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Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001\documentclass{howto}
2\usepackage{ltxmarkup}
3
4\title{Documenting Python}
5
6\input{boilerplate}
7
Fred Drakec7c9a641999-04-28 18:24:02 +00008% Now override the stuff that includes author information;
9% Guido did *not* write this one!
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000010
11\author{Fred L. Drake, Jr.}
12\authoraddress{
Fred Drake8fdb6382000-10-28 04:08:38 +000013 PythonLabs \\
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +000014 Email: \email{fdrake@acm.org}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000015}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000016
17
18\begin{document}
19
20\maketitle
21
22\begin{abstract}
23\noindent
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +000024The Python language has a substantial body of
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000025documentation, much of it contributed by various authors. The markup
26used for the Python documentation is based on \LaTeX{} and requires a
27significant set of macros written specifically for documenting Python.
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +000028This document describes the macros introduced to support Python
29documentation and how they should be used to support a wide range of
30output formats.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000031
32This document describes the document classes and special markup used
33in the Python documentation. Authors may use this guide, in
34conjunction with the template files provided with the
35distribution, to create or maintain whole documents or sections.
36\end{abstract}
37
38\tableofcontents
39
40
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +000041\section{Introduction \label{intro}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000042
43 Python's documentation has long been considered to be good for a
44 free programming language. There are a number of reasons for this,
45 the most important being the early commitment of Python's creator,
46 Guido van Rossum, to providing documentation on the language and its
47 libraries, and the continuing involvement of the user community in
48 providing assistance for creating and maintaining documentation.
49
50 The involvement of the community takes many forms, from authoring to
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +000051 bug reports to just plain complaining when the documentation could
52 be more complete or easier to use. All of these forms of input from
53 the community have proved useful during the time I've been involved
54 in maintaining the documentation.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000055
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +000056 This document is aimed at authors and potential authors of
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +000057 documentation for Python. More specifically, it is for people
58 contributing to the standard documentation and developing additional
59 documents using the same tools as the standard documents. This
60 guide will be less useful for authors using the Python documentation
61 tools for topics other than Python, and less useful still for
62 authors not using the tools at all.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000063
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +000064 The material in this guide is intended to assist authors using the
65 Python documentation tools. It includes information on the source
66 distribution of the standard documentation, a discussion of the
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +000067 document types, reference material on the markup defined in the
68 document classes, a list of the external tools needed for processing
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +000069 documents, and reference material on the tools provided with the
70 documentation resources. At the end, there is also a section
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +000071 discussing future directions for the Python documentation and where
72 to turn for more information.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000073
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +000074\section{Directory Structure \label{directories}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000075
76 The source distribution for the standard Python documentation
77 contains a large number of directories. While third-party documents
78 do not need to be placed into this structure or need to be placed
79 within a similar structure, it can be helpful to know where to look
80 for examples and tools when developing new documents using the
81 Python documentation tools. This section describes this directory
82 structure.
83
84 The documentation sources are usually placed within the Python
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +000085 source distribution as the top-level directory \file{Doc/}, but
86 are not dependent on the Python source distribution in any way.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +000087
88 The \file{Doc/} directory contains a few files and several
89 subdirectories. The files are mostly self-explanatory, including a
90 \file{README} and a \file{Makefile}. The directories fall into
91 three categories:
92
93 \begin{definitions}
94 \term{Document Sources}
95 The \LaTeX{} sources for each document are placed in a
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +000096 separate directory. These directories are given short
97 names which vaguely indicate the document in each:
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +000098
99 \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Document Title}
Fred Drake31edf4d2000-09-07 20:06:07 +0000100 \lineii{api/}
101 {\citetitle[../api/api.html]{The Python/C API}}
102 \lineii{dist/}
103 {\citetitle[../dist/dist.html]{Distributing Python Modules}}
104 \lineii{doc/}
105 {\citetitle[../doc/doc.html]{Documenting Python}}
106 \lineii{ext/}
107 {\citetitle[../ext/ext.html]{Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter}}
108 \lineii{inst/}
109 {\citetitle[../inst/inst.html]{Installing Python Modules}}
110 \lineii{lib/}
111 {\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}}
112 \lineii{mac/}
113 {\citetitle[../mac/mac.html]{Macintosh Module Reference}}
114 \lineii{ref/}
115 {\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual}}
116 \lineii{tut/}
117 {\citetitle[../tut/tut.html]{Python Tutorial}}
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000118 \end{tableii}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000119
120 \term{Format-Specific Output}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000121 Most output formats have a directory which contains a
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000122 \file{Makefile} which controls the generation of that format
123 and provides storage for the formatted documents. The only
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000124 variations within this category are the Portable Document
125 Format (PDF) and PostScript versions are placed in the
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000126 directories \file{paper-a4/} and \file{paper-letter/} (this
127 causes all the temporary files created by \LaTeX{} to be kept
128 in the same place for each paper size, where they can be more
129 easily ignored).
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000130
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000131 \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Output Formats}
132 \lineii{html/}{HTML output}
133 \lineii{info/}{GNU info output}
134 \lineii{paper-a4/}{PDF and PostScript, A4 paper}
135 \lineii{paper-letter/}{PDF and PostScript, US-Letter paper}
136 \end{tableii}
137
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000138 \term{Supplemental Files}
139 Some additional directories are used to store supplemental
140 files used for the various processes. Directories are
141 included for the shared \LaTeX{} document classes, the
142 \LaTeX2HTML support, template files for various document
143 components, and the scripts used to perform various steps in
144 the formatting processes.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000145
146 \begin{tableii}{p{.75in}|p{3in}}{filenq}{Directory}{Contents}
147 \lineii{perl/}{Support for \LaTeX2HTML processing}
148 \lineii{templates/}{Example files for source documents}
149 \lineii{texinputs/}{Style implementation for \LaTeX}
150 \lineii{tools/}{Custom processing scripts}
151 \end{tableii}
152
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000153 \end{definitions}
154
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000155
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000156\section{Style Guide \label{style-guide}}
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000157
158 The Python documentation should follow the \citetitle
159 [http://developer.apple.com/techpubs/macos8/pdf/apple_styleguide00.pdf]
160 {Apple Publications Style Guide} wherever possible. This particular
161 style guide was selected mostly because it seems reasonable and is
162 easy to get online. (Printed copies are available; see the Apple's
163 \citetitle[http://developer.apple.com/techpubs/faq.html]{Developer
164 Documentation FAQ} for more information.)
165
166 Topics which are not covered in the Apple's style guide will be
167 discussed in this document if necessary.
