| \documentclass{howto} |
| \usepackage{ltxmarkup} |
| |
| \title{Documenting Python} |
| |
| \makeindex |
| |
| \input{boilerplate} |
| |
| % Now override the stuff that includes author information; |
| % Guido did *not* write this one! |
| |
| \author{Fred L. Drake, Jr.} |
| \authoraddress{ |
| PythonLabs \\ |
| Email: \email{fdrake@acm.org} |
| } |
| |
| |
| \begin{document} |
| |
| \maketitle |
| |
| \begin{abstract} |
| \noindent |
| The Python language has a substantial body of |
| documentation, much of it contributed by various authors. The markup |
| used for the Python documentation is based on \LaTeX{} and requires a |
| significant set of macros written specifically for documenting Python. |
| This document describes the macros introduced to support Python |
| documentation and how they should be used to support a wide range of |
| output formats. |
| |
| This document describes the document classes and special markup used |
| in the Python documentation. Authors may use this guide, in |
| conjunction with the template files provided with the |
| distribution, to create or maintain whole documents or sections. |
| |
| If you're interested in contributing to Python's documentation, |
| there's no need to learn \LaTeX{} if you're not so inclined; plain |
| text contributions are more than welcome as well. |
| \end{abstract} |
| |
| \tableofcontents |
| |
| |
| \section{Introduction \label{intro}} |
| |
| Python's documentation has long been considered to be good for a |
| free programming language. There are a number of reasons for this, |
| the most important being the early commitment of Python's creator, |
| Guido van Rossum, to providing documentation on the language and its |
| libraries, and the continuing involvement of the user community in |
| providing assistance for creating and maintaining documentation. |
| |
| The involvement of the community takes many forms, from authoring to |
| bug reports to just plain complaining when the documentation could |
| be more complete or easier to use. All of these forms of input from |
| the community have proved useful during the time I've been involved |
| in maintaining the documentation. |
| |
| This document is aimed at authors and potential authors of |
| documentation for Python. More specifically, it is for people |
| contributing to the standard documentation and developing additional |
| documents using the same tools as the standard documents. This |
| guide will be less useful for authors using the Python documentation |
| tools for topics other than Python, and less useful still for |
| authors not using the tools at all. |
| |
| The material in this guide is intended to assist authors using the |
| Python documentation tools. It includes information on the source |
| distribution of the standard documentation, a discussion of the |
| document types, reference material on the markup defined in the |
| document classes, a list of the external tools needed for processing |
| documents, and reference material on the tools provided with the |
| documentation resources. At the end, there is also a section |
| discussing future directions for the Python documentation and where |
| to turn for more information. |
| |
| If your interest is in contributing to the Python documentation, but |
| you don't have the time or inclination to learn \LaTeX{} and the |
| markup structures documented here, there's a welcoming place for you |
| among the Python contributors as well. Any time you feel that you |
| can clarify existing documentation or provide documentation that's |
| missing, the existing documentation team will gladly work with you |
| to integrate your text, dealing with the markup for you. Please |
| don't let the material in this document stand between the |
| documentation and your desire to help out! |
| |
| \section{Directory Structure \label{directories}} |
| |
| The source distribution for the standard Python documentation |
| contains a large number of directories. While third-party documents |
| do not need to be placed into this structure or need to be placed |
| within a similar structure, it can be helpful to know where to look |
| for examples and tools when developing new documents using the |
| Python documentation tools. This section describes this directory |
| structure. |
| |
| The documentation sources are usually placed within the Python |
| source distribution as the top-level directory \file{Doc/}, but |
| are not dependent on the Python source distribution in any way. |
| |
| The \file{Doc/} directory contains a few files and several |
| subdirectories. The files are mostly self-explanatory, including a |
| \file{README} and a \file{Makefile}. The directories fall into |
| three categories: |
| |
| \begin{definitions} |
| \term{Document Sources} |
| The \LaTeX{} sources for each document are placed in a |
| separate directory. These directories are given short |
| names which vaguely indicate the document in each: |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Document Title} |
| \lineii{api/} |
| {\citetitle[../api/api.html]{The Python/C API}} |
| \lineii{dist/} |
| {\citetitle[../dist/dist.html]{Distributing Python Modules}} |
| \lineii{doc/} |
| {\citetitle[../doc/doc.html]{Documenting Python}} |
| \lineii{ext/} |
| {\citetitle[../ext/ext.html] |
| {Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter}} |
| \lineii{inst/} |
| {\citetitle[../inst/inst.html]{Installing Python Modules}} |
| \lineii{lib/} |
| {\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}} |
| \lineii{mac/} |
| {\citetitle[../mac/mac.html]{Macintosh Module Reference}} |
| \lineii{ref/} |
| {\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual}} |
| \lineii{tut/} |
| {\citetitle[../tut/tut.html]{Python Tutorial}} |
| \lineii{whatsnew/} |
| {\citetitle[../whatsnew/whatsnew24.html] |
| {What's New in Python \shortversion}} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| \term{Format-Specific Output} |
| Most output formats have a directory which contains a |
| \file{Makefile} which controls the generation of that format |
| and provides storage for the formatted documents. The only |
| variations within this category are the Portable Document |
| Format (PDF) and PostScript versions are placed in the |
| directories \file{paper-a4/} and \file{paper-letter/} (this |
| causes all the temporary files created by \LaTeX{} to be kept |
| in the same place for each paper size, where they can be more |
| easily ignored). |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Output Formats} |
| \lineii{html/}{HTML output} |
| \lineii{info/}{GNU info output} |
| \lineii{isilo/}{\ulink{iSilo}{http://www.isilo.com/} |
| documents (for Palm OS devices)} |
| \lineii{paper-a4/}{PDF and PostScript, A4 paper} |
| \lineii{paper-letter/}{PDF and PostScript, US-Letter paper} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| \term{Supplemental Files} |
| Some additional directories are used to store supplemental |
| files used for the various processes. Directories are |
| included for the shared \LaTeX{} document classes, the |
| \LaTeX2HTML support, template files for various document |
| components, and the scripts used to perform various steps in |
| the formatting processes. |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Contents} |
| \lineii{commontex/}{Document content shared among documents} |
| \lineii{perl/} {Support for \LaTeX2HTML processing} |
| \lineii{templates/}{Example files for source documents} |
| \lineii{texinputs/}{Style implementation for \LaTeX} |
| \lineii{tools/} {Custom processing scripts} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| \end{definitions} |
| |
| |
| \section{Style Guide \label{style-guide}} |
| |
| The Python documentation should follow the \citetitle |
| [http://developer.apple.com/documentation/UserExperience/Conceptual/APStyleGuide/AppleStyleGuide2003.pdf] |
| {Apple Publications Style Guide} wherever possible. This particular |
| style guide was selected mostly because it seems reasonable and is |
| easy to get online. |
| |
| Topics which are not covered in the Apple's style guide will be |
| discussed in this document if necessary. |
| |
| Footnotes are generally discouraged due to the pain of using |
| footnotes in the HTML conversion of documents. Footnotes may be |
| used when they are the best way to present specific information. |
| When a footnote reference is added at the end of the sentence, it |
| should follow the sentence-ending punctuation. The \LaTeX{} markup |
| should appear something like this: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| This sentence has a footnote reference.% |
| \footnote{This is the footnote text.} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Footnotes may appear in the middle of sentences where appropriate. |
| |
| Many special names are used in the Python documentation, including |
| the names of operating systems, programming languages, standards |
| bodies, and the like. Many of these were assigned \LaTeX{} macros |
| at some point in the distant past, and these macros lived on long |
| past their usefulness. In the current markup, most of these entities |
| are not assigned any special markup, but the preferred spellings are |
| given here to aid authors in maintaining the consistency of |
| presentation in the Python documentation. |
| |
| Other terms and words deserve special mention as well; these conventions |
| should be used to ensure consistency throughout the documentation: |
| |
| \begin{description} |
| \item[CPU] |
| For ``central processing unit.'' Many style guides say this |
| should be spelled out on the first use (and if you must use it, |
| do so!). For the Python documentation, this abbreviation should |
| be avoided since there's no reasonable way to predict which occurrence |
| will be the first seen by the reader. It is better to use the |
| word ``processor'' instead. |
| |
| \item[\POSIX] |
| The name assigned to a particular group of standards. This is |
| always uppercase. Use the macro \macro{POSIX} to represent this |
| name. |
| |
| \item[Python] |
| The name of our favorite programming language is always |
| capitalized. |
| |
| \item[Unicode] |
| The name of a character set and matching encoding. This is |
| always written capitalized. |
| |
| \item[\UNIX] |
| The name of the operating system developed at AT\&T Bell Labs |
| in the early 1970s. Use the macro \macro{UNIX} to use this |
| name. |
| \end{description} |
| |
| |
| \section{\LaTeX{} Primer \label{latex-primer}} |
| |
| This section is a brief introduction to \LaTeX{} concepts and |
| syntax, to provide authors enough information to author documents |
| productively without having to become ``\TeX{}nicians.'' This does |
| not teach everything needed to know about writing \LaTeX{} for |
| Python documentation; many of the standard ``environments'' are not |
| described here (though you will learn how to mark something as an |
| environment). |
| |
| Perhaps the most important concept to keep in mind while marking up |
| Python documentation is that while \TeX{} is unstructured, \LaTeX{} was |
| designed as a layer on top of \TeX{} which specifically supports |
| structured markup. The Python-specific markup is intended to extend |
| the structure provided by standard \LaTeX{} document classes to |
| support additional information specific to Python. |
| |
| \LaTeX{} documents contain two parts: the preamble and the body. |
| The preamble is used to specify certain metadata about the document |
| itself, such as the title, the list of authors, the date, and the |
| \emph{class} the document belongs to. Additional information used |
| to control index generation and the use of bibliographic databases |
| can also be placed in the preamble. For most authors, the preamble |
| can be most easily created by copying it from an existing document |
| and modifying a few key pieces of information. |
| |
| The \dfn{class} of a document is used to place a document within a |
