoc command on entire packages, individual source files, or both. When documenting entire packages, you can either use the -subpackages option to recursively traverse a directory and its subdirectories, or to pass in an explicit list of package names. When you document individual source files, pass in a list of Java source file names. See Simple Examples. Process Source Files The javadoc command processes files that end in source and other files described in Source Files. If you run the javadoc command by passing in individual source file names, then you can determine exactly which source files are processed. However, that is not how most developers want to work, because it is simpler to pass in package names. The javadoc command can be run three ways without explicitly specifying the source file names. You can pass in package names, use the -subpackages option, or use wild cards with source file names. In these cases, the javadoc command processes a source file only when the file fulfills all of the following requirements: The file name prefix (with .java removed) is a valid class name. The path name relative to the root of the source tree is a valid package name after the separators are converted to dots. The package statement contains the valid package name. Processing Links During a run, the javadoc command adds cross-reference links to package, class, and member names that are being documented as part of that run. Links appear in the following places. See Javadoc Tags for a description of the @ tags. Declarations (return types, argument types, and field types). See Also sections that are generated from @see tags. Inline text generated from {@link} tags. Exception names generated from @throws tags. Specified by links to interface members and Overrides links to class members. See Method Comment Inheritance. Summary tables listing packages, classes and members. Package and class inheritance trees. The index. You can add links to existing text for classes not included on the command line (but generated separately) by way of the -link and -linkoffline options. Processing Details The javadoc command produces one complete document every time it runs. It does not do incremental builds that modify or directly incorporate the results from earlier runs. However, the javadoc command can link to results from other runs. The javadoc command implementation requires and relies on the Java compiler. The javadoc command calls part of the javac command to compile the declarations and ignore the member implementations. The javadoc command builds a rich internal representation of the classes that includes the class hierarchy and use relationships to generate the HTML. The javadoc command also picks up user-supplied documentation from documentation comments in the source code. See Documentation Comments. The javadoc command runs on source files that are pure stub files with no method bodies. This means you can write documentation comments and run the javadoc command in the early stages of design before API implementation. Relying on the compiler ensures that the HTML output corresponds exactly with the actual implementation, which may rely on implicit, rather than explicit, source code. For example, the javadoc command documents default constructors that are present in the compiled class files but not in the source code. In many cases, the javadoc command lets you generate documentation for source files with incomplete or erroneous code. You can generate documentation before all debugging and troubleshooting is done. The javadoc command does primitive checking of documentation comments. When the javadoc command builds its internal structure for the documentation, it loads all referenced classes. Because of this, the javadoc command must be able to find all referenced classes, whether bootstrap classes, extensions, or user classes. See How Classes Are Found at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/tools/findingclasses.html Typically, classes you create must either be loaded as an extension or in the javadoc command class path. Javadoc Doclets You can customize the content and format of the javadoc command output with doclets. The javadoc command has a default built-in doclet, called the standard doclet, that generates HTML-formatted API documentation. You can modify or make a subclass of the standard doclet, or write your own doclet to generate HTML, XML, MIF, RTF or whatever output format you want. When a custom doclet is not specified with the -doclet option, the javadoc command uses the default standard doclet. The javadoc command has several options that are available regardless of which doclet is being used. The standard doclet adds a supplementary set of command-line options. See Options. Source Files The javadoc command generates output that originates from the following types of source files: Java language source files for classes (.java), package comment files, overview comment files, and miscellaneous unprocessed files. This section also describes test files and template files that can also be in the source tree, but that you want to be sure not to document. Class Source Files Each class or interface and its members can have their own documentation comments contained in a source file. See Documentation Comments. Package Comment Files Each package can have its own documentation comment, contained in its own source file, that the javadoc command merges into the generated package summary page. You typically include in this comment any documentation that applies to the entire package. To create a package comment file, you can place your comments in one of the following files: The package-info.java file can contain the package declaration, package annotations, package comments, and Javadoc tags. This file is preferred. The package.html file contains only package comments and Javadoc tags. No package annotations. A