168
169 Many special names are used in the Python documentation, including
170 the names of operating systems, programming languages, standards
171 bodies, and the like. Many of these were assigned \LaTeX{} macros
172 at some point in the distant past, and these macros lived on long
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000173 past their usefulness. In the current markup, most of these entities
174 are not assigned any special markup, but the preferred spellings are
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000175 given here to aid authors in maintaining the consistency of
176 presentation in the Python documentation.
177
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000178 Other terms and words deserve special mention as well; these conventions
179 should be used to ensure consistency throughout the documentation:
180
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000181 \begin{description}
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000182 \item[CPU]
183 For ``central processing unit.'' Many style guides say this
184 should be spelled out on the first use (and if you must use it,
185 do so!). For the Python documentation, this abbreviation should
186 be avoided since there's no reasonable way to predict which occurance
187 will be the first seen by the reader. It is better to use the
188 word ``processor'' instead.
189
190 \item[\POSIX]
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000191 The name assigned to a particular group of standards. This is
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000192 always uppercase. Use the macro \macro{POSIX} to represent this
193 name.
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000194
195 \item[Python]
196 The name of our favorite programming language is always
197 capitalized.
198
199 \item[Unicode]
200 The name of a character set and matching encoding. This is
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000201 always written capitalized.
202
203 \item[\UNIX]
204 The name of the operating system developed at AT\&T Bell Labs
205 in the early 1970s. Use the macro \macro{UNIX} to use this name.
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000206 \end{description}
207
208
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000209\section{\LaTeX{} Primer \label{latex-primer}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000210
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000211 This section is a brief introduction to \LaTeX{} concepts and
212 syntax, to provide authors enough information to author documents
213 productively without having to become ``\TeX{}nicians.''
214
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000215 Perhaps the most important concept to keep in mind while marking up
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +0000216 Python documentation is that while \TeX{} is unstructured, \LaTeX{} was
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000217 designed as a layer on top of \TeX{} which specifically supports
218 structured markup. The Python-specific markup is intended to extend
219 the structure provided by standard \LaTeX{} document classes to
220 support additional information specific to Python.
221
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000222 \LaTeX{} documents contain two parts: the preamble and the body.
223 The preamble is used to specify certain metadata about the document
224 itself, such as the title, the list of authors, the date, and the
225 \emph{class} the document belongs to. Additional information used
226 to control index generation and the use of bibliographic databases
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000227 can also be placed in the preamble. For most authors, the preamble
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000228 can be most easily created by copying it from an existing document
229 and modifying a few key pieces of information.
230
231 The \dfn{class} of a document is used to place a document within a
232 broad category of documents and set some fundamental formatting
233 properties. For Python documentation, two classes are used: the
234 \code{manual} class and the \code{howto} class. These classes also
235 define the additional markup used to document Python concepts and
236 structures. Specific information about these classes is provided in
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000237 section \ref{classes}, ``Document Classes,'' below. The first thing
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000238 in the preamble is the declaration of the document's class.
239
240 After the class declaration, a number of \emph{macros} are used to
241 provide further information about the document and setup any
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000242 additional markup that is needed. No output is generated from the
243 preamble; it is an error to include free text in the preamble
244 because it would cause output.
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000245
246 The document body follows the preamble. This contains all the
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000247 printed components of the document marked up structurally. Generic
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000248 \LaTeX{} structures include hierarchical sections, numbered and
249 bulleted lists, and special structures for the document abstract and
250 indexes.
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000251
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000252 \subsection{Syntax \label{latex-syntax}}
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000253
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000254 There are some things that an author of Python documentation needs
255 to know about \LaTeX{} syntax.
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000256
257 A \dfn{comment} is started by the ``percent'' character
258 (\character{\%}) and continues through the end of the line and all
259 leading whitespace on the following line. This is a little
260 different from any programming language I know of, so an example
261 is in order:
262
263\begin{verbatim}
264This is text.% comment
265 This is more text. % another comment
266Still more text.
267\end{verbatim}
268
269 The first non-comment character following the first comment is the
270 letter \character{T} on the second line; the leading whitespace on
271 that line is consumed as part of the first comment. This means
272 that there is no space between the first and second sentences, so
273 the period and letter \character{T} will be directly adjacent in
274 the typeset document.
275
276 Note also that though the first non-comment character after the
277 second comment is the letter \character{S}, there is whitespace
278 preceding the comment, so the two sentences are separated as
279 expected.
280
281 A \dfn{group} is an enclosure for a collection of text and
282 commands which encloses the formatting context and constrains the
283 scope of any changes to that context made by commands within the
284 group. Groups can be nested hierarchically. The formatting
285 context includes the font and the definition of additional macros
286 (or overrides of macros defined in outer groups). Syntactically,
287 groups are enclosed in braces:
288
289\begin{verbatim}
290{text in a group}
291\end{verbatim}
292
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000293 An alternate syntax for a group using brackets, \code{[...]}, is
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000294 used by macros and environment constructors which take optional
295 parameters; brackets do not normally hold syntactic significance.
296 A degenerate group, containing only one atomic bit of content,
297 does not need to have an explicit group, unless it is required to
298 avoid ambiguity. Since Python tends toward the explicit, groups
299 are also made explicit in the documentation markup.
300
301 Groups are used only sparingly in the Python documentation, except
302 for their use in marking parameters to macros and environments.