| broad category of documents and set some fundamental formatting |
| properties. For Python documentation, two classes are used: the |
| \code{manual} class and the \code{howto} class. These classes also |
| define the additional markup used to document Python concepts and |
| structures. Specific information about these classes is provided in |
| section \ref{classes}, ``Document Classes,'' below. The first thing |
| in the preamble is the declaration of the document's class. |
| |
| After the class declaration, a number of \emph{macros} are used to |
| provide further information about the document and setup any |
| additional markup that is needed. No output is generated from the |
| preamble; it is an error to include free text in the preamble |
| because it would cause output. |
| |
| The document body follows the preamble. This contains all the |
| printed components of the document marked up structurally. Generic |
| \LaTeX{} structures include hierarchical sections, numbered and |
| bulleted lists, and special structures for the document abstract and |
| indexes. |
| |
| \subsection{Syntax \label{latex-syntax}} |
| |
| There are some things that an author of Python documentation needs |
| to know about \LaTeX{} syntax. |
| |
| A \dfn{comment} is started by the ``percent'' character |
| (\character{\%}) and continues through the end of the line |
| \emph{and all leading whitespace on the following line}. This is |
| a little different from any programming language I know of, so an |
| example is in order: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| This is text.% comment |
| This is more text. % another comment |
| Still more text. |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The first non-comment character following the first comment is the |
| letter \character{T} on the second line; the leading whitespace on |
| that line is consumed as part of the first comment. This means |
| that there is no space between the first and second sentences, so |
| the period and letter \character{T} will be directly adjacent in |
| the typeset document. |
| |
| Note also that though the first non-comment character after the |
| second comment is the letter \character{S}, there is whitespace |
| preceding the comment, so the two sentences are separated as |
| expected. |
| |
| A \dfn{group} is an enclosure for a collection of text and |
| commands which encloses the formatting context and constrains the |
| scope of any changes to that context made by commands within the |
| group. Groups can be nested hierarchically. The formatting |
| context includes the font and the definition of additional macros |
| (or overrides of macros defined in outer groups). Syntactically, |
| groups are enclosed in braces: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| {text in a group} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| An alternate syntax for a group using brackets, \code{[...]}, is |
| used by macros and environment constructors which take optional |
| parameters; brackets do not normally hold syntactic significance. |
| A degenerate group, containing only one atomic bit of content, |
| does not need to have an explicit group, unless it is required to |
| avoid ambiguity. Since Python tends toward the explicit, groups |
| are also made explicit in the documentation markup. |
| |
| Groups are used only sparingly in the Python documentation, except |
| for their use in marking parameters to macros and environments. |
| |
| A \dfn{macro} is usually a simple construct which is identified by |
| name and can take some number of parameters. In normal \LaTeX{} |
| usage, one of these can be optional. The markup is introduced |
| using the backslash character (\character{\e}), and the name is |
| given by alphabetic characters (no digits, hyphens, or |
| underscores). Required parameters should be marked as a group, |
| and optional parameters should be marked using the alternate |
| syntax for a group. |
| |
| For example, a macro which takes a single parameter |
| would appear like this: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \name{parameter} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| A macro which takes an optional parameter would be typed like this |
| when the optional parameter is given: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \name[optional] |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| If both optional and required parameters are to be required, it |
| looks like this: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \name[optional]{required} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| A macro name may be followed by a space or newline; a space |
| between the macro name and any parameters will be consumed, but |
| this usage is not practiced in the Python documentation. Such a |
| space is still consumed if there are no parameters to the macro, |
| in which case inserting an empty group (\code{\{\}}) or explicit |
| word space (\samp{\e\ }) immediately after the macro name helps to |
| avoid running the expansion of the macro into the following text. |
| Macros which take no parameters but which should not be followed |
| by a word space do not need special treatment if the following |
| character in the document source if not a name character (such as |
| punctuation). |
| |
| Each line of this example shows an appropriate way to write text |
| which includes a macro which takes no parameters: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| This \UNIX{} is followed by a space. |
| This \UNIX\ is also followed by a space. |
| \UNIX, followed by a comma, needs no additional markup. |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| An \dfn{environment} is a larger construct than a macro, and can |
| be used for things with more content than would conveniently fit |
| in a macro parameter. They are primarily used when formatting |
| parameters need to be changed before and after a large chunk of |
| content, but the content itself needs to be highly flexible. Code |
| samples are presented using an environment, and descriptions of |
| functions, methods, and classes are also marked using environments. |
| |
| Since the content of an environment is free-form and can consist |
| of several paragraphs, they are actually marked using a pair of |
| macros: \macro{begin} and \macro{end}. These macros both take the |
| name of the environment as a parameter. An example is the |
| environment used to mark the abstract of a document: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{abstract} |
| This is the text of the abstract. It concisely explains what |
| information is found in the document. |
| |
| It can consist of multiple paragraphs. |
| \end{abstract} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| An environment can also have required and optional parameters of |
| its own. These follow the parameter of the \macro{begin} macro. |
| This example shows an environment which takes a single required |
| parameter: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{datadesc}{controlnames} |
| A 33-element string array that contains the \ASCII{} mnemonics for |
| the thirty-two \ASCII{} control characters from 0 (NUL) to 0x1f |
| (US), in order, plus the mnemonic \samp{SP} for the space character. |
| \end{datadesc} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| There are a number of less-used marks in \LaTeX{} which are used |
| to enter characters which are not found in \ASCII{} or which a |
| considered special, or \emph{active} in \TeX{} or \LaTeX. Given |
| that these are often used adjacent to other characters, the markup |
| required to produce the proper character may need to be followed |
| by a space or an empty group, or the markup can be enclosed in a |
| group. Some which are found in Python documentation are: |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{c|l}{textrm}{Character}{Markup} |
| \lineii{\textasciicircum}{\code{\e textasciicircum}} |
| \lineii{\textasciitilde}{\code{\e textasciitilde}} |
| \lineii{\textgreater}{\code{\e textgreater}} |
| \lineii{\textless}{\code{\e textless}} |
| \lineii{\c c}{\code{\e c c}} |
| \lineii{\"o}{\code{\e"o}} |
| \lineii{\o}{\code{\e o}} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Hierarchical Structure \label{latex-structure}} |
| |
| \LaTeX{} expects documents to be arranged in a conventional, |
| hierarchical way, with chapters, sections, sub-sections, |
| appendixes, and the like. These are marked using macros rather |
| than environments, probably because the end of a section can be |
| safely inferred when a section of equal or higher level starts. |
| |
| There are six ``levels'' of sectioning in the document classes |
| used for Python documentation, and the deepest two |
| levels\footnote{The deepest levels have the highest numbers in the |
| table.} are not used. The levels are: |
| |
| \begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{textrm}{Level}{Macro Name}{Notes} |
| \lineiii{1}{\macro{chapter}}{(1)} |
| \lineiii{2}{\macro{section}}{} |
| \lineiii{3}{\macro{subsection}}{} |
| \lineiii{4}{\macro{subsubsection}}{} |
| \lineiii{5}{\macro{paragraph}}{(2)} |
| \lineiii{6}{\macro{subparagraph}}{} |
| \end{tableiii} |
| |
| \noindent |
| Notes: |
| |
| \begin{description} |
| \item[(1)] |
| Only used for the \code{manual} documents, as described in |
| section \ref{classes}, ``Document Classes.'' |
| \item[(2)] |
| Not the same as a paragraph of text; nobody seems to use this. |
| \end{description} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Common Environments \label{latex-environments}} |
| |
| \LaTeX{} provides a variety of environments even without the |
| additional markup provided by the Python-specific document classes |
| introduced in the next section. The following environments are |
| provided as part of standard \LaTeX{} and are being used in the |
| standard Python documentation; descriptions will be added here as |
| time allows. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| abstract |
| alltt |
| description |
| displaymath |
| document |
| enumerate |
| figure |
| flushleft |
| itemize |
| list |
| math |
| quotation |
| quote |
| sloppypar |
| verbatim |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| |
| \section{Document Classes \label{classes}} |
| |
| Two \LaTeX{} document classes are defined specifically for use with |
| the Python documentation. The \code{manual} class is for large |
| documents which are sectioned into chapters, and the \code{howto} |
| class is for smaller documents. |
| |
| The \code{manual} documents are larger and are used for most of the |
| standard documents. This document class is based on the standard |
| \LaTeX{} \code{report} class and is formatted very much like a long |
| technical report. The \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference |
| Manual} is a good example of a \code{manual} document, and the |
| \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} is a large |
| example. |
| |
| The \code{howto} documents are shorter, and don't have the large |
| structure of the \code{manual} documents. This class is based on |
| the standard \LaTeX{} \code{article} class and is formatted somewhat |
| like the Linux Documentation Project's ``HOWTO'' series as done |
| originally using the LinuxDoc software. The original intent for the |
| document class was that it serve a similar role as the LDP's HOWTO |
| series, but the applicability of the class turns out to be somewhat |
| broader. This class is used for ``how-to'' documents (this |
| document is an example) and for shorter reference manuals for small, |
| fairly cohesive module libraries. Examples of the later use include |
| \citetitle[http://starship.python.net/crew/fdrake/manuals/krb5py/krb5py.html]{Using |
| Kerberos from Python}, which contains reference material for an |
| extension package. These documents are roughly equivalent to a |
| single chapter from a larger work. |
| |
| |
| \section{Special Markup Constructs \label{special-constructs}} |
