Architecture
LuaDoc's processing can be divided in two distinct steps: parsing and 
generation. The parsing step take as input a set of .lua files 
and must produce a Documentation object. A generator takes a 
Documentation object as input and produces a set of output files. 
It's up to the generator to decide which output format it will generate.
The parsing step is executed by a component called 
taglet, while the generation is handled by a 
component called doclet. This architecture is 
shown below.
 
Taglet
LuaDoc does not impose a documentation format. It does relies on an internal 
representation of the documentation. This representation is described in the
Documentation section. If the developer wants to
use a custom documentation format the taglet component can be 
replaced.
Writing a new taglet is a matter a implementing a single method:
function start (files, doc)
- files
- a list of file (or directory) names.
- doc
- a preprocessed documentation object.
LuaDoc comes bundled with a standard taglet implementation. This implementation 
takes all file names in the list and produce the documentation object using a set
of tags described in the section How To. If an 
item in the list is a directory it iterates recursively throw all files in the 
directory looking for filenames with .lua or .luadoc 
extensions.
Documentation
Instead of defining a documentation format LuaDoc defines an internal representation of a documentation object. Taglets and doclets must conform with this format.
The documentation object is described below. Some description elements are explained below:
- List
- table indexed by number. Example: List<string> { [1] = "x", [2] = "y", [3] = "z", }
- HashMap
- table whose numerical indices are the key values for objects. Example: HashMap<string, string>
	{ [1] = "x", [2] = "y"; [3] = "z"; ["x"] = "x coord", ["y"] = "y coord", ["z"] = "z coord", }
DOCUMENTATION
{
	files = HashMap<string, DOCUMENTATION_ELEMENT>, -- indexed by file name
	modules = HashMap<string, DOCUMENTATION_ELEMENT>, -- indexed by module name
}
DOCUMENTATION_ELEMENT
{
	type = ["file" | "module"],
	name = <string>, -- full path of file or name of module
	doc = List<BLOCK>, -- all documentation blocks
	functions = HashMap<string, BLOCK>, -- only functions, indexed by function name
	tables = HashMap<string, BLOCK>, -- only table definitions, indexed by table name
	},
}
BLOCK
{
	class = ["module" | "function" | "table"],
	name = <string>,
	summary = <string>,
	description = <string>,
	comment = List<string>,
	code = List<string>,
	param = HashMap<string, string>,
},
Doclet
The primary job of an doclet is to take a 
Documentation object and generate some kind of output.
LuaDoc is bundled with an implementation that generates HTML files.
Writing a new doclet is a matter a 
implementing a single method:
function start (doc)
- doc
- a documentation object.