303
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000304 A \dfn{macro} is usually a simple construct which is identified by
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000305 name and can take some number of parameters. In normal \LaTeX{}
306 usage, one of these can be optional. The markup is introduced
307 using the backslash character (\character{\e}), and the name is
308 given by alphabetic characters (no digits, hyphens, or
309 underscores). Required parameters should be marked as a group,
310 and optional parameters should be marked using the alternate
311 syntax for a group.
312
313 For example, a macro named ``foo'' which takes a single parameter
314 would appear like this:
315
316\begin{verbatim}
317\name{parameter}
318\end{verbatim}
319
320 A macro which takes an optional parameter would be typed like this
321 when the optional paramter is given:
322
323\begin{verbatim}
324\name[optional]
325\end{verbatim}
326
327 If both optional and required parameters are to be required, it
328 looks like this:
329
330\begin{verbatim}
331\name[optional]{required}
332\end{verbatim}
333
334 A macro name may be followed by a space or newline; a space
335 between the macro name and any parameters will be consumed, but
336 this usage is not practiced in the Python documentation. Such a
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000337 space is still consumed if there are no parameters to the macro,
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000338 in which case inserting an empty group (\code{\{\}}) or explicit
339 word space (\samp{\e\ }) immediately after the macro name helps to
340 avoid running the expansion of the macro into the following text.
341 Macros which take no parameters but which should not be followed
342 by a word space do not need special treatment if the following
343 character in the document source if not a name character (such as
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000344 punctuation).
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000345
346 Each line of this example shows an appropriate way to write text
347 which includes a macro which takes no parameters:
348
349\begin{verbatim}
350This \UNIX{} is followed by a space.
351This \UNIX\ is also followed by a space.
352\UNIX, followed by a comma, needs no additional markup.
353\end{verbatim}
354
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000355 An \dfn{environment} is a larger construct than a macro, and can
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000356 be used for things with more content than would conveniently fit
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000357 in a macro parameter. They are primarily used when formatting
358 parameters need to be changed before and after a large chunk of
359 content, but the content itself needs to be highly flexible. Code
360 samples are presented using an environment, and descriptions of
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000361 functions, methods, and classes are also marked using environments.
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000362
363 Since the content of an environment is free-form and can consist
364 of several paragraphs, they are actually marked using a pair of
365 macros: \macro{begin} and \macro{end}. These macros both take the
366 name of the environment as a parameter. An example is the
367 environment used to mark the abstract of a document:
368
369\begin{verbatim}
370\begin{abstract}
371 This is the text of the abstract. It concisely explains what
372 information is found in the document.
373
374 It can consist of multiple paragraphs.
375\end{abstract}
376\end{verbatim}
377
378 An environment can also have required and optional parameters of
379 its own. These follow the parameter of the \macro{begin} macro.
380 This example shows an environment which takes a single required
381 parameter:
382
383\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake2bbc6972001-03-28 16:51:20 +0000384\begin{datadesc}{controlnames}
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000385 A 33-element string array that contains the \ASCII{} mnemonics for
386 the thirty-two \ASCII{} control characters from 0 (NUL) to 0x1f
387 (US), in order, plus the mnemonic \samp{SP} for the space character.
388\end{datadesc}
389\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000390
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000391 There are a number of less-used marks in \LaTeX{} which are used
392 to enter non-\ASCII{} characters, especially those used in
393 European names. Given that these are often used adjacent to other
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000394 characters, the markup required to produce the proper character
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000395 may need to be followed by a space or an empty group, or the
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000396 markup can be enclosed in a group. Some which are found in Python
397 documentation are:
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000398
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000399\begin{tableii}{c|l}{textrm}{Character}{Markup}
400 \lineii{\c c}{\code{\e c c}}
401 \lineii{\"o}{\code{\e"o}}
402 \lineii{\o}{\code{\e o}}
403\end{tableii}
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000404
405
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000406 \subsection{Hierarchical Structure \label{latex-syntax}}
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000407
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000408 \LaTeX{} expects documents to be arranged in a conventional,
409 hierarchical way, with chapters, sections, sub-sections,
410 appendixes, and the like. These are marked using macros rather
411 than environments, probably because the end of a section can be
412 safely inferred when a section of equal or higher level starts.
413
414 There are six ``levels'' of sectioning in the document classes
Fred Drake4c6f17a2001-04-18 05:12:47 +0000415 used for Python documentation, and the deepest two
416 levels\footnote{The deepest levels have the highest numbers in the
417 table.} are not used. The levels are:
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000418
419 \begin{tableiii}{c|l|c}{textrm}{Level}{Macro Name}{Notes}
420 \lineiii{1}{\macro{chapter}}{(1)}
421 \lineiii{2}{\macro{section}}{}
422 \lineiii{3}{\macro{subsection}}{}
Fred Drakeb7a52c92000-11-27 20:10:18 +0000423 \lineiii{4}{\macro{subsubsection}}{}
Fred Draked097d482000-10-20 20:51:31 +0000424 \lineiii{5}{\macro{paragraph}}{(2)}
425 \lineiii{6}{\macro{subparagraph}}{}
426 \end{tableiii}
427
428 \noindent
429 Notes:
430
431 \begin{description}
432 \item[(1)]
433 Only used for the \code{manual} documents, as described in
434 section \ref{classes}, ``Document Classes.''
435 \item[(2)]
436 Not the same as a paragraph of text; nobody seems to use this.
437 \end{description}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000438
439
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000440\section{Document Classes \label{classes}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000441
442 Two \LaTeX{} document classes are defined specifically for use with
443 the Python documentation. The \code{manual} class is for large
444 documents which are sectioned into chapters, and the \code{howto}
445 class is for smaller documents.