| |
| The Python document classes define a lot of new environments and |
| macros. This section contains the reference material for these |
| facilities. Documentation for ``standard'' \LaTeX{} constructs is |
| not included here, though they are used in the Python documentation. |
| |
| \subsection{Markup for the Preamble \label{preamble-info}} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{release}{\p{ver}} |
| Set the version number for the software described in the |
| document. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{setshortversion}{\p{sver}} |
| Specify the ``short'' version number of the documented software |
| to be \var{sver}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \subsection{Meta-information Markup \label{meta-info}} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{sectionauthor}{\p{author}\p{email}} |
| Identifies the author of the current section. \var{author} |
| should be the author's name such that it can be used for |
| presentation (though it isn't), and \var{email} should be the |
| author's email address. The domain name portion of |
| the address should be lower case. |
| |
| No presentation is generated from this markup, but it is used to |
| help keep track of contributions. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \subsection{Information Units \label{info-units}} |
| |
| XXX Explain terminology, or come up with something more ``lay.'' |
| |
| There are a number of environments used to describe specific |
| features provided by modules. Each environment requires |
| parameters needed to provide basic information about what is being |
| described, and the environment content should be the description. |
| Most of these environments make entries in the general index (if |
| one is being produced for the document); if no index entry is |
| desired, non-indexing variants are available for many of these |
| environments. The environments have names of the form |
| \code{\var{feature}desc}, and the non-indexing variants are named |
| \code{\var{feature}descni}. The available variants are explicitly |
| included in the list below. |
| |
| For each of these environments, the first parameter, \var{name}, |
| provides the name by which the feature is accessed. |
| |
| Environments which describe features of objects within a module, |
| such as object methods or data attributes, allow an optional |
| \var{type name} parameter. When the feature is an attribute of |
| class instances, \var{type name} only needs to be given if the |
| class was not the most recently described class in the module; the |
| \var{name} value from the most recent \env{classdesc} is implied. |
| For features of built-in or extension types, the \var{type name} |
| value should always be provided. Another special case includes |
| methods and members of general ``protocols,'' such as the |
| formatter and writer protocols described for the |
| \module{formatter} module: these may be documented without any |
| specific implementation classes, and will always require the |
| \var{type name} parameter to be provided. |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{cfuncdesc}{\p{type}\p{name}\p{args}} |
| Environment used to described a C function. The \var{type} |
| should be specified as a \keyword{typedef} name, \code{struct |
| \var{tag}}, or the name of a primitive type. If it is a pointer |
| type, the trailing asterisk should not be preceded by a space. |
| \var{name} should be the name of the function (or function-like |
| pre-processor macro), and \var{args} should give the types and |
| names of the parameters. The names need to be given so they may |
| be used in the description. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{cmemberdesc}{\p{container}\p{type}\p{name}} |
| Description for a structure member. \var{container} should be |
| the \keyword{typedef} name, if there is one, otherwise if should |
| be \samp{struct \var{tag}}. The type of the member should given |
| as \var{type}, and the name should be given as \var{name}. The |
| text of the description should include the range of values |
| allowed, how the value should be interpreted, and whether the |
| value can be changed. References to structure members in text |
| should use the \macro{member} macro. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{csimplemacrodesc}{\p{name}} |
| Documentation for a ``simple'' macro. Simple macros are macros |
| which are used for code expansion, but which do not take |
| arguments so cannot be described as functions. This is not to |
| be used for simple constant definitions. Examples of its use |
| in the Python documentation include |
| \csimplemacro{PyObject_HEAD} and |
| \csimplemacro{Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{ctypedesc}{\op{tag}\p{name}} |
| Environment used to described a C type. The \var{name} |
| parameter should be the \keyword{typedef} name. If the type is |
| defined as a \keyword{struct} without a \keyword{typedef}, |
| \var{name} should have the form \code{struct \var{tag}}. |
| \var{name} will be added to the index unless \var{tag} is |
| provided, in which case \var{tag} will be used instead. |
| \var{tag} should not be used for a \keyword{typedef} name. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{cvardesc}{\p{type}\p{name}} |
| Description of a global C variable. \var{type} should be the |
| \keyword{typedef} name, \code{struct \var{tag}}, or the name of |
| a primitive type. If variable has a pointer type, the trailing |
| asterisk should \emph{not} be preceded by a space. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{datadesc}{\p{name}} |
| This environment is used to document global data in a module, |
| including both variables and values used as ``defined |
| constants.'' Class and object attributes are not documented |
| using this environment. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| \begin{envdesc}{datadescni}{\p{name}} |
| Like \env{datadesc}, but without creating any index entries. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{excclassdesc}{\p{name}\p{constructor parameters}} |
| Describe an exception defined by a class. \var{constructor |
| parameters} should not include the \var{self} parameter or |
| the parentheses used in the call syntax. To describe an |
| exception class without describing the parameters to its |
| constructor, use the \env{excdesc} environment. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{excdesc}{\p{name}} |
| Describe an exception. In the case of class exceptions, the |
| constructor parameters are not described; use \env{excclassdesc} |
| to describe an exception class and its constructor. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{funcdesc}{\p{name}\p{parameters}} |
| Describe a module-level function. \var{parameters} should |
| not include the parentheses used in the call syntax. Object |
| methods are not documented using this environment. Bound object |
| methods placed in the module namespace as part of the public |
| interface of the module are documented using this, as they are |
| equivalent to normal functions for most purposes. |
| |
| The description should include information about the parameters |
| required and how they are used (especially whether mutable |
| objects passed as parameters are modified), side effects, and |
| possible exceptions. A small example may be provided. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| \begin{envdesc}{funcdescni}{\p{name}\p{parameters}} |
| Like \env{funcdesc}, but without creating any index entries. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{classdesc}{\p{name}\p{constructor parameters}} |
| Describe a class and its constructor. \var{constructor |
| parameters} should not include the \var{self} parameter or |
| the parentheses used in the call syntax. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{classdesc*}{\p{name}} |
| Describe a class without describing the constructor. This can |
| be used to describe classes that are merely containers for |
| attributes or which should never be instantiated or subclassed |
| by user code. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{memberdesc}{\op{type name}\p{name}} |
| Describe an object data attribute. The description should |
| include information about the type of the data to be expected |
| and whether it may be changed directly. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| \begin{envdesc}{memberdescni}{\op{type name}\p{name}} |
| Like \env{memberdesc}, but without creating any index entries. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{methoddesc}{\op{type name}\p{name}\p{parameters}} |
| Describe an object method. \var{parameters} should not include |
| the \var{self} parameter or the parentheses used in the call |
| syntax. The description should include similar information to |
| that described for \env{funcdesc}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| \begin{envdesc}{methoddescni}{\op{type name}\p{name}\p{parameters}} |
| Like \env{methoddesc}, but without creating any index entries. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Showing Code Examples \label{showing-examples}} |
| |
| Examples of Python source code or interactive sessions are |
| represented as \env{verbatim} environments. This environment |
| is a standard part of \LaTeX{}. It is important to only use |
| spaces for indentation in code examples since \TeX{} drops tabs |
| instead of converting them to spaces. |
| |
| Representing an interactive session requires including the prompts |
| and output along with the Python code. No special markup is |
| required for interactive sessions. After the last line of input |
| or output presented, there should not be an ``unused'' primary |
| prompt; this is an example of what \emph{not} to do: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> 1 + 1 |
| 2 |
| >>> |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Within the \env{verbatim} environment, characters special to |
| \LaTeX{} do not need to be specially marked in any way. The entire |
| example will be presented in a monospaced font; no attempt at |
| ``pretty-printing'' is made, as the environment must work for |
| non-Python code and non-code displays. There should be no blank |
| lines at the top or bottom of any \env{verbatim} display. |
| |
| Longer displays of verbatim text may be included by storing the |
| example text in an external file containing only plain text. The |
| file may be included using the standard \macro{verbatiminput} |
| macro; this macro takes a single argument naming the file |
| containing the text. For example, to include the Python source |
| file \file{example.py}, use: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \verbatiminput{example.py} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Use of \macro{verbatiminput} allows easier use of special editing |
| modes for the included file. The file should be placed in the |
| same directory as the \LaTeX{} files for the document. |
| |
| The Python Documentation Special Interest Group has discussed a |
| number of approaches to creating pretty-printed code displays and |
| interactive sessions; see the Doc-SIG area on the Python Web site |
| for more information on this topic. |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Inline Markup \label{inline-markup}} |
| |
| The macros described in this section are used to mark just about |
| anything interesting in the document text. They may be used in |
| headings (though anything involving hyperlinks should be avoided |
| there) as well as in the body text. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{bfcode}{\p{text}} |
| Like \macro{code}, but also makes the font bold-face. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{cdata}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a C-language variable. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{cfunction}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a C-language function. \var{name} should include the |
