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+= Method Documentation Guide
+
+This guide discusses recommendations for documenting methods for Ruby core
+classes and classes in the standard library.
+
+== Goal
+
+The goal when documentating a method is to impart the most important
+information about the method in the least amount of time. A reader
+of the method documentation should be able to quickly understand
+the purpose of the method and how to use it. Providing too little
+information about the method is not good, but providing unimportant
+information or unnecessary examples is not good either. Use your
+judgment about what the user of the method needs to know to use the
+method correctly.
+
+== General Structure
+
+The general structure of the method documentation should be:
+
+* call-seq (for methods written in C)
+* Synopsis (Short Description)
+* Details and Examples
+* Argument Description (if necessary)
+* Corner Cases and Exceptions
+* Related Methods (optional)
+
+== call-seq (for methods written in C)
+
+For methods written in C, RDoc cannot determine what arguments
+the method accepts, so those need to be documented using a
+<tt>call-seq</tt>. Here's an example <tt>call-seq</tt>:
+
+ * call-seq:
+ * array.count -> integer
+ * array.count(obj) -> integer
+ * array.count {|element| ... } -> integer
+
+When creating the <tt>call-seq</tt>, use the form
+
+ receiver_type.method_name(arguments) {|block_arguments|} -> return_type
+
+Omit the parentheses for cases where the method does not accept arguments,
+and omit the block for cases where a block is not accepted.
+
+In the cases where method can return multiple different types, separate the
+types with "or". If the method can return any type, use "object". If the
+method returns the receiver, use "self".
+
+In cases where the method accepts optional arguments, use a <tt>call-seq</tt>
+with an optional argument if the method has the same behavior when an argument
+is ommitted as when the argument is passed with the default value. For example,
+use:
+
+ * obj.respond_to?(symbol, include_all=false) -> true or false
+
+Instead of:
+
+ * obj.respond_to?(symbol) -> true or false
+ * obj.respond_to?(symbol, include_all) -> true or false
+
+However, as shown above for <tt>Array#count</tt>, use separate lines if the
+behavior is different if the argument is ommitted.
+
+== Synopsis
+
+The synopsis comes next, and is a short description of what the
+method does and why you would want to use it. Ideally, this
+is a single sentence, but for more complex methods it may require
+an entire paragraph.
+
+For <tt>Array#count</tt>, the synopsis is:
+
+ Returns a count of specified elements.
+
+This is great as it is short and descriptive. Avoid documenting
+too much in the synopsis, stick to the most important information
+for the benefit of the reader.
+
+== Details and Examples
+
+Most non-trivial methods benefit from examples, as well as details
+beyond what is given in the synopsis. In the details and examples
+section, you can document how the method handles different types
+of arguments, and provides examples on proper usage. In this
+section, focus on how to use the method properly, not on how the
+method handles improper arguments or corner cases.
+
+Not every behavior of a method requires an example. If the method
+is documented to return +self+, you don't need to provide an example
+showing the return value is the same as the receiver. If the method
+is documented to return +nil+, you don't need to provide an example
+showing that it returns +nil+. If the details mention that for a
+certain argument type, an empty array is returned, you don't need
+to provide an example for that.
+
+Only add an example if it provides the user additional information,
+do not add an example if it provides the same information given
+in the synopsis or details. The purpose of examples is not to prove
+what the details are stating.
+
+== Argument Description (if necessary)
+
+For methods that require arguments, if not obvious and not explicitly
+mentioned in the details or implicitly shown in the examples, you can
+provide details about the types of arguments supported. When discussing
+the types of arguments, use simple language even if less-precise, such
+as "level must be an integer", not "level must be an Integer-convertible
+object". The vast majority of use will be with the expected type, not an
+argument that is explicitly convertable to the expected type, and
+documenting the difference is not important.
+
+For methods that take blocks, it can be useful to document the type of
+argument passed if it is not obvious, not explicitly mentioned in the
+details, and not implicitly shown in the examples.
+
+If there is more than one argument or block argument, use an RDoc
+definition list:
+
+argument_name1 :: type and description
+argument_name2 :: type and description
+
+== Corner Cases and Exceptions
+
+For corner cases of methods, such as atypical usage, briefly mention
+the behavior, but do not provide any examples.
+
+Only document exceptions raised if they are not obvious. For example,
+if you have stated earlier than an argument type must be an integer,
+you do not need to document that a TypeError is raised if a non-integer
+is passed. Do not provide examples of exceptions being raised unless
+that is a common case, such as Hash#fetch raising KeyError.
+
+== Related Methods (optional)
+
+In some cases, it is useful to document which methods are related to
+the current method. For example, documentation for Hash#[] might
+mention Hash#fetch as a related method, and Hash#merge might mention
+#merge! as a related method. Consider which methods may be related
+to the current method, and if you think the reader would benefit it,
+at the end of the method documentation, add a line starting with
+"Related: " (e.g. "Related: #fetch"). Don't list more than three
+related methods. If you think more than three methods are related,
+pick the three you think are most important and list those three.
+
+== Methods Accepting Multiple Argument Types
+
+For methods that accept multiple argument types, in some cases it can
+be useful to document the different argument types separately. It's
+best to use a separate paragraph for each case you are discussing.
+
+== Use of English
+
+Readers of this documentation may not be native speakers of English.
+Documentation should be written with this in mind.
+
+Use short sentences and group them into paragraphs that cover a single
+topic. Avoid complex verb tenses, excessive comma-separated phrases,
+and idioms.
+
+When writing documentation, define unusual or critical concepts in
+simple language. Provide links to authoritative sources, or add a
+general description to the top-level documentation for the class or
+module.
+
+== Formatting
+
+Extraneous formatting such as headings and horizontal lines should be
+avoided in general. It is best to keep the formatting as simple as
+possible. Only use headings and other formatting for the most complex
+cases where the method documentation is very long due to the complexity
+of the method.
+
+Methods are documented using RDoc syntax. See the
+{RDoc Markup Reference}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/RDoc/Markup.html#class-RDoc::Markup-label-RDoc+Markup+Reference]
+for more information on formatting with RDoc syntax.