446
447 The \code{manual} documents are larger and are used for most of the
448 standard documents. This document class is based on the standard
449 \LaTeX{} \code{report} class and is formatted very much like a long
Fred Drake698d5201999-11-10 15:54:57 +0000450 technical report. The \citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference
451 Manual} is a good example of a \code{manual} document, and the
452 \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} is a large
453 example.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000454
455 The \code{howto} documents are shorter, and don't have the large
456 structure of the \code{manual} documents. This class is based on
457 the standard \LaTeX{} \code{article} class and is formatted somewhat
458 like the Linux Documentation Project's ``HOWTO'' series as done
459 originally using the LinuxDoc software. The original intent for the
460 document class was that it serve a similar role as the LDP's HOWTO
461 series, but the applicability of the class turns out to be somewhat
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +0000462 broader. This class is used for ``how-to'' documents (this
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000463 document is an example) and for shorter reference manuals for small,
464 fairly cohesive module libraries. Examples of the later use include
Fred Drake6a547c72000-09-15 22:11:24 +0000465\citetitle[http://starship.python.net/crew/fdrake/manuals/krb5py/krb5py.html]{Using
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000466 Kerberos from Python}, which contains reference material for an
467 extension package. These documents are roughly equivalent to a
468 single chapter from a larger work.
469
470
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000471\section{Special Markup Constructs \label{special-constructs}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000472
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +0000473 The Python document classes define a lot of new environments and
474 macros. This section contains the reference material for these
475 facilities.
476
Fred Drakeaf2b7142000-09-14 20:11:05 +0000477 \subsection{Markup for the Preamble \label{preamble-info}}
478
479 \begin{macrodesc}{release}{\p{ver}}
480 Set the version number for the software described in the
481 document.
482 \end{macrodesc}
483
484 \begin{macrodesc}{setshortversion}{\p{sver}}
485 Specify the ``short'' version number of the documented software
486 to be \var{sver}.
487 \end{macrodesc}
488
Fred Drakee15956b2000-04-03 04:51:13 +0000489 \subsection{Meta-information Markup \label{meta-info}}
490
491 \begin{macrodesc}{sectionauthor}{\p{author}\p{email}}
492 Identifies the author of the current section. \var{author}
493 should be the author's name such that it can be used for
494 presentation (though it isn't), and \var{email} should be the
495 author's email address. The domain name portion of
496 the address should be lower case.
497
498 No presentation is generated from this markup, but it is used to
499 help keep track of contributions.
500 \end{macrodesc}
501
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000502 \subsection{Information Units \label{info-units}}
503
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000504 XXX Explain terminology, or come up with something more ``lay.''
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000505
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000506 There are a number of environments used to describe specific
507 features provided by modules. Each environment requires
508 parameters needed to provide basic information about what is being
509 described, and the environment content should be the description.
510 Most of these environments make entries in the general index (if
511 one is being produced for the document); if no index entry is
512 desired, non-indexing variants are available for many of these
513 environments. The environments have names of the form
514 \code{\var{feature}desc}, and the non-indexing variants are named
515 \code{\var{feature}descni}. The available variants are explicitly
516 included in the list below.
517
518 For each of these environments, the first parameter, \var{name},
519 provides the name by which the feature is accessed.
520
521 Environments which describe features of objects within a module,
522 such as object methods or data attributes, allow an optional
523 \var{type name} parameter. When the feature is an attribute of
524 class instances, \var{type name} only needs to be given if the
525 class was not the most recently described class in the module; the
526 \var{name} value from the most recent \env{classdesc} is implied.
527 For features of built-in or extension types, the \var{type name}
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000528 value should always be provided. Another special case includes
529 methods and members of general ``protocols,'' such as the
530 formatter and writer protocols described for the
531 \module{formatter} module: these may be documented without any
532 specific implementation classes, and will always require the
533 \var{type name} parameter to be provided.
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000534
Fred Drake7be440d2000-09-16 21:23:25 +0000535 \begin{envdesc}{cfuncdesc}{\p{type}\p{name}\p{args}}
536 Environment used to described a C function. The \var{type}
537 should be specified as a \keyword{typedef} name, \code{struct
538 \var{tag}}, or the name of a primitive type. If it is a pointer
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +0000539 type, the trailing asterisk should not be preceded by a space.
Fred Drake7be440d2000-09-16 21:23:25 +0000540 \var{name} should be the name of the function (or function-like
541 pre-processor macro), and \var{args} should give the types and
542 names of the parameters. The names need to be given so they may
543 be used in the description.
544 \end{envdesc}
545
546 \begin{envdesc}{ctypedesc}{\op{tag}\p{name}}
547 Environment used to described a C type. The \var{name}
548 parameter should be the \keyword{typedef} name. If the type is
549 defined as a \keyword{struct} without a \keyword{typedef},
550 \var{name} should have the form \code{struct \var{tag}}.
551 \var{name} will be added to the index unless \var{tag} is
552 provided, in which case \var{tag} will be used instead.
553 \var{tag} should not be used for a \keyword{typedef} name.
554 \end{envdesc}
555
556 \begin{envdesc}{cvardesc}{\p{type}\p{name}}
557 Description of a global C variable. \var{type} should be the
558 \keyword{typedef} name, \code{struct \var{tag}}, or the name of
559 a primitive type. If variable has a pointer type, the trailing
Fred Drake02997492000-09-21 05:26:43 +0000560 asterisk should \emph{not} be preceded by a space.
Fred Drake7be440d2000-09-16 21:23:25 +0000561 \end{envdesc}
562
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000563 \begin{envdesc}{datadesc}{\p{name}}
564 This environment is used to document global data in a module,
565 including both variables and values used as ``defined
566 constants.'' Class and object attributes are not documented
567 using this environment.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000568 \end{envdesc}
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +0000569 \begin{envdesc}{datadescni}{\p{name}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000570 Like \env{datadesc}, but without creating any index entries.
571 \end{envdesc}
572
Fred Drake9f2376d2001-05-11 01:01:12 +0000573 \begin{envdesc}{excclassdesc}{\p{name}\p{constructor parameters}}
574 Descibe an exception defined by a class. \var{constructor
575 parameters} should not include the \var{self} parameter or
576 the parentheses used in the call syntax. To describe an
577 exception class without describing the parameters to its
578 constructor, use the \env{excdesc} environment.