| function name and the trailing parentheses. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{character}{\p{char}} |
| A character when discussing the character rather than a one-byte |
| string value. The character will be typeset as with \macro{samp}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{citetitle}{\op{url}\p{title}} |
| A title for a referenced publication. If \var{url} is specified, |
| the title will be made into a hyperlink when formatted as HTML. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{class}{\p{name}} |
| A class name; a dotted name may be used. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{code}{\p{text}} |
| A short code fragment or literal constant value. Typically, it |
| should not include any spaces since no quotation marks are |
| added. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{constant}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a ``defined'' constant. This may be a C-language |
| \code{\#define} or a Python variable that is not intended to be |
| changed. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{csimplemacro}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a ``simple'' macro. Simple macros are macros |
| which are used for code expansion, but which do not take |
| arguments so cannot be described as functions. This is not to |
| be used for simple constant definitions. Examples of its use |
| in the Python documentation include |
| \csimplemacro{PyObject_HEAD} and |
| \csimplemacro{Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{ctype}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a C \keyword{typedef} or structure. For structures |
| defined without a \keyword{typedef}, use \code{\e ctype\{struct |
| struct_tag\}} to make it clear that the \keyword{struct} is |
| required. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{deprecated}{\p{version}\p{what to do}} |
| Declare whatever is being described as being deprecated starting |
| with release \var{version}. The text given as \var{what to do} |
| should recommend something to use instead. It should be |
| complete sentences. The entire deprecation notice will be |
| presented as a separate paragraph; it should either precede or |
| succeed the description of the deprecated feature. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{dfn}{\p{term}} |
| Mark the defining instance of \var{term} in the text. (No index |
| entries are generated.) |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{e}{} |
| Produces a backslash. This is convenient in \macro{code}, |
| \macro{file}, and similar macros, and the \env{alltt} |
| environment, and is only defined there. To |
| create a backslash in ordinary text (such as the contents of the |
| \macro{citetitle} macro), use the standard \macro{textbackslash} |
| macro. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{email}{\p{address}} |
| An email address. Note that this is \emph{not} hyperlinked in |
| any of the possible output formats. The domain name portion of |
| the address should be lower case. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{emph}{\p{text}} |
| Emphasized text; this will be presented in an italic font. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{envvar}{\p{name}} |
| An environment variable. Index entries are generated. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{exception}{\p{name}} |
| The name of an exception. A dotted name may be used. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{file}{\p{file or dir}} |
| The name of a file or directory. In the PDF and PostScript |
| outputs, single quotes and a font change are used to indicate |
| the file name, but no quotes are used in the HTML output. |
| \warning{The \macro{file} macro cannot be used in the |
| content of a section title due to processing limitations.} |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{filenq}{\p{file or dir}} |
| Like \macro{file}, but single quotes are never used. This can |
| be used in conjunction with tables if a column will only contain |
| file or directory names. |
| \warning{The \macro{filenq} macro cannot be used in the |
| content of a section title due to processing limitations.} |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{function}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a Python function; dotted names may be used. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{infinity}{} |
| The symbol for mathematical infinity: \infinity. Some Web |
| browsers are not able to render the HTML representation of this |
| symbol properly, but support is growing. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{kbd}{\p{key sequence}} |
| Mark a sequence of keystrokes. What form \var{key sequence} |
| takes may depend on platform- or application-specific |
| conventions. When there are no relevant conventions, the names |
| of modifier keys should be spelled out, to improve accessibility |
| for new users and non-native speakers. For example, an |
| \program{xemacs} key sequence may be marked like |
| \code{\e kbd\{C-x C-f\}}, but without reference to a specific |
| application or platform, the same sequence should be marked as |
| \code{\e kbd\{Control-x Control-f\}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{keyword}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a keyword in a programming language. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{mailheader}{\p{name}} |
| The name of an \rfc{822}-style mail header. This markup does |
| not imply that the header is being used in an email message, but |
| can be used to refer to any header of the same ``style.'' This |
| is also used for headers defined by the various MIME |
| specifications. The header name should be entered in the same |
| way it would normally be found in practice, with the |
| camel-casing conventions being preferred where there is more |
| than one common usage. The colon which follows the name of the |
| header should not be included. |
| For example: \code{\e mailheader\{Content-Type\}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{makevar}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a \program{make} variable. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{manpage}{\p{name}\p{section}} |
| A reference to a \UNIX{} manual page. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{member}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a data attribute of an object. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{method}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a method of an object. \var{name} should include the |
| method name and the trailing parentheses. A dotted name may be |
| used. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{mimetype}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a MIME type, or a component of a MIME type (the |
| major or minor portion, taken alone). |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{module}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a module; a dotted name may be used. This should |
| also be used for package names. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{newsgroup}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a Usenet newsgroup. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{note}{\p{text}} |
| An especially important bit of information about an API that a |
| user should be aware of when using whatever bit of API the |
| note pertains to. This should be the last thing in the |
| paragraph as the end of the note is not visually marked in |
| any way. The content of \var{text} should be written in |
| complete sentences and include all appropriate punctuation. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{pep}{\p{number}} |
| A reference to a Python Enhancement Proposal. This generates |
| appropriate index entries. The text \samp{PEP \var{number}} is |
| generated; in the HTML output, this text is a hyperlink to an |
| online copy of the specified PEP. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{plusminus}{} |
| The symbol for indicating a value that may take a positive or |
| negative value of a specified magnitude, typically represented |
| by a plus sign placed over a minus sign. For example: |
| \code{\e plusminus 3\%{}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{program}{\p{name}} |
| The name of an executable program. This may differ from the |
| file name for the executable for some platforms. In particular, |
| the \file{.exe} (or other) extension should be omitted for |
| Windows programs. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{programopt}{\p{option}} |
| A command-line option to an executable program. Use this only |
| for ``short'' options, and include the leading hyphen. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{longprogramopt}{\p{option}} |
| A long command-line option to an executable program. This |
| should only be used for long option names which will be prefixed |
| by two hyphens; the hyphens should not be provided as part of |
| \var{option}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{refmodule}{\op{key}\p{name}} |
| Like \macro{module}, but create a hyperlink to the documentation |
| for the named module. Note that the corresponding |
| \macro{declaremodule} must be in the same document. If the |
| \macro{declaremodule} defines a module key different from the |
| module name, it must also be provided as \var{key} to the |
| \macro{refmodule} macro. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{regexp}{\p{string}} |
| Mark a regular expression. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{rfc}{\p{number}} |
| A reference to an Internet Request for Comments. This generates |
| appropriate index entries. The text \samp{RFC \var{number}} is |
| generated; in the HTML output, this text is a hyperlink to an |
| online copy of the specified RFC. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{samp}{\p{text}} |
| A short code sample, but possibly longer than would be given |
| using \macro{code}. Since quotation marks are added, spaces are |
| acceptable. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{shortversion}{} |
| The ``short'' version number of the documented software, as |
| specified using the \macro{setshortversion} macro in the |
| preamble. For Python, the short version number for a release is |
| the first three characters of the \code{sys.version} value. For |
| example, versions 2.0b1 and 2.0.1 both have a short version of |
| 2.0. This may not apply for all packages; if |
| \macro{setshortversion} is not used, this produces an empty |
| expansion. See also the \macro{version} macro. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{strong}{\p{text}} |
| Strongly emphasized text; this will be presented using a bold |
| font. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{ulink}{\p{text}\p{url}} |
| A hypertext link with a target specified by a URL, but for which |
| the link text should not be the title of the resource. For |
| resources being referenced by name, use the \macro{citetitle} |
| macro. Not all formatted versions support arbitrary hypertext |
| links. Note that many characters are special to \LaTeX{} and |
| this macro does not always do the right thing. In particular, |
| the tilde character (\character{\~}) is mis-handled; encoding it |
| as a hex-sequence does work, use \samp{\%7e} in place of the |
| tilde character. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{url}{\p{url}} |
| A URL (or URN). The URL will be presented as text. In the HTML |
| and PDF formatted versions, the URL will also be a hyperlink. |
| This can be used when referring to external resources without |
| specific titles; references to resources which have titles |
| should be marked using the \macro{citetitle} macro. See the |
| comments about special characters in the description of the |
| \macro{ulink} macro for special considerations. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{var}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a variable or formal parameter in running text. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{version}{} |
