Reference documentation and code samples for the Service Usage V1 API class Google::Api::Page.
Represents a documentation page. A page can contain subpages to represent nested documentation set structure.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#content
def content() -> ::String
-
(::String) — The Markdown content of the page. You can use
(== include \{path} ==)
to include content from a Markdown file.
#content=
def content=(value) -> ::String
-
value (::String) — The Markdown content of the page. You can use
(== include \{path} ==)
to include content from a Markdown file.
-
(::String) — The Markdown content of the page. You can use
(== include \{path} ==)
to include content from a Markdown file.
#name
def name() -> ::String
-
(::String) — The name of the page. It will be used as an identity of the page to
generate URI of the page, text of the link to this page in navigation,
etc. The full page name (start from the root page name to this page
concatenated with
.
) can be used as reference to the page in your documentation. For example:pages: - name: Tutorial content: (== include tutorial.md ==) subpages: - name: Java content: (== include tutorial_java.md ==)
You can reference
Java
page using Markdown reference link syntax:[Java][Tutorial.Java]
.
#name=
def name=(value) -> ::String
-
value (::String) — The name of the page. It will be used as an identity of the page to
generate URI of the page, text of the link to this page in navigation,
etc. The full page name (start from the root page name to this page
concatenated with
.
) can be used as reference to the page in your documentation. For example:pages: - name: Tutorial content: (== include tutorial.md ==) subpages: - name: Java content: (== include tutorial_java.md ==)
You can reference
Java
page using Markdown reference link syntax:[Java][Tutorial.Java]
.
-
(::String) — The name of the page. It will be used as an identity of the page to
generate URI of the page, text of the link to this page in navigation,
etc. The full page name (start from the root page name to this page
concatenated with
.
) can be used as reference to the page in your documentation. For example:pages: - name: Tutorial content: (== include tutorial.md ==) subpages: - name: Java content: (== include tutorial_java.md ==)
You can reference
Java
page using Markdown reference link syntax:[Java][Tutorial.Java]
.
#subpages
def subpages() -> ::Array<::Google::Api::Page>
- (::Array<::Google::Api::Page>) — Subpages of this page. The order of subpages specified here will be honored in the generated docset.
#subpages=
def subpages=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Api::Page>
- value (::Array<::Google::Api::Page>) — Subpages of this page. The order of subpages specified here will be honored in the generated docset.
- (::Array<::Google::Api::Page>) — Subpages of this page. The order of subpages specified here will be honored in the generated docset.