579 \end{envdesc}
580
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000581 \begin{envdesc}{excdesc}{\p{name}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000582 Describe an exception. This may be either a string exception or
Fred Drake9f2376d2001-05-11 01:01:12 +0000583 a class exception. In the case of class exceptions, the
584 constructor parameters are not described; use \env{excclassdesc}
585 to describe an exception class and its constructor.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000586 \end{envdesc}
587
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000588 \begin{envdesc}{funcdesc}{\p{name}\p{parameters}}
589 Describe a module-level function. \var{parameters} should
590 not include the parentheses used in the call syntax. Object
591 methods are not documented using this environment. Bound object
592 methods placed in the module namespace as part of the public
593 interface of the module are documented using this, as they are
594 equivalent to normal functions for most purposes.
595
596 The description should include information about the parameters
597 required and how they are used (especially whether mutable
598 objects passed as parameters are modified), side effects, and
599 possible exceptions. A small example may be provided.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000600 \end{envdesc}
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000601 \begin{envdesc}{funcdescni}{\p{name}\p{parameters}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000602 Like \env{funcdesc}, but without creating any index entries.
603 \end{envdesc}
604
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000605 \begin{envdesc}{classdesc}{\p{name}\p{constructor parameters}}
606 Describe a class and its constructor. \var{constructor
607 parameters} should not include the \var{self} parameter or
608 the parentheses used in the call syntax.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000609 \end{envdesc}
610
Fred Drake9f2376d2001-05-11 01:01:12 +0000611 \begin{envdesc}{classdesc*}{\p{name}}
612 Describe a class without describing the constructor. This can
613 be used to describe classes that are merely containers for
614 attributes or which should never be instantiated or subclassed
615 by user code.
616 \end{envdesc}
617
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000618 \begin{envdesc}{memberdesc}{\op{type name}\p{name}}
619 Describe an object data attribute. The description should
620 include information about the type of the data to be expected
621 and whether it may be changed directly.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000622 \end{envdesc}
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000623 \begin{envdesc}{memberdescni}{\op{type name}\p{name}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000624 Like \env{memberdesc}, but without creating any index entries.
625 \end{envdesc}
626
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000627 \begin{envdesc}{methoddesc}{\op{type name}\p{name}\p{parameters}}
628 Describe an object method. \var{parameters} should not include
629 the \var{self} parameter or the parentheses used in the call
630 syntax. The description should include similar information to
631 that described for \env{funcdesc}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000632 \end{envdesc}
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +0000633 \begin{envdesc}{methoddescni}{\op{type name}\p{name}\p{parameters}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000634 Like \env{methoddesc}, but without creating any index entries.
635 \end{envdesc}
636
637
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000638 \subsection{Showing Code Examples \label{showing-examples}}
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000639
640 Examples of Python source code or interactive sessions are
641 represented as \env{verbatim} environments. This environment
642 is a standard part of \LaTeX{}. It is important to only use
643 spaces for indentation in code examples since \TeX{} drops tabs
644 instead of converting them to spaces.
645
646 Representing an interactive session requires including the prompts
647 and output along with the Python code. No special markup is
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000648 required for interactive sessions. After the last line of input
649 or output presented, there should not be an ``unused'' primary
650 prompt; this is an example of what \emph{not} to do:
651
652\begin{verbatim}
653>>> 1 + 1
6542
655>>>
656\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000657
658 Within the \env{verbatim} environment, characters special to
659 \LaTeX{} do not need to be specially marked in any way. The entire
660 example will be presented in a monospaced font; no attempt at
661 ``pretty-printing'' is made, as the environment must work for
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000662 non-Python code and non-code displays. There should be no blank
663 lines at the top or bottom of any \env{verbatim} display.
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000664
Fred Drake66eed242001-06-18 14:59:58 +0000665 Longer displays of verbatim text may be included by storing the
666 example text in an external file containing only plain text. The
667 file may be included using the standard \macro{verbatiminput}
668 macro; this macro takes a single argument naming the file
669 containing the text. For example, to include the Python source
670 file \file{example.py}, use:
671
672\begin{verbatim}
673\verbatiminput{example.py}
674\end{verbatim}
675
676 Use of \macro{verbatiminput} allows easier use of special editing
677 modes for the included file. The file should be placed in the
678 same directory as the \LaTeX{} files for the document.
679
Fred Drake5eb992b1999-06-11 14:25:45 +0000680 The Python Documentation Special Interest Group has discussed a
681 number of approaches to creating pretty-printed code displays and
682 interactive sessions; see the Doc-SIG area on the Python Web site
683 for more information on this topic.
684
685
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +0000686 \subsection{Inline Markup \label{inline-markup}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000687
Fred Drake87f768e1999-05-17 15:22:45 +0000688 The macros described in this section are used to mark just about
689 anything interesting in the document text. They may be used in
690 headings (though anything involving hyperlinks should be avoided
691 there) as well as in the body text.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000692
693 \begin{macrodesc}{bfcode}{\p{text}}
694 Like \macro{code}, but also makes the font bold-face.
695 \end{macrodesc}
696
697 \begin{macrodesc}{cdata}{\p{name}}
698 The name of a C-language variable.
699 \end{macrodesc}
700
701 \begin{macrodesc}{cfunction}{\p{name}}
702 The name of a C-language function. \var{name} should include the
703 function name and the trailing parentheses.
704 \end{macrodesc}
705
706 \begin{macrodesc}{character}{\p{char}}
707 A character when discussing the character rather than a one-byte
708 string value. The character will be typeset as with \macro{samp}.
709 \end{macrodesc}
710
Fred Drake29a710f1999-11-10 22:51:18 +0000711 \begin{macrodesc}{citetitle}{\op{url}\p{title}}
712 A title for a referenced publication. If \var{url} is specified,
713 the title will be made into a hyperlink when formatted as HTML.