| The version number of the described software, as specified using |
| \macro{release} in the preamble. See also the |
| \macro{shortversion} macro. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{warning}{\p{text}} |
| An important bit of information about an API that a user should |
| be very aware of when using whatever bit of API the warning |
| pertains to. This should be the last thing in the paragraph as |
| the end of the warning is not visually marked in any way. The |
| content of \var{text} should be written in complete sentences |
| and include all appropriate punctuation. This differs from |
| \macro{note} in that it is recommended over \macro{note} for |
| information regarding security. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| The following two macros are used to describe information that's |
| associated with changes from one release to another. For features |
| which are described by a single paragraph, these are typically |
| added as separate source lines at the end of the paragraph. When |
| adding these to features described by multiple paragraphs, they |
| are usually collected in a single separate paragraph after the |
| description. When both \macro{versionadded} and |
| \macro{versionchanged} are used, \macro{versionadded} should come |
| first; the versions should be listed in chronological order. Both |
| of these should come before availability statements. The location |
| should be selected so the explanation makes sense and may vary as |
| needed. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{versionadded}{\op{explanation}\p{version}} |
| The version of Python which added the described feature to the |
| library or C API. \var{explanation} should be a \emph{brief} |
| explanation of the change consisting of a capitalized sentence |
| fragment; a period will be appended by the formatting process. |
| When this applies to an entire module, it should be placed at |
| the top of the module section before any prose. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{versionchanged}{\op{explanation}\p{version}} |
| The version of Python in which the named feature was changed in |
| some way (new parameters, changed side effects, etc.). |
| \var{explanation} should be a \emph{brief} explanation of the |
| change consisting of a capitalized sentence fragment; a |
| period will be appended by the formatting process. This should |
| not generally be applied to modules. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Miscellaneous Text Markup \label{misc-text-markup}} |
| |
| In addition to the inline markup, some additional ``block'' markup |
| is defined to make it easier to bring attention to various bits of |
| text. The markup described here serves this purpose, and is |
| intended to be used when marking one or more paragraphs or other |
| block constructs (such as \env{verbatim} environments). |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{notice}{\op{type}} |
| Label some paragraphs as being worthy of additional attention from |
| the reader. What sort of attention is warranted can be indicated |
| by specifying the \var{type} of the notice. The only values |
| defined for \var{type} are \code{note} and \code{warning}; these |
| are equivalent in intent to the inline markup of the same name. |
| If \var{type} is omitted, \code{note} is used. Additional values |
| may be defined in the future. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Module-specific Markup \label{module-markup}} |
| |
| The markup described in this section is used to provide information |
| about a module being documented. Each module should be documented |
| in its own \macro{section}. A typical use of this markup |
| appears at the top of that section and might look like this: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \section{\module{spam} --- |
| Access to the SPAM facility} |
| |
| \declaremodule{extension}{spam} |
| \platform{Unix} |
| \modulesynopsis{Access to the SPAM facility of \UNIX.} |
| \moduleauthor{Jane Doe}{jane.doe@frobnitz.org} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Python packages\index{packages} --- collections of modules that can |
| be described as a unit --- are documented using the same markup as |
| modules. The name for a module in a package should be typed in |
| ``fully qualified'' form (it should include the package name). |
| For example, a module ``foo'' in package ``bar'' should be marked as |
| \code{\e module\{bar.foo\}}, and the beginning of the reference |
| section would appear as: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \section{\module{bar.foo} --- |
| Module from the \module{bar} package} |
| |
| \declaremodule{extension}{bar.foo} |
| \modulesynopsis{Nifty module from the \module{bar} package.} |
| \moduleauthor{Jane Doe}{jane.doe@frobnitz.org} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note that the name of a package is also marked using |
| \macro{module}. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{declaremodule}{\op{key}\p{type}\p{name}} |
| Requires two parameters: module type (\samp{standard}, |
| \samp{builtin}, \samp{extension}, or \samp{}), and the module |
| name. An optional parameter should be given as the basis for the |
| module's ``key'' used for linking to or referencing the section. |
| The ``key'' should only be given if the module's name contains any |
| underscores, and should be the name with the underscores stripped. |
| Note that the \var{type} parameter must be one of the values |
| listed above or an error will be printed. For modules which are |
| contained in packages, the fully-qualified name should be given as |
| \var{name} parameter. This should be the first thing after the |
| \macro{section} used to introduce the module. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{platform}{\p{specifier}} |
| Specifies the portability of the module. \var{specifier} is a |
| comma-separated list of keys that specify what platforms the |
| module is available on. The keys are short identifiers; |
| examples that are in use include \samp{IRIX}, \samp{Mac}, |
| \samp{Windows}, and \samp{Unix}. It is important to use a key |
| which has already been used when applicable. This is used to |
| provide annotations in the Module Index and the HTML and GNU info |
| output. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{modulesynopsis}{\p{text}} |
| The \var{text} is a short, ``one line'' description of the |
| module that can be used as part of the chapter introduction. |
| This is must be placed after \macro{declaremodule}. |
| The synopsis is used in building the contents of the table |
| inserted as the \macro{localmoduletable}. No text is |
| produced at the point of the markup. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{moduleauthor}{\p{name}\p{email}} |
| This macro is used to encode information about who authored a |
| module. This is currently not used to generate output, but can be |
| used to help determine the origin of the module. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Library-level Markup \label{library-markup}} |
| |
| This markup is used when describing a selection of modules. For |
| example, the \citetitle[../mac/mac.html]{Macintosh Library |
| Modules} document uses this to help provide an overview of the |
| modules in the collection, and many chapters in the |
| \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} use it for |
| the same purpose. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{localmoduletable}{} |
| If a \file{.syn} file exists for the current |
| chapter (or for the entire document in \code{howto} documents), a |
| \env{synopsistable} is created with the contents loaded from the |
| \file{.syn} file. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Table Markup \label{table-markup}} |
| |
| There are three general-purpose table environments defined which |
| should be used whenever possible. These environments are defined |
| to provide tables of specific widths and some convenience for |
| formatting. These environments are not meant to be general |
| replacements for the standard \LaTeX{} table environments, but can |
| be used for an advantage when the documents are processed using |
| the tools for Python documentation processing. In particular, the |
| generated HTML looks good! There is also an advantage for the |
| eventual conversion of the documentation to XML (see section |
| \ref{futures}, ``Future Directions''). |
| |
| Each environment is named \env{table\var{cols}}, where \var{cols} |
| is the number of columns in the table specified in lower-case |
| Roman numerals. Within each of these environments, an additional |
| macro, \macro{line\var{cols}}, is defined, where \var{cols} |
| matches the \var{cols} value of the corresponding table |
| environment. These are supported for \var{cols} values of |
| \code{ii}, \code{iii}, and \code{iv}. These environments are all |
| built on top of the \env{tabular} environment. Variants based on |
| the \env{longtable} environment are also provided. |
| |
| Note that all tables in the standard Python documentation use |
| vertical lines between columns, and this must be specified in the |
| markup for each table. A general border around the outside of the |
| table is not used, but would be the responsibility of the |
| processor; the document markup should not include an exterior |
| border. |
| |
| The \env{longtable}-based variants of the table environments are |
| formatted with extra space before and after, so should only be |
| used on tables which are long enough that splitting over multiple |
| pages is reasonable; tables with fewer than twenty rows should |
| never by marked using the long flavors of the table environments. |
| The header row is repeated across the top of each part of the |
| table. |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{tableii}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}} |
| Create a two-column table using the \LaTeX{} column specifier |
| \var{colspec}. The column specifier should indicate vertical |
| bars between columns as appropriate for the specific table, but |
| should not specify vertical bars on the outside of the table |
| (that is considered a stylesheet issue). The \var{col1font} |
| parameter is used as a stylistic treatment of the first column |
| of the table: the first column is presented as |
| \code{\e\var{col1font}\{column1\}}. To avoid treating the first |
| column specially, \var{col1font} may be \samp{textrm}. The |
| column headings are taken from the values \var{heading1} and |
| \var{heading2}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{longtableii}{\unspecified} |
| Like \env{tableii}, but produces a table which may be broken |
| across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for |
| \env{tableii}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{lineii}{\p{column1}\p{column2}} |
| Create a single table row within a \env{tableii} or |
| \env{longtableii} environment. |
| The text for the first column will be generated by applying the |
| macro named by the \var{col1font} value when the \env{tableii} |
| was opened. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{tableiii}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}} |
| Like the \env{tableii} environment, but with a third column. |
| The heading for the third column is given by \var{heading3}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{longtableiii}{\unspecified} |
| Like \env{tableiii}, but produces a table which may be broken |
| across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for |
| \env{tableiii}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{lineiii}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}} |
| Like the \macro{lineii} macro, but with a third column. The |
