pydoc3 --version (return code: 0)
pydoc - the Python documentation tool
pydoc3 <name> ...
Show text documentation on something. <name> may be the name of a
Python keyword, topic, function, module, or package, or a dotted
reference to a class or function within a module or module in a
package. If <name> contains a '/', it is used as the path to a
Python source file to document. If name is 'keywords', 'topics',
or 'modules', a listing of these things is displayed.
pydoc3 -k <keyword>
Search for a keyword in the synopsis lines of all available modules.
pydoc3 -p <port>
Start an HTTP server on the given port on the local machine. Port
number 0 can be used to get an arbitrary unused port.
pydoc3 -b
Start an HTTP server on an arbitrary unused port and open a Web browser
to interactively browse documentation. The -p option can be used with
the -b option to explicitly specify the server port.
pydoc3 -w <name> ...
Write out the HTML documentation for a module to a file in the current
directory. If <name> contains a '/', it is treated as a filename; if
it names a directory, documentation is written for all the contents.
pydoc3 --help (return code: 0)
pydoc - the Python documentation tool
pydoc3 <name> ...
Show text documentation on something. <name> may be the name of a
Python keyword, topic, function, module, or package, or a dotted
reference to a class or function within a module or module in a
package. If <name> contains a '/', it is used as the path to a
Python source file to document. If name is 'keywords', 'topics',
or 'modules', a listing of these things is displayed.
pydoc3 -k <keyword>
Search for a keyword in the synopsis lines of all available modules.
pydoc3 -p <port>
Start an HTTP server on the given port on the local machine. Port
number 0 can be used to get an arbitrary unused port.
pydoc3 -b
Start an HTTP server on an arbitrary unused port and open a Web browser
to interactively browse documentation. The -p option can be used with
the -b option to explicitly specify the server port.
pydoc3 -w <name> ...
Write out the HTML documentation for a module to a file in the current
directory. If <name> contains a '/', it is treated as a filename; if
it names a directory, documentation is written for all the contents.