714 \end{macrodesc}
715
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000716 \begin{macrodesc}{class}{\p{name}}
717 A class name; a dotted name may be used.
718 \end{macrodesc}
719
720 \begin{macrodesc}{code}{\p{text}}
721 A short code fragment or literal constant value. Typically, it
722 should not include any spaces since no quotation marks are
723 added.
724 \end{macrodesc}
725
726 \begin{macrodesc}{constant}{\p{name}}
727 The name of a ``defined'' constant. This may be a C-language
728 \code{\#define} or a Python variable that is not intended to be
729 changed.
730 \end{macrodesc}
731
732 \begin{macrodesc}{ctype}{\p{name}}
733 The name of a C \keyword{typedef} or structure. For structures
734 defined without a \keyword{typedef}, use \code{\e ctype\{struct
735 struct_tag\}} to make it clear that the \keyword{struct} is
736 required.
737 \end{macrodesc}
738
739 \begin{macrodesc}{deprecated}{\p{version}\p{what to do}}
740 Declare whatever is being described as being deprecated starting
741 with release \var{version}. The text given as \var{what to do}
742 should recommend something to use instead.
743 \end{macrodesc}
744
745 \begin{macrodesc}{dfn}{\p{term}}
746 Mark the defining instance of \var{term} in the text. (No index
747 entries are generated.)
748 \end{macrodesc}
749
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +0000750 \begin{macrodesc}{e}{}
751 Produces a backslash. This is convenient in \macro{code} and
Fred Drake31edf4d2000-09-07 20:06:07 +0000752 similar macros, and is only defined there. To create a
Fred Drake2b853412000-04-11 19:08:30 +0000753 backslash in ordinary text (such as the contents of the
754 \macro{file} macro), use the standard \macro{textbackslash} macro.
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +0000755 \end{macrodesc}
756
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000757 \begin{macrodesc}{email}{\p{address}}
758 An email address. Note that this is \emph{not} hyperlinked in
Fred Drakee15956b2000-04-03 04:51:13 +0000759 any of the possible output formats. The domain name portion of
760 the address should be lower case.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000761 \end{macrodesc}
762
763 \begin{macrodesc}{emph}{\p{text}}
764 Emphasized text; this will be presented in an italic font.
765 \end{macrodesc}
766
767 \begin{macrodesc}{envvar}{\p{name}}
768 An environment variable. Index entries are generated.
769 \end{macrodesc}
770
771 \begin{macrodesc}{exception}{\p{name}}
772 The name of an exception. A dotted name may be used.
773 \end{macrodesc}
774
775 \begin{macrodesc}{file}{\p{file or dir}}
776 The name of a file or directory. In the PDF and PostScript
777 outputs, single quotes and a font change are used to indicate
778 the file name, but no quotes are used in the HTML output.
Fred Drake31edf4d2000-09-07 20:06:07 +0000779 \strong{Warning:} The \macro{file} macro cannot be used in the
780 content of a section title due to processing limitations.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000781 \end{macrodesc}
782
783 \begin{macrodesc}{filenq}{\p{file or dir}}
784 Like \macro{file}, but single quotes are never used. This can
785 be used in conjunction with tables if a column will only contain
786 file or directory names.
Fred Drake31edf4d2000-09-07 20:06:07 +0000787 \strong{Warning:} The \macro{filenq} macro cannot be used in the
788 content of a section title due to processing limitations.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000789 \end{macrodesc}
790
791 \begin{macrodesc}{function}{\p{name}}
792 The name of a Python function; dotted names may be used.
793 \end{macrodesc}
794
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000795 \begin{macrodesc}{infinity}{}
796 The symbol for mathematical infinity: \infinity. Some Web
797 browsers are not able to render the HTML representation of this
798 symbol properly, but support is growing.
799 \end{macrodesc}
800
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000801 \begin{macrodesc}{kbd}{\p{key sequence}}
802 Mark a sequence of keystrokes. What form \var{key sequence}
803 takes may depend on platform- or application-specific
Fred Drake07178d22001-07-12 02:08:29 +0000804 conventions. When there are no relevant conventions, the names
805 of modifier keys should be spelled out, to improve accessibility
806 for new users and non-native speakers. For example, an
807 \program{xemacs} key sequence may be marked like
808 \code{\e kbd\{C-x C-f\}}, but without reference to a specific
809 application or platform, the same sequence should be marked as
810 \code{\e kbd\{Control-x Control-f\}}.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000811 \end{macrodesc}
812
813 \begin{macrodesc}{keyword}{\p{name}}
814 The name of a keyword in a programming language.
815 \end{macrodesc}
816
Fred Drake8b3a7b52001-09-26 17:01:58 +0000817 \begin{macrodesc}{mailheader}{\p{name}}
818 The name of an \rfc{822}-style mail header. This markup does
819 not imply that the header is being used in an email message, but
820 can be used to refer to any header of the same ``style.'' This
821 is also used for headers defined by the various MIME
822 specifications. The header name should be entered in the same
823 way it would normally be found in practice, with the
824 camel-casing conventions being preferred where there is more
Fred Drake203d91a2001-09-26 18:43:20 +0000825 than one common usage. The colon which follows the name of the
826 header should not be included.
827 For example: \code{\e mailheader\{Content-Type\}}.
Fred Drake8b3a7b52001-09-26 17:01:58 +0000828 \end{macrodesc}
829
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000830 \begin{macrodesc}{makevar}{\p{name}}
831 The name of a \program{make} variable.
832 \end{macrodesc}
833
834 \begin{macrodesc}{manpage}{\p{name}\p{section}}
835 A reference to a \UNIX{} manual page.
836 \end{macrodesc}
837
838 \begin{macrodesc}{member}{\p{name}}
839 The name of a data attribute of an object.
840 \end{macrodesc}
841
842 \begin{macrodesc}{method}{\p{name}}
843 The name of a method of an object. \var{name} should include the
844 method name and the trailing parentheses. A dotted name may be
845 used.
846 \end{macrodesc}
847
848 \begin{macrodesc}{mimetype}{\p{name}}
Fred Drake8b3a7b52001-09-26 17:01:58 +0000849 The name of a MIME type, or a component of a MIME type (the
850 major or minor portion, taken alone).