| text for the third column is given by \var{column3}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{tableiv}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}\p{heading4}} |
| Like the \env{tableiii} environment, but with a fourth column. |
| The heading for the fourth column is given by \var{heading4}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{longtableiv}{\unspecified} |
| Like \env{tableiv}, but produces a table which may be broken |
| across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for |
| \env{tableiv}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{lineiv}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}\p{column4}} |
| Like the \macro{lineiii} macro, but with a fourth column. The |
| text for the fourth column is given by \var{column4}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{tablev}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}\p{heading4}\p{heading5}} |
| Like the \env{tableiv} environment, but with a fifth column. |
| The heading for the fifth column is given by \var{heading5}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{longtablev}{\unspecified} |
| Like \env{tablev}, but produces a table which may be broken |
| across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for |
| \env{tablev}. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{linev}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}\p{column4}\p{column5}} |
| Like the \macro{lineiv} macro, but with a fifth column. The |
| text for the fifth column is given by \var{column5}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| An additional table-like environment is \env{synopsistable}. The |
| table generated by this environment contains two columns, and each |
| row is defined by an alternate definition of |
| \macro{modulesynopsis}. This environment is not normally used by |
| authors, but is created by the \macro{localmoduletable} macro. |
| |
| Here is a small example of a table given in the documentation for |
| the \module{warnings} module; markup inside the table cells is |
| minimal so the markup for the table itself is readily discernable. |
| Here is the markup for the table: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{tableii}{l|l}{exception}{Class}{Description} |
| \lineii{Warning} |
| {This is the base class of all warning category classes. It |
| is a subclass of \exception{Exception}.} |
| \lineii{UserWarning} |
| {The default category for \function{warn()}.} |
| \lineii{DeprecationWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about deprecated features.} |
| \lineii{SyntaxWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about dubious syntactic |
| features.} |
| \lineii{RuntimeWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about dubious runtime features.} |
| \lineii{FutureWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about constructs that will change |
| semantically in the future.} |
| \end{tableii} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Here is the resulting table: |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{l|l}{exception}{Class}{Description} |
| \lineii{Warning} |
| {This is the base class of all warning category classes. It |
| is a subclass of \exception{Exception}.} |
| \lineii{UserWarning} |
| {The default category for \function{warn()}.} |
| \lineii{DeprecationWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about deprecated features.} |
| \lineii{SyntaxWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about dubious syntactic |
| features.} |
| \lineii{RuntimeWarning} |
| {Base category for warnings about dubious runtime features.} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| Note that the class names are implicitly marked using the |
| \macro{exception} macro, since that is given as the \var{col1font} |
| value for the \env{tableii} environment. To create a table using |
| different markup for the first column, use \code{textrm} for the |
| \var{col1font} value and mark each entry individually. |
| |
| To add a horizontal line between vertical sections of a table, use |
| the standard \macro{hline} macro between the rows which should be |
| separated: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{tableii}{l|l}{constant}{Language}{Audience} |
| \lineii{APL}{Masochists.} |
| \lineii{BASIC}{First-time programmers on PC hardware.} |
| \lineii{C}{\UNIX{} \&\ Linux kernel developers.} |
| \hline |
| \lineii{Python}{Everyone!} |
| \end{tableii} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note that not all presentation formats are capable of displaying a |
| horizontal rule in this position. This is how the table looks in |
| the format you're reading now: |
| |
| \begin{tableii}{l|l}{constant}{Language}{Audience} |
| \lineii{APL}{Masochists.} |
| \lineii{C}{\UNIX{} \&\ Linux kernel developers.} |
| \lineii{JavaScript}{Web developers.} |
| \hline |
| \lineii{Python}{Everyone!} |
| \end{tableii} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Reference List Markup \label{references}} |
| |
| Many sections include a list of references to module documentation |
| or external documents. These lists are created using the |
| \env{seealso} or \env{seealso*} environments. These environments |
| define some additional macros to support creating reference |
| entries in a reasonable manner. |
| |
| The \env{seealso} environment is typically placed in a section |
| just before any sub-sections. This is done to ensure that |
| reference links related to the section are not hidden in a |
| subsection in the hypertext renditions of the documentation. For |
| the HTML output, it is shown as a ``side bar,'' boxed off from the |
| main flow of the text. The \env{seealso*} environment is |
| different in that it should be used when a list of references is |
| being presented as part of the primary content; it is not |
| specially set off from the text. |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{seealso}{} |
| This environment creates a ``See also:'' heading and defines the |
| markup used to describe individual references. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{seealso*}{} |
| This environment is used to create a list of references which |
| form part of the main content. It is not given a special |
| header and is not set off from the main flow of the text. It |
| provides the same additional markup used to describe individual |
| references. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| For each of the following macros, \var{why} should be one or more |
| complete sentences, starting with a capital letter (unless it |
| starts with an identifier, which should not be modified), and |
| ending with the appropriate punctuation. |
| |
| These macros are only defined within the content of the |
| \env{seealso} and \env{seealso*} environments. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seelink}{\p{url}\p{linktext}\p{why}} |
| References to specific on-line resources should be given using |
| the \macro{seelink} macro if they don't have a meaningful title |
| but there is some short description of what's at the end of the |
| link. Online documents which have identifiable titles should be |
| referenced using the \macro{seetitle} macro, using the optional |
| parameter to that macro to provide the URL. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seemodule}{\op{key}\p{name}\p{why}} |
| Refer to another module. \var{why} should be a brief |
| explanation of why the reference may be interesting. The module |
| name is given in \var{name}, with the link key given in |
| \var{key} if necessary. In the HTML and PDF conversions, the |
| module name will be a hyperlink to the referred-to module. |
| \note{The module must be documented in the same |
| document (the corresponding \macro{declaremodule} is required).} |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seepep}{\p{number}\p{title}\p{why}} |
| Refer to an Python Enhancement Proposal (PEP). \var{number} |
| should be the official number assigned by the PEP Editor, |
| \var{title} should be the human-readable title of the PEP as |
| found in the official copy of the document, and \var{why} should |
| explain what's interesting about the PEP. This should be used |
| to refer the reader to PEPs which specify interfaces or language |
| features relevant to the material in the annotated section of the |
| documentation. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seerfc}{\p{number}\p{title}\p{why}} |
| Refer to an IETF Request for Comments (RFC). Otherwise very |
| similar to \macro{seepep}. This should be used |
| to refer the reader to PEPs which specify protocols or data |
| formats relevant to the material in the annotated section of the |
| documentation. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seetext}{\p{text}} |
| Add arbitrary text \var{text} to the ``See also:'' list. This |
| can be used to refer to off-line materials or on-line materials |
| using the \macro{url} macro. This should consist of one or more |
| complete sentences. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seetitle}{\op{url}\p{title}\p{why}} |
| Add a reference to an external document named \var{title}. If |
| \var{url} is given, the title is made a hyperlink in the HTML |
| version of the documentation, and displayed below the title in |
| the typeset versions of the documentation. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{seeurl}{\p{url}\p{why}} |
| References to specific on-line resources should be given using |
| the \macro{seeurl} macro if they don't have a meaningful title. |
| Online documents which have identifiable titles should be |
| referenced using the \macro{seetitle} macro, using the optional |
| parameter to that macro to provide the URL. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Index-generating Markup \label{indexing}} |
| |
| Effective index generation for technical documents can be very |
| difficult, especially for someone familiar with the topic but not |
| the creation of indexes. Much of the difficulty arises in the |
| area of terminology: including the terms an expert would use for a |
| concept is not sufficient. Coming up with the terms that a novice |
| would look up is fairly difficult for an author who, typically, is |
| an expert in the area she is writing on. |
| |
| The truly difficult aspects of index generation are not areas with |
| which the documentation tools can help. However, ease |
| of producing the index once content decisions are made is within |
| the scope of the tools. Markup is provided which the processing |
| software is able to use to generate a variety of kinds of index |
| entry with minimal effort. Additionally, many of the environments |
| described in section \ref{info-units}, ``Information Units,'' will |
| generate appropriate entries into the general and module indexes. |
| |
| The following macro can be used to control the generation of index |
| data, and should be used in the document preamble: |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{makemodindex}{} |
| This should be used in the document preamble if a ``Module |
| Index'' is desired for a document containing reference material |
| on many modules. This causes a data file |
| \code{lib\var{jobname}.idx} to be created from the |
| \macro{declaremodule} macros. This file can be processed by the |
| \program{makeindex} program to generate a file which can be |
| \macro{input} into the document at the desired location of the |
| module index. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| There are a number of macros that are useful for adding index |
| entries for particular concepts, many of which are specific to |
| programming languages or even Python. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{bifuncindex}{\p{name}} |
| Add an index entry referring to a built-in function named |
| \var{name}; parentheses should not be included after |
| \var{name}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{exindex}{\p{exception}} |
| Add a reference to an exception named \var{exception}. The |