package can have a single package.html file or a single package-info.java file, but not both. Place either file in the package directory in the source tree with your source files. The package-info.java File The package-info.java file can contain a package comment of the following structure. The comment is placed before the package declaration. Note: The comment separators /** and */ must be present, but the leading asterisks on the intermediate lines can be left off. /** * Provides the classes necessary to create an * applet and the classes an applet uses * to communicate with its applet context. ** The applet framework involves two entities: * the applet and the applet context. * An applet is an embeddable window (see the * {@link java.awt.Panel} class) with a few extra * methods that the applet context can use to * initialize, start, and stop the applet. * * @since 1.0 * @see java.awt */ package java.lang.applet; The package.html File The package.html file can contain a package comment of the following structure. The comment is placed in the
element. File: java/applet/package.html Provides the classes necessary to create an applet and the classes an applet uses to communicate with its applet context.The applet framework involves two entities: the applet and the applet context. An applet is an embeddable window (see the {@link java.awt.Panel} class) with a few extra methods that the applet context can use to initialize, start, and stop the applet. @since 1.0 @see java.awt The package.html file is a typical HTML file and does not include a package declaration. The content of the package comment file is written in HTML with one exception. The documentation comment should not include the comment separators /** and */ or leading asterisks. When writing the comment, make the first sentence a summary about the package, and do not put a title or any other text between the
tag and the first sentence. You can include package tags. All block tags must appear after the main description. If you add an @see tag in a package comment file, then it must have a fully qualified name. Processing the Comment File When the javadoc command runs, it searches for the package comment file. If the package comment file is found, then the javadoc command does the following: Copies the comment for processing. For package.html, the javadoc command copies all content between the and HTML tags. You can include a section to put atag, source file copyright statement, or other information, but none of these appear in the generated documentation. Processes the package tags. See Package Tags. Inserts the processed text at the bottom of the generated package summary page. See Java Platform, Standard Edition API Specification Overview at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/overview-summary.html Copies the first sentence of the package comment to the top of the package summary page. The javadoc command also adds the package name and this first sentence to the list of packages on the overview page. See Java Platform, Standard Edition API Specification Overview at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/overview-summary.html The end of the sentence is determined by the same rules used for the end of the first sentence of class and member main descriptions. Overview Comment Files Each application or set of packages that you are documenting can have its own overview documentation comment that is kept in its own source file, that the javadoc command merges into the generated overview page. You typically include in this comment any documentation that applies to the entire application or set of packages. You can name the file anything you want such as overview.html and place it anywhere. A typical location is at the top of the source tree. For example, if the source files for the java.applet package are contained in the C:\user\src\java\applet directory, then you could create an overview comment file at C:\user\src\overview.html. You can have multiple overview comment files for the same set of source files in case you want to run the javadoc command multiple times on different sets of packages. For example, you could run the javadoc command once with -private for internal documentation and again without that option for public documentation. In this case, you could describe the documentation as public or internal in the first sentence of each overview comment file. The content of the overview comment file is one big documentation comment that is written in HTML. Make the first sentence a summary about the application or set of packages. Do not put a title or any other text between the tag and the first sentence. All tags except inline tags, such as an {@link} tag, must appear after the main description. If you add an @see tag, then it must have a fully qualified name. When you run the javadoc command, specify the overview comment file name with the -overview option. The file is then processed similarly to that of a package comment file. The javadoc command does the following: Copies all content between the and tags for processing. Processes the overview tags that are present. See Overview Tags. Inserts the processed text at the bottom of the generated overview page. See Java Platform Standard Edition API Specification Overview at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/overview-summary.html Copies the first sentence of the overview comment to the top of the overview summary page. Unprocessed Files Your source files can include any files that you want the javadoc command to copy to the destination directory. These files usually include graphic files, example Java source and class files, and self-standing HTML files with a lot of content that would overwhelm the documentation comment of a typical Java source file. To include unprocessed files, put them in a directory called doc-files. The doc-files directory can be a subdirectory