"use strict"; Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true }); exports.TSDocValidationConfiguration = void 0; /** * Part of the {@link TSDocConfiguration} object. */ var TSDocValidationConfiguration = /** @class */ (function () { function TSDocValidationConfiguration() { /** * Set `ignoreUndefinedTags` to true to silently ignore unrecognized tags, * instead of reporting a warning. * * @remarks * Normally the parser will issue errors when it encounters tag names that do not * have a corresponding definition in {@link TSDocConfiguration.tagDefinitions}. * This helps to catch common mistakes such as a misspelled tag. * * @defaultValue `false` */ this.ignoreUndefinedTags = false; /** * Set `reportUnsupportedTags` to true to issue a warning for tags that are not * supported by your tool. * * @remarks * The TSDoc standard defines may tags. By default it assumes that if your tool does * not implement one of these tags, then it will simply ignore it. But sometimes this * may be misleading for developers. (For example, they might write an `@example` block * and then be surprised if it doesn't appear in the documentation output.). * * For a better experience, you can tell the parser which tags you support, and then it * will issue warnings wherever unsupported tags are used. This is done using * {@link TSDocConfiguration.setSupportForTag}. Note that calling that function * automatically sets `reportUnsupportedTags` to true. * * @defaultValue `false` */ this.reportUnsupportedTags = false; /** * Set `reportUnsupportedHtmlElements` to true to issue a warning for HTML elements which * are not defined in your TSDoc configuration's `supportedHtmlElements` field. * * @defaultValue `false` */ this.reportUnsupportedHtmlElements = false; } return TSDocValidationConfiguration; }()); exports.TSDocValidationConfiguration = TSDocValidationConfiguration; //# sourceMappingURL=TSDocValidationConfiguration.js.map