@use JSDoc

ES 2015 Classes

JSDoc 3 makes it easy to document classes that follow the ECMAScript 2015 specification. You don't need to use tags such as @class and @constructor with ES 2015 classes—JSDoc automatically identifies classes and their constructors simply by parsing your code. ES 2015 classes are supported in JSDoc 3.4.0 and later.

Documenting a simple class

The following example shows how to document a simple class with a constructor, two instance methods, and one static method:

Simple ES 2015 class
/** Class representing a point. */
class Point {
    /**
     * Create a point.
     * @param {number} x - The x value.
     * @param {number} y - The y value.
     */
    constructor(x, y) {
        // ...
    }

    /**
     * Get the x value.
     * @return {number} The x value.
     */
    getX() {
        // ...
    }

    /**
     * Get the y value.
     * @return {number} The y value.
     */
    getY() {
        // ...
    }

    /**
     * Convert a string containing two comma-separated numbers into a point.
     * @param {string} str - The string containing two comma-separated numbers.
     * @return {Point} A Point object.
     */
    static fromString(str) {
        // ...
    }
}

You can also document classes that are defined in a class expression, which assigns the class to a variable or constant:

ES 2015 class expression
/** Class representing a point. */
const Point = class {
    // and so on
}

Extending classes

When you use the extends keyword to extend an existing class, you also need to tell JSDoc which class you're extending. You do this with the @augments (or @extends) tag.

For example, to extend the Point class shown above:

Extending an ES 2015 class
/**
 * Class representing a dot.
 * @extends Point
 */
class Dot extends Point {
    /**
     * Create a dot.
     * @param {number} x - The x value.
     * @param {number} y - The y value.
     * @param {number} width - The width of the dot, in pixels.
     */
    constructor(x, y, width) {
        // ...
    }

    /**
     * Get the dot's width.
     * @return {number} The dot's width, in pixels.
     */
    getWidth() {
        // ...
    }
}