of any package directory that contains source files. You can have one doc-files subdirectory for each package. For example, if you want to include the image of a button in the java.awt.Button class documentation, then place the image file in the \src\java\awt\doc-files directory. Do not place the doc-files directory at \src\java\doc-files, because java is not a package. It does not contain any source files. All links to the unprocessed files must be included in the code because the javadoc command does not look at the files. The javadoc command copies the directory and all of its contents to the destination. The following example shows how the link in the Button.java documentation comment might look: /** * This button looks like this: * */ Test and Template Files You can store test and template files in the source tree in the same directory with or in a subdirectory of the directory where the source files reside. To prevent test and template files from being processed, run the javadoc command and explicitly pass in individual source file names. Test files are valid, compilable source files. Template files are not valid, compatible source files, but they often have the .java suffix. Test Files If you want your test files to belong to either an unnamed package or to a package other than the package that the source files are in, then put the test files in a subdirectory underneath the source files and give the directory an invalid name. If you put the test files in the same directory with the source and call the javadoc command with a command-line argument that indicates its package name, then the test files cause warnings or errors. If the files are in a subdirectory with an invalid name, then the test file directory is skipped and no errors or warnings are issued. For example, to add test files for source files in com.package1, put them in a subdirectory in an invalid package name. The following directory name is invalid because it contains a hyphen: com\package1\test-files\ If your test files contain documentation comments, then you can set up a separate run of the javadoc command to produce test file documentation by passing in their test source file names with wild cards, such as com/package1/test-files/*.java. Template Files If you want a template file to be in the source directory, but not generate errors when you execute the javadoc command, then give it an invalid file name such as Buffer-Template.java to prevent it from being processed. The javadoc command only processes source files with names, when stripped of the .java suffix, that are valid class names. Generated Files By default, the javadoc command uses a standard doclet that generates HTML-formatted documentation. The standard doclet generates basic content, cross-reference, and support pages described here. Each HTML page corresponds to a separate file. The javadoc command generates two types of files. The first type is named after classes and interfaces. The second type contain hyphens (such as package-summary.html) to prevent conflicts with the first type of file. Basic Content Pages One class or interface page (classname.html) for each class or interface being documented. One package page (package-summary.html) for each package being documented. The javadoc command includes any HTML text provided in a file with the name package.html or package-info.java in the package directory of the source tree. One overview page (overview-summary.html) for the entire set of packages. The overview page is the front page of the generated document. The javadoc command includes any HTML text provided in a file specified by the -overview option. The Overview page is created only when you pass two or more package names into the javadoc command. See HTML Frames and Options. Cross-Reference Pages One class hierarchy page for the entire set of packages (overview-tree.html). To view the hierarchy page, click Overview in the navigation bar and click Tree. One class hierarchy page for each package (package-tree.html) To view the hierarchy page, go to a particular package, class, or interface page, and click Tree to display the hierarchy for that package. One use page for each package (package-use.html) and a separate use page for each class and interface (class-use/classname.html). The use page describes what packages, classes, methods, constructors and fields use any part of the specified class, interface, or package. For example, given a class or interface A, its use page includes subclasses of A, fields declared as A, methods that return A, and methods and constructors with parameters of type A. To view the use page, go to the package, class, or interface and click the Use link in the navigation bar. A deprecated API page (deprecated-list.html) that lists all deprecated APIs and their suggested replacements. Avoid deprecated APIs because they can be removed in future implementations. A constant field values page (constant-values.html) for the values of static fields. A serialized form page (serialized-form.html) that provides information about serializable and externalizable classes with field and method descriptions. The information on this page is of interest to reimplementors, and not to developers who want to use the API. To access the serialized form page, go to any serialized class and click Serialized Form in the See Also section of the class comment. The standard doclet generates a serialized form page that lists any class (public or non-public) that implements Serializable with its readObject and writeObject methods, the fields that are serialized, and the documentation comments from the @serial, @serialField, and @serialData tags. Public serializable classes can be excluded by marking them (or their package) with @serial exclude, and package-private serializable classes can be included by marking them (or their package) with an @serial include. As of Release 