| exception should be class-based. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{kwindex}{\p{keyword}} |
| Add a reference to a language keyword (not a keyword parameter |
| in a function or method call). |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{obindex}{\p{object type}} |
| Add an index entry for a built-in object type. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{opindex}{\p{operator}} |
| Add a reference to an operator, such as \samp{+}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{refmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}} |
| Add an index entry for module \var{module}; if \var{module} |
| contains an underscore, the optional parameter \var{key} should |
| be provided as the same string with underscores removed. An |
| index entry ``\var{module} (module)'' will be generated. This |
| is intended for use with non-standard modules implemented in |
| Python. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{refexmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}} |
| As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be |
| ``\var{module} (extension module).'' This is intended for use |
| with non-standard modules not implemented in Python. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{refbimodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}} |
| As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be |
| ``\var{module} (built-in module).'' This is intended for use |
| with standard modules not implemented in Python. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{refstmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}} |
| As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be |
| ``\var{module} (standard module).'' This is intended for use |
| with standard modules implemented in Python. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{stindex}{\p{statement}} |
| Add an index entry for a statement type, such as \keyword{print} |
| or \keyword{try}/\keyword{finally}. |
| |
| XXX Need better examples of difference from \macro{kwindex}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| Additional macros are provided which are useful for conveniently |
| creating general index entries which should appear at many places |
| in the index by rotating a list of words. These are simple macros |
| that simply use \macro{index} to build some number of index |
| entries. Index entries build using these macros contain both |
| primary and secondary text. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{indexii}{\p{word1}\p{word2}} |
| Build two index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2}\}} and |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word1}\}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{indexiii}{\p{word1}\p{word2}\p{word3}} |
| Build three index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2} \var{word3}\}}, |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word3}, \var{word1}\}}, and |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word3}!\var{word1} \var{word2}\}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{indexiv}{\p{word1}\p{word2}\p{word3}\p{word4}} |
| Build four index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2} \var{word3} \var{word4}\}}, |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word3} \var{word4}, \var{word1}\}}, |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word3}!\var{word4}, \var{word1} \var{word2}\}}, |
| and |
| \code{\e index\{\var{word4}!\var{word1} \var{word2} \var{word3}\}}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \subsection{Grammar Production Displays \label{grammar-displays}} |
| |
| Special markup is available for displaying the productions of a |
| formal grammar. The markup is simple and does not attempt to |
| model all aspects of BNF (or any derived forms), but provides |
| enough to allow context-free grammars to be displayed in a way |
| that causes uses of a symbol to be rendered as hyperlinks to the |
| definition of the symbol. There is one environment and a pair of |
| macros: |
| |
| \begin{envdesc}{productionlist}{\op{language}} |
| This environment is used to enclose a group of productions. The |
| two macros are only defined within this environment. If a |
| document describes more than one language, the optional parameter |
| \var{language} should be used to distinguish productions between |
| languages. The value of the parameter should be a short name |
| that can be used as part of a filename; colons or other |
| characters that can't be used in filename across platforms |
| should be included. |
| \end{envdesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{production}{\p{name}\p{definition}} |
| A production rule in the grammar. The rule defines the symbol |
| \var{name} to be \var{definition}. \var{name} should not |
| contain any markup, and the use of hyphens in a document which |
| supports more than one grammar is undefined. \var{definition} |
| may contain \macro{token} macros and any additional content |
| needed to describe the grammatical model of \var{symbol}. Only |
| one \macro{production} may be used to define a symbol --- |
| multiple definitions are not allowed. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{token}{\p{name}} |
| The name of a symbol defined by a \macro{production} macro, used |
| in the \var{definition} of a symbol. Where possible, this will |
| be rendered as a hyperlink to the definition of the symbol |
| \var{name}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| Note that the entire grammar does not need to be defined in a |
| single \env{productionlist} environment; any number of |
| groupings may be used to describe the grammar. Every use of the |
| \macro{token} must correspond to a \macro{production}. |
| |
| The following is an example taken from the |
| \citetitle[../ref/identifiers.html]{Python Reference Manual}: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{productionlist} |
| \production{identifier} |
| {(\token{letter}|"_") (\token{letter} | \token{digit} | "_")*} |
| \production{letter} |
| {\token{lowercase} | \token{uppercase}} |
| \production{lowercase} |
| {"a"..."z"} |
| \production{uppercase} |
| {"A"..."Z"} |
| \production{digit} |
| {"0"..."9"} |
| \end{productionlist} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Graphical Interface Components \label{gui-markup}} |
| |
| The components of graphical interfaces will be assigned markup, but |
| most of the specifics have not been determined. |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{guilabel}{\p{label}} |
| Labels presented as part of an interactive user interface should |
| be marked using \macro{guilabel}. This includes labels from |
| text-based interfaces such as those created using \code{curses} or |
| other text-based libraries. Any label used in the interface |
| should be marked with this macro, including button labels, window |
| titles, field names, menu and menu selection names, and even |
| values in selection lists. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{menuselection}{\p{menupath}} |
| Menu selections should be marked using a combination of |
| \macro{menuselection} and \macro{sub}. This macro is used to mark |
| a complete sequence of menu selections, including selecting |
| submenus and choosing a specific operation, or any subsequence of |
| such a sequence. The names of individual selections should be |
| separated by occurrences of \macro{sub}. |
| |
| For example, to mark the selection ``\menuselection{Start \sub |
| Programs}'', use this markup: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \menuselection{Start \sub Programs} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| When including a selection that includes some trailing indicator, |
| such as the ellipsis some operating systems use to indicate that |
| the command opens a dialog, the indicator should be omitted from |
| the selection name. |
| |
| Individual selection names within the \macro{menuselection} should |
| not be marked using \macro{guilabel} since that's implied by using |
| \macro{menuselection}. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| \begin{macrodesc}{sub}{} |
| Separator for menu selections that include multiple levels. This |
| macro is only defined within the context of the |
| \macro{menuselection} macro. |
| \end{macrodesc} |
| |
| |
| \section{Processing Tools \label{tools}} |
| |
| \subsection{External Tools \label{tools-external}} |
| |
| Many tools are needed to be able to process the Python |
| documentation if all supported formats are required. This |
| section lists the tools used and when each is required. Consult |
| the \file{Doc/README} file to see if there are specific version |
| requirements for any of these. |
| |
| \begin{description} |
| \item[\program{dvips}] |
| This program is a typical part of \TeX{} installations. It is |
| used to generate PostScript from the ``device independent'' |
| \file{.dvi} files. It is needed for the conversion to |
| PostScript. |
| |
| \item[\program{emacs}] |
| Emacs is the kitchen sink of programmers' editors, and a damn |
| fine kitchen sink it is. It also comes with some of the |
| processing needed to support the proper menu structures for |
| Texinfo documents when an info conversion is desired. This is |
| needed for the info conversion. Using \program{xemacs} |
| instead of FSF \program{emacs} may lead to instability in the |
| conversion, but that's because nobody seems to maintain the |
| Emacs Texinfo code in a portable manner. |
| |
| \item[\program{latex}] |
| \LaTeX{} is a large and extensible macro package by Leslie |
| Lamport, based on \TeX, a world-class typesetter by Donald |
| Knuth. It is used for the conversion to PostScript, and is |
| needed for the HTML conversion as well (\LaTeX2HTML requires |
| one of the intermediate files it creates). |
| |
| \item[\program{latex2html}] |
| Probably the longest Perl script anyone ever attempted to |
| maintain. This converts \LaTeX{} documents to HTML documents, |
| and does a pretty reasonable job. It is required for the |
| conversions to HTML and GNU info. |
| |
| \item[\program{lynx}] |
| This is a text-mode Web browser which includes an |
| HTML-to-plain text conversion. This is used to convert |
| \code{howto} documents to text. |
| |
| \item[\program{make}] |
| Just about any version should work for the standard documents, |
| but GNU \program{make} is required for the experimental |
| processes in \file{Doc/tools/sgmlconv/}, at least while |
| they're experimental. This is not required for running the |
| \program{mkhowto} script. |
| |
| \item[\program{makeindex}] |
| This is a standard program for converting \LaTeX{} index data |
| to a formatted index; it should be included with all \LaTeX{} |
| installations. It is needed for the PDF and PostScript |
| conversions. |
| |
| \item[\program{makeinfo}] |
| GNU \program{makeinfo} is used to convert Texinfo documents to |
| GNU info files. Since Texinfo is used as an intermediate |
| format in the info conversion, this program is needed in that |
| conversion. |
| |
| \item[\program{pdflatex}] |
| pdf\TeX{} is a relatively new variant of \TeX, and is used to |
| generate the PDF version of the manuals. It is typically |
| installed as part of most of the large \TeX{} distributions. |
| \program{pdflatex} is pdf\TeX{} using the \LaTeX{} format. |
| |
| \item[\program{perl}] |
| Perl is required for \LaTeX2HTML{} and one of the scripts used |
| to post-process \LaTeX2HTML output, as well as the |
| HTML-to-Texinfo conversion. This is required for |
| the HTML and GNU info conversions. |
| |
| \item[\program{python}] |
| Python is used for many of the scripts in the |
| \file{Doc/tools/} directory; it is required for all |
| conversions. This shouldn't be a problem if you're interested |
| in writing documentation for Python! |
| \end{description} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Internal Tools \label{tools-internal}} |
| |
| This section describes the various scripts that are used to |