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000851 \end{macrodesc}
852
853 \begin{macrodesc}{module}{\p{name}}
Fred Drake2b853412000-04-11 19:08:30 +0000854 The name of a module; a dotted name may be used. This should
855 also be used for package names.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000856 \end{macrodesc}
857
858 \begin{macrodesc}{newsgroup}{\p{name}}
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +0000859 The name of a Usenet newsgroup.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000860 \end{macrodesc}
861
Fred Drake92350b32001-10-09 18:01:23 +0000862 \begin{macrodesc}{note}{\p{text}}
863 An especially important bit of information about an API that a
864 user should be aware of when using whatever bit of API the
865 note pertains to. This should be the last thing in the
866 paragraph as the end of the note is not visually marked in
867 any way.
868 \end{macrodesc}
869
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000870 \begin{macrodesc}{pep}{\p{number}}
871 A reference to a Python Enhancement Proposal. This generates
872 appropriate index entries. The text \samp{PEP \var{number}} is
873 generated; in the HTML output, this text is a hyperlink to an
874 online copy of the specified PEP.
875 \end{macrodesc}
876
877 \begin{macrodesc}{plusminus}{}
878 The symbol for indicating a value that may take a positive or
879 negative value of a specified magnitude, typically represented
880 by a plus sign placed over a minus sign. For example:
Fred Drake203d91a2001-09-26 18:43:20 +0000881 \code{\e plusminus 3\%{}}.
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000882 \end{macrodesc}
883
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000884 \begin{macrodesc}{program}{\p{name}}
885 The name of an executable program. This may differ from the
886 file name for the executable for some platforms. In particular,
887 the \file{.exe} (or other) extension should be omitted for DOS
888 and Windows programs.
889 \end{macrodesc}
890
Fred Drake29a710f1999-11-10 22:51:18 +0000891 \begin{macrodesc}{programopt}{\p{option}}
Fred Drakece444982000-04-11 18:52:52 +0000892 A command-line option to an executable program. Use this only
893 for ``shot'' options, and include the leading hyphen.
894 \end{macrodesc}
895
896 \begin{macrodesc}{longprogramopt}{\p{option}}
897 A long command-line option to an executable program. This
898 should only be used for long option names which will be prefixed
899 by two hyphens; the hyphens should not be provided as part of
900 \var{option}.
Fred Drake29a710f1999-11-10 22:51:18 +0000901 \end{macrodesc}
902
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000903 \begin{macrodesc}{refmodule}{\op{key}\p{name}}
904 Like \macro{module}, but create a hyperlink to the documentation
905 for the named module. Note that the corresponding
906 \macro{declaremodule} must be in the same document. If the
907 \macro{declaremodule} defines a module key different from the
908 module name, it must also be provided as \var{key} to the
909 \macro{refmodule} macro.
910 \end{macrodesc}
911
912 \begin{macrodesc}{regexp}{\p{string}}
913 Mark a regular expression.
914 \end{macrodesc}
915
916 \begin{macrodesc}{rfc}{\p{number}}
917 A reference to an Internet Request for Comments. This generates
918 appropriate index entries. The text \samp{RFC \var{number}} is
919 generated; in the HTML output, this text is a hyperlink to an
920 online copy of the specified RFC.
921 \end{macrodesc}
922
923 \begin{macrodesc}{samp}{\p{text}}
924 A short code sample, but possibly longer than would be given
925 using \macro{code}. Since quotation marks are added, spaces are
926 acceptable.
927 \end{macrodesc}
928
Fred Drakeaf2b7142000-09-14 20:11:05 +0000929 \begin{macrodesc}{shortversion}{}
930 The ``short'' version number of the documented software, as
931 specified using the \macro{setshortversion} macro in the
932 preamble. For Python, the short version number for a release is
933 the first three characters of the \code{sys.version} value. For
934 example, versions 2.0b1 and 2.0.1 both have a short version of
935 2.0. This may not apply for all packages; if
936 \macro{setshortversion} is not used, this produces an empty
937 expansion. See also the \macro{version} macro.
938 \end{macrodesc}
939
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000940 \begin{macrodesc}{strong}{\p{text}}
941 Strongly emphasized text; this will be presented using a bold
942 font.
943 \end{macrodesc}
944
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000945 \begin{macrodesc}{ulink}{\p{text}\p{url}}
946 A hypertext link with a target specified by a URL, but for which
947 the link text should not be the title of the resource. For
948 resources being referenced by name, use the \macro{citetitle}
949 macro. Not all formatted versions support arbitrary hypertext
950 links. Note that many characters are special to \LaTeX{} and
951 this macro does not always do the right thing. In particular,
952 the tilde character (\character{\~}) is mis-handled; encoding it
953 as a hex-sequence does work, use \samp{\%7e} in place of the
954 tilde character.
955 \end{macrodesc}
956
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +0000957 \begin{macrodesc}{url}{\p{url}}
958 A URL (or URN). The URL will be presented as text. In the HTML
959 and PDF formatted versions, the URL will also be a hyperlink.
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +0000960 This can be used when referring to external resources without
961 specific titles; references to resources which have titles
962 should be marked using the \macro{citetitle} macro. See the
963 comments about special characters in the description of the
964 \macro{ulink} macro for special considerations.
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +0000965 \end{macrodesc}
966
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000967 \begin{macrodesc}{var}{\p{name}}
968 The name of a variable or formal parameter in running text.
969 \end{macrodesc}
970
971 \begin{macrodesc}{version}{}
Fred Drakeaf2b7142000-09-14 20:11:05 +0000972 The version number of the described software, as specified using
973 \macro{release} in the preamble. See also the
974 \macro{shortversion} macro.