1.4, you can generate the complete serialized form for public and private classes by running the javadoc command without specifying the -private option. See Options. An index page (index-*.html) of all class, interface, constructor, field and method names, in alphabetical order. The index page is internationalized for Unicode and can be generated as a single file or as a separate file for each starting character (such as AZ for English). Support Pages A help page (help-doc.html) that describes the navigation bar and the previous pages. Use -helpfile to override the default help file with your own custom help file. One index.html file that creates the HTML frames for display. Load this file to display the front page with frames. The index.html file contains no text content. Several frame files (*-frame.html) that contains lists of packages, classes, and interfaces. The frame files display the HTML frames. A package list file (package-list) that is used by the -link and -linkoffline options. The package list file is a text file that is not reachable through links. A style sheet file (stylesheet.css) that controls a limited amount of color, font family, font size, font style, and positioning information on the generated pages. A doc-files directory that holds image, example, source code, or other files that you want copied to the destination directory. These files are not processed by the javadoc command. This directory is not processed unless it exists in the source tree. See Options. HTML Frames The javadoc command generates the minimum number of frames (two or three) necessary based on the values passed to the command. It omits the list of packages when you pass a single package name or source files that belong to a single package as an argument to the javadoc command. Instead, the javadoc command creates one frame in the left-hand column that displays the list of classes. When you pass two or more package names, the javadoc command creates a third frame that lists all packages and an overview page (overview-summary.html). To bypass frames, click the No Frames link or enter the page set from the overview-summary.html page. Generated File Structure The generated class and interface files are organized in the same directory hierarchy that Java source files and class files are organized. This structure is one directory per subpackage. For example, the document generated for the java.applet.Applet class would be located at java\applet\Applet.html. The file structure for the java.applet package follows, assuming that the destination directory is named apidocs. All files that contain the word frame appear in the upper-left or lower-left frames, as noted. All other HTML files appear in the right-hand frame. Directories are bold. The asterisks (*) indicate the files and directories that are omitted when the arguments to the javadoc command are source file names rather than package names. When arguments are source file names, an empty package list is created. The doc-files directory is not created in the destination unless it exists in the source tree. See Generated Files. apidocs: Top-level directory index.html: Initial Page that sets up HTML frames *overview-summary.html: Package list with summaries overview-tree.html: Class hierarchy for all packages deprecated-list.html: Deprecated APIs for all packages constant-values.html: Static field values for all packages serialized-form.html: Serialized forms for all packages *overview-frame.html: All packages for display in upper-left frame allclasses-frame.html: All classes for display in lower-left frame help-doc.html: Help about Javadoc page organization index-all.html: Default index created without -splitindex option index-files: Directory created with -splitindex option index-.html: Index files created with -splitindex option package-list: Package names for resolving external references stylesheet.css: Defines fonts, colors, positions, and so on java: Package directory applet: Subpackage directory Applet.html: Applet class page AppletContext.html: AppletContext interface AppletStub.html: AppletStub interface AudioClip.html: AudioClip interface package-summary.html: Classes with summaries package-frame.html: Package classes for display in lower-left frame package-tree.html: Class hierarchy for this package package-use.html: Where this package is used doc-files: Image and example files directory class-use: Image and examples file location - Applet.html: Uses of the Applet class - AppletContext.html: Uses of the AppletContext interface - AppletStub.html: Uses of the AppletStub interface - AudioClip.html: Uses of the AudioClip interface src-html: Source code directory java: Package directory applet: Subpackage directory - Applet.html: Applet source code - AppletContext.html: AppletContext source code - AppletStub.html: AppletStub source code - AudioClip.html: AudioClip source code Generated API Declarations The javadoc command generates a declaration at the start of each class, interface, field, constructor, and method description for that API item. For example, the declaration for the Boolean class is: public final class Boolean extends Object implements Serializable The declaration for the Boolean.valueOf method is: public static Boolean valueOf(String s) The javadoc command can include the modifiers public, protected, private, abstract, final, static, transient, and volatile, but not synchronized or native. The synchronized and native modifiers are considered implementation detail and not part of the API specification. Rather than relying on the keyword synchronized, APIs should document their concurrency semantics in the main description of the comment. For example, a description might be: A single enumeration cannot be used by multiple threads concurrently. The document should not describe how to achieve these semantics. As another example, while the Hashtable option should