| implement various stages of document processing or to orchestrate |
| entire build sequences. Most of these tools are only useful |
| in the context of building the standard documentation, but some |
| are more general. |
| |
| \begin{description} |
| \item[\program{mkhowto}] |
| This is the primary script used to format third-party |
| documents. It contains all the logic needed to ``get it |
| right.'' The proper way to use this script is to make a |
| symbolic link to it or run it in place; the actual script file |
| must be stored as part of the documentation source tree, |
| though it may be used to format documents outside the tree. |
| Use \program{mkhowto} \longprogramopt{help} for a list of |
| command line options. |
| |
| \program{mkhowto} can be used for both \code{howto} and |
| \code{manual} class documents. It is usually a good idea to |
| always use the latest version of this tool rather than a |
| version from an older source release of Python. It can be |
| used to generate DVI, HTML, PDF, PostScript, and plain text |
| documents. The GNU info and iSilo formats will be supported |
| by this script in some future version. |
| |
| Use the \longprogramopt{help} option on this script's command |
| line to get a summary of options for this script. |
| |
| XXX Need more here. |
| \end{description} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Working on Cygwin \label{cygwin}} |
| |
| Installing the required tools under Cygwin under Cygwin can be a |
| little tedious. Most of the required packages can be installed |
| using Cygwin's graphical installer, while netpbm and \LaTeX2HTML |
| must be installed from source. |
| |
| Start with a reasonably modern version of Cygwin. If you haven't |
| upgraded for a few years, now would be a good time. |
| |
| Using the Cygwin installer, make sure your Cygwin installation |
| includes Perl, Python, and the \TeX{} packages. Perl and Python |
| are located under the \menuselection{Interpreters} heading. The |
| \TeX{} packages are located under the \menuselection{Text} |
| heading, and are named \code{tetex-*}. To ensure that all |
| required packages are available, install every \code{tetex} |
| package, except \code{tetex-x11}. (There may be a more minimal |
| set, but I've not spent time trying to minimize the installation.) |
| |
| The netpbm package is used by \LaTeX2HTML, and \emph{must} be |
| installed before \LaTeX2HTML can be successfully installed, even |
| though its features will not be used for most Python |
| documentation. References to download locations are located in |
| the \ulink{netpbm README}{http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/README}. |
| Install from the latest stable source distribution according to |
| the instructions. (Note that binary packages of netpbm are |
| sometimes available, but these may not work correctly with |
| \LaTeX2HTML.) |
| |
| \LaTeX2HTML can be installed from the source archive, but only |
| after munging one of the files in the distribution. Download the |
| source archive from the \LaTeX2HTML website |
| \url{http://www.latex2html.org/} (or one of the many alternate |
| sites) and unpack it to a build directory. In the top level of |
| this build directory there will be a file named \file{L2hos.pm}. |
| Open \file{L2hos.pm} in an editor, and near the bottom of the file |
| replace the text \code{\$\textasciicircum{}O} with the text |
| \code{'unix'}. Proceed using this command to build and install |
| the software: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| % ./configure && make install |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| You should now be able to build at least the DVI, HTML, PDF, and |
| PostScript versions of the formatted documentation. |
| |
| |
| \section{Including Graphics \label{graphics}} |
| |
| The standard documentation included with Python makes no use of |
| diagrams or images; this is intentional. The outside tools used to |
| format the documentation have not always been suited to working with |
| graphics. As the tools have evolved and been improved by their |
| maintainers, support for graphics has improved. |
| |
| The internal tools, starting with the \program{mkhowto} script, do |
| not provide any direct support for graphics. However, |
| \program{mkhowto} will not interfere with graphics support in the |
| external tools. |
| |
| Experience using graphics together with these tools and the |
| \code{howto} and \code{manual} document classes is not extensive, |
| but has been known to work. The basic approach is this: |
| |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| \item Create the image or graphic using your favorite |
| application. |
| |
| \item Convert the image to a format supported by the conversion to |
| your desired output format. If you want to generate HTML or |
| PostScript, you can convert the image or graphic to |
| encapsulated PostScript (a \file{.eps} file); \LaTeX2HTML |
| can convert that to a \file{.gif} file; it may be possible |
| to provide a \file{.gif} file directly. If you want to |
| generate PDF, you need to provide an ``encapsulated'' PDF |
| file. This can be generated from encapsulated PostScript |
| using the \program{epstopdf} tool provided with the te\TeX{} |
| distribution on Linux and \UNIX. |
| |
| \item In your document, add this line to ``import'' the general |
| graphics support package \code{graphicx}: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \usepackage{graphicx} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \item Where you want to include your graphic or image, include |
| markup similar to this: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{figure} |
| \centering |
| \includegraphics[width=5in]{myimage} |
| \caption{Description of my image} |
| \end{figure} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| In particular, note for the \macro{includegraphics} macro |
| that no file extension is provided. If you're only |
| interested in one target format, you can include the |
| extension of the appropriate input file, but to allow |
| support for multiple formats, omitting the extension makes |
| life easier. |
| |
| \item Run \program{mkhowto} normally. |
| \end{enumerate} |
| |
| If you're working on systems which support some sort of |
| \program{make} facility, you can use that to ensure the intermediate |
| graphic formats are kept up to date. This example shows a |
| \file{Makefile} used to format a document containing a diagram |
| created using the \program{dia} application: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| default: pdf |
| all: html pdf ps |
| |
| html: mydoc/mydoc.html |
| pdf: mydoc.pdf |
| ps: mydoc.ps |
| |
| mydoc/mydoc.html: mydoc.tex mygraphic.eps |
| mkhowto --html $< |
| |
| mydoc.pdf: mydoc.tex mygraphic.pdf |
| mkhowto --pdf $< |
| |
| mydoc.ps: mydoc.tex mygraphic.eps |
| mkhowto --postscript $< |
| |
| .SUFFIXES: .dia .eps .pdf |
| |
| .dia.eps: |
| dia --nosplash --export $@ $< |
| |
| .eps.pdf: |
| epstopdf $< |
| \end{verbatim} % $ <-- bow to font-lock |
| |
| |
| \section{Future Directions \label{futures}} |
| |
| The history of the Python documentation is full of changes, most of |
| which have been fairly small and evolutionary. There has been a |
| great deal of discussion about making large changes in the markup |
| languages and tools used to process the documentation. This section |
| deals with the nature of the changes and what appears to be the most |
| likely path of future development. |
| |
| \subsection{Structured Documentation \label{structured}} |
| |
| Most of the small changes to the \LaTeX{} markup have been made |
| with an eye to divorcing the markup from the presentation, making |
| both a bit more maintainable. Over the course of 1998, a large |
| number of changes were made with exactly this in mind; previously, |
| changes had been made but in a less systematic manner and with |
| more concern for not needing to update the existing content. The |
| result has been a highly structured and semantically loaded markup |
| language implemented in \LaTeX. With almost no basic \TeX{} or |
| \LaTeX{} markup in use, however, the markup syntax is about the |
| only evidence of \LaTeX{} in the actual document sources. |
| |
| One side effect of this is that while we've been able to use |
| standard ``engines'' for manipulating the documents, such as |
| \LaTeX{} and \LaTeX2HTML, most of the actual transformations have |
| been created specifically for Python. The \LaTeX{} document |
| classes and \LaTeX2HTML support are both complete implementations |
| of the specific markup designed for these documents. |
| |
| Combining highly customized markup with the somewhat esoteric |
| systems used to process the documents leads us to ask some |
| questions: Can we do this more easily? and, Can we do this |
| better? After a great deal of discussion with the community, we |
| have determined that actively pursuing modern structured |
| documentation systems is worth some investment of time. |
| |
| There appear to be two real contenders in this arena: the Standard |
| General Markup Language (SGML), and the Extensible Markup Language |
| (XML). Both of these standards have advantages and disadvantages, |
| and many advantages are shared. |
| |
| SGML offers advantages which may appeal most to authors, |
| especially those using ordinary text editors. There are also |
| additional abilities to define content models. A number of |
| high-quality tools with demonstrated maturity are available, but |
| most are not free; for those which are, portability issues remain |
| a problem. |
| |
| The advantages of XML include the availability of a large number |
| of evolving tools. Unfortunately, many of the associated |
| standards are still evolving, and the tools will have to follow |
| along. This means that developing a robust tool set that uses |
| more than the basic XML 1.0 recommendation is not possible in the |
| short term. The promised availability of a wide variety of |
| high-quality tools which support some of the most important |
| related standards is not immediate. Many tools are likely to be |
| free, and the portability issues of those which are, are not |
| expected to be significant. |
| |
| It turns out that converting to an XML or SGML system holds |
| promise for translators as well; how much can be done to ease the |
| burden on translators remains to be seen, and may have some impact |
| on the schema and specific technologies used. |
| |
| XXX Eventual migration to XML. |
| |
| The documentation will be moved to XML in the future, and tools |
| are being written which will convert the documentation from the |
| current format to something close to a finished version, to the |
| extent that the desired information is already present in the |
| documentation. Some XSLT stylesheets have been started for |
| presenting a preliminary XML version as HTML, but the results are |
| fairly rough. |
| |
| The timeframe for the conversion is not clear since there doesn't |
| seem to be much time available to work on this, but the apparent |
| benefits are growing more substantial at a moderately rapid pace. |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Discussion Forums \label{discussion}} |
| |
| Discussion of the future of the Python documentation and related |
| topics takes place in the Documentation Special Interest Group, or |
| ``Doc-SIG.'' Information on the group, including mailing list |
| archives and subscription information, is available at |
| \url{http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/}. The SIG is open to all |
| interested parties. |
| |
| Comments and bug reports on the standard documents should be sent |
| to \email{docs@python.org}. This may include comments |
| about formatting, content, grammatical and spelling errors, or |
| this document. You can also send comments on this document |
| directly to the author at \email{fdrake@acm.org}. |
| |
| \input{doc.ind} |
| |
| \end{document} |