be thread-safe, there is no reason to specify that it is achieved by synchronizing all of its exported methods. It is better to reserve the right to synchronize internally at the bucket level for higher concurrency. Documentation Comments This section describes source code comments and comment inheritance. Source Code Comments You can include documentation comments in the source code, ahead of declarations for any class, interface, method, constructor, or field. You can also create documentation comments for each package and another one for the overview, though their syntax is slightly different. A documentation comment consists of the characters between /** and */ that end it. Leading asterisks are allowed on each line and are described further in the following section. The text in a comment can continue onto multiple lines. /** * This is the typical format of a simple documentation comment * that spans two lines. */ To save space you can put a comment on one line: /** This comment takes up only one line. */ Placement of Comments Documentation comments are recognized only when placed immediately before class, interface, constructor, method, or field declarations. Documentation comments placed in the body of a method are ignored. The javadoc command recognizes only one documentation comment per declaration statement. See Where Tags Can Be Used. A common mistake is to put an import statement between the class comment and the class declaration. Do not put an import statement at this location because the javadoc command ignores the class comment. /** * This is the class comment for the class Whatever. */ import com.example; // MISTAKE - Important not to put import statement here public class Whatever{ } Parts of Comments A documentation comment has a main description followed by a tag section. The main description begins after the starting delimiter /** and continues until the tag section. The tag section starts with the first block tag, which is defined by the first @ character that begins a line (ignoring leading asterisks, white space, and leading separator /**). It is possible to have a comment with only a tag section and no main description. The main description cannot continue after the tag section begins. The argument to a tag can span multiple lines. There can be any number of tags, and some types of tags can be repeated while others cannot. For example, this @see tag starts the tag section: /** * This sentence holds the main description for this documentation comment. * @see java.lang.Object */ Block and inline Tags A tag is a special keyword within a documentation comment that the javadoc command processes. There are two kinds of tags: block tags, which appear as an @tag tag (also known as standalone tags), and inline tags, which appear within braces, as an {@tag} tag. To be interpreted, a block tag must appear at the beginning of a line, ignoring leading asterisks, white space, and the separator (/**). This means you can use the @ character elsewhere in the text and it will not be interpreted as the start of a tag. If you want to start a line with the @ character and not have it be interpreted, then use the HTML entity @. Each block tag has associated text, which includes any text following the tag up to, but not including, either the next tag, or the end of the documentation comment. This associated text can span multiple lines. An inline tag is allowed and interpreted anywhere that text is allowed. The following example contains the @deprecated block tag and the {@link} inline tag. See Javadoc Tags. /** * @deprecated As of JDK 1.1, replaced by {@link #setBounds(int,int,int,int)} */ Write Comments in HTML The text must be written in HTML with HTML entities and HTML tags. You can use whichever version of HTML your browser supports. The standard doclet generates HTML 3.2-compliant code elsewhere (outside of the documentation comments) with the inclusion of cascading style sheets and frames. HTML 4.0 is preferred for generated files because of the frame sets. For example, entities for the less than symbol (<) and the greater than symbol (>) should be written as < and >. Similarly, the ampersand (&) should be written as &. The bold HTML tag is shown in the following example. /** * This is a doc comment. * @see java.lang.Object */ Leading Asterisks When the javadoc command parses a documentation comment, leading asterisks (*) on each line are discarded, and blanks and tabs that precede the initial asterisks (*) are also discarded. If you omit the leading asterisk on a line, then the leading white space is no longer removed so that you can paste code examples directly into a documentation comment inside a tag with its indentation preserved. Spaces are interpreted by browsers more uniformly than tabs. Indentation is relative to the left margin (rather than the separator /** ortag). First Sentence The first sentence of each documentation comment should be a summary sentence that contains a concise but complete description of the declared entity. This sentence ends at the first period that is followed by a blank, tab, or line terminator, or at the first block tag. The javadoc command copies this first sentence to the member summary at the top of the HTML page. Multiple-Field Declarations The Java platform lets you declare multiple fields in a single statement, but this statement can have only one documentation comment that is copied for all fields. If you want individual documentation comments for each field, then declare each field in a separate statement. For example, the following documentation comment does not make sense written as a single declaration and would be better handled as two declarations: /** * The horizontal and vertical distances of point (x,y) */ public int x, y; // Avoid this The javadoc command generates the following documentation from the previous code: public int x The horizontal and vertical distances of point (x, y). public int y The horizontal and vertical distances of point (x, y). Use of Header Tags When writing documentation comments for members, it is best not to use HTML heading tags such asand
, because the javadoc command creates an entire structured document, and these structural tags might interfere with the formatting of the generated document. However, you can use these headings in class and package comments to provide your own structure. Method Comment Inheritance The javadoc command allows method comment inheritance in classes and interfaces to fill in missing text or to explicitly inherit method comments. Constructors, fields, and nested classes do not inherit documentation comments. Note: The source file for an inherited method must be on the path specified by the -sourcepath option for the documentation comment to be available to copy. Neither the class nor its package needs to be passed in on the command line. This contrasts with Release 1.3.n and earlier releases, where the class had to be a documented class. Fill in Missing Text When a main description, or @return, @param, or @throws tag is missing from a method comment, the javadoc command copies the corresponding main description or tag comment from the method it overrides or implements (if any). See Method Comment Inheritance. When an @param tag for a particular parameter is missing, the comment for that parameter is copied from the method further up the inheritance hierarchy. When an @throws tag for a particular exception is missing, the @throws tag is copied only when that exception is declared. This behavior contrasts with Release 1.3 and earlier, where the presence of any main description or tag would prevent all comments from being inherited. See Javadoc Tags and Options. Explicit Inheritance Insert the {@inheritDoc} inline tag in a method main description or @return, @param, or @throws tag comment. The corresponding inherited main description or tag comment is copied into that spot. Class and Interface Inheritance Comment inheritance occurs in all possible cases of inheritance from classes and interfaces: When a method in a class overrides a method in a superclass When a method in an interface overrides a method in a superinterface When a method in a class implements a method in an interface In the first two cases, the javadoc command generates the subheading Overrides in the documentation for the overriding method. A link to the method being overridden is included, whether or not the comment is inherited. In the third case, when a method in a specified class implements a method in an interface, the javadoc command generates the subheading Specified by in the documentation for the overriding method. A link to the method being implemented is included, whether or not the comment is inherited. Method Comments Algorithm If a method does not have a documentation comment, or has an {@inheritDoc} tag, then the javadoc command uses the following algorithm to search for an applicable comment. The algorithm is designed to find the most specific applicable documentation comment, and to give preference to interfaces over superclasses: Look in each directly implemented (or extended) interface in the order they appear following the word implements (or extends) in the method declaration. Use the first documentation comment found for this method. If Step 1 failed to find a documentation comment, then recursively apply this entire algorithm to each directly implemented (or extended) interface in the same order they were examined in Step 1. When Step 2 fails to find a documentation comment and this is a class other than the Object class, but not an interface: If the superclass has a documentation comment for this method, then use it. If Step 3a failed to find a documentation comment, then recursively apply this entire algorithm to the superclass. Javadoc Tags The javadoc command parses special tags when they are embedded within a Java documentation comment. The javadoc tags let you autogenerate a complete, well-formatted API from your source code. The tags start with an at sign (@) and are case-sensitive. They must be typed with the uppercase and lowercase letters as shown. A tag must start at the beginning of a line (after any leading spaces and an optional asterisk), or it is treated as text. By convention, tags with the same name are grouped together. For example, put all @see tags together. For more information, see Where Tags Can Be Used. Tags have the following types: Bock tags: Place block tags only in the tag section that follows the description. Block tags have the form: @tag. Inline tags: Place inline tags anywhere in the main description or in the comments for block tags. Inline tags are enclosed within braces: {@tag}. For custom tags, see -tag tagname:Xaoptcmf:"taghead". See also Where Tags Can Be Used. Tag Descriptions @author name-text Introduced in JDK 1.0 Adds an Author entry with the specified name text to the generated documents when the -author option is used. A documentation comment can contain multiple @author tags. You can specify one name per @author tag or multiple names per tag. In the former case, the javadoc command inserts a comma (,) and space between names. In the latter case, the entire text is copied to the generated document without being parsed. Therefore, you can use multiple names per line if you want a localized name separator other than a comma. See @author in How to Write Doc Comments for the Javadoc Tool at http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/documentation/index-137868.html#@author {@code text} Introduced in JDK 1.5 Equivalent to
{@literal}
. Displays text in code font without interpreting the text as HTML markup or nested Javadoc tags. This enables you to use regular angle brackets (< and >) instead of the HTML entities (< and >) in documentation comments, such as in parameter types (