Fred Drake2f4bebd1999-04-28 16:43:11 +0000975 \end{macrodesc}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +0000976
Fred Drake3151f442001-04-18 05:19:06 +0000977 \begin{macrodesc}{versionadded}{\op{explanation}\p{version}}
Fred Drakec26cc912000-05-02 17:43:44 +0000978 The version of Python which added the described feature to the
Fred Drake3151f442001-04-18 05:19:06 +0000979 library or C API. \var{explanation} should be a \emph{brief}
980 explanation of the change consisting of a capitalized sentence
981 fragment; a period will be appended by the formatting process.
982 This is typically added to the end of the first paragraph of the
983 description before any availability notes. The location should
984 be selected so the explanation makes sense and may vary as
985 needed.
Fred Drakec26cc912000-05-02 17:43:44 +0000986 \end{macrodesc}
987
988 \begin{macrodesc}{versionchanged}{\op{explanation}\p{version}}
989 The version of Python in which the named feature was changed in
990 some way (new parameters, changed side effects, etc.).
991 \var{explanation} should be a \emph{brief} explanation of the
Fred Drake63568aa2000-10-19 05:36:10 +0000992 change consisting of a capitalized sentence fragment; a
Fred Drakec26cc912000-05-02 17:43:44 +0000993 period will be appended by the formatting process.
994 This is typically added to the end of the first paragraph of the
995 description before any availability notes and after
996 \macro{versionadded}. The location should be selected so the
997 explanation makes sense and may vary as needed.
998 \end{macrodesc}
999
Fred Drake92350b32001-10-09 18:01:23 +00001000 \begin{macrodesc}{warning}{\p{text}}
1001 An important bit of information about an API that a user should
1002 be very aware of when using whatever bit of API the warning
1003 pertains to. This should be the last thing in the paragraph as
1004 the end of the warning is not visually marked in any way. This
1005 differs from \macro{note} in that it is recommended over
1006 \macro{note} for information regarding security.
1007 \end{macrodesc}
1008
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001009
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001010 \subsection{Module-specific Markup \label{module-markup}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001011
1012 The markup described in this section is used to provide information
1013 about a module being documented. A typical use of this markup
1014 appears at the top of the section used to document a module. A
1015 typical example might look like this:
1016
1017\begin{verbatim}
1018\section{\module{spam} ---
1019 Access to the SPAM facility}
1020
1021\declaremodule{extension}{spam}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001022 \platform{Unix}
Fred Drake9120df32001-07-14 02:34:12 +00001023\modulesynopsis{Access to the SPAM facility of \UNIX.}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001024\moduleauthor{Jane Doe}{jane.doe@frobnitz.org}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001025\end{verbatim}
1026
Fred Drake7932ed02000-08-11 17:37:33 +00001027 Python packages\index{packages} --- collections of modules that can
1028 be described as a unit --- are documented using the same markup as
1029 modules. The name for a module in a package should be typed in
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001030 ``fully qualified'' form (it should include the package name).
Fred Drake7932ed02000-08-11 17:37:33 +00001031 For example, a module ``foo'' in package ``bar'' should be marked as
Fred Drake203d91a2001-09-26 18:43:20 +00001032 \code{\e module\{bar.foo\}}, and the beginning of the reference
Fred Drake7932ed02000-08-11 17:37:33 +00001033 section would appear as:
1034
1035\begin{verbatim}
1036\section{\module{bar.foo} ---
1037 Module from the \module{bar} package}
1038
1039\declaremodule{extension}{bar.foo}
1040\modulesynopsis{Nifty module from the \module{bar} package.}
1041\moduleauthor{Jane Doe}{jane.doe@frobnitz.org}
1042\end{verbatim}
1043
1044 Note that the name of a package is also marked using
1045 \macro{module}.
1046
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001047 \begin{macrodesc}{declaremodule}{\op{key}\p{type}\p{name}}
Fred Drake87f768e1999-05-17 15:22:45 +00001048 Requires two parameters: module type (\samp{standard},
1049 \samp{builtin}, \samp{extension}, or \samp{}), and the module
1050 name. An optional parameter should be given as the basis for the
1051 module's ``key'' used for linking to or referencing the section.
1052 The ``key'' should only be given if the module's name contains any
1053 underscores, and should be the name with the underscores stripped.
1054 Note that the \var{type} parameter must be one of the values
1055 listed above or an error will be printed. For modules which are
1056 contained in packages, the fully-qualified name should be given as
1057 \var{name} parameter. This should be the first thing after the
1058 \macro{section} used to introduce the module.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001059 \end{macrodesc}
1060
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001061 \begin{macrodesc}{platform}{\p{specifier}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001062 Specifies the portability of the module. \var{specifier} is a
1063 comma-separated list of keys that specify what platforms the
1064 module is available on. The keys are short identifiers;
1065 examples that are in use include \samp{IRIX}, \samp{Mac},
1066 \samp{Windows}, and \samp{Unix}. It is important to use a key
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +00001067 which has already been used when applicable. This is used to
1068 provide annotations in the Module Index and the HTML and GNU info
1069 output.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001070 \end{macrodesc}
1071
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001072 \begin{macrodesc}{modulesynopsis}{\p{text}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001073 The \var{text} is a short, ``one line'' description of the
1074 module that can be used as part of the chapter introduction.
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001075 This is must be placed after \macro{declaremodule}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001076 The synopsis is used in building the contents of the table
1077 inserted as the \macro{localmoduletable}. No text is
1078 produced at the point of the markup.
1079 \end{macrodesc}
1080
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001081 \begin{macrodesc}{moduleauthor}{\p{name}\p{email}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001082 This macro is used to encode information about who authored a
1083 module. This is currently not used to generate output, but can be
1084 used to help determine the origin of the module.
1085 \end{macrodesc}
1086
1087
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001088 \subsection{Library-level Markup \label{library-markup}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001089
1090 This markup is used when describing a selection of modules. For
Fred Drake698d5201999-11-10 15:54:57 +00001091 example, the \citetitle[../mac/mac.html]{Macintosh Library
1092 Modules} document uses this to help provide an overview of the
1093 modules in the collection, and many chapters in the
1094 \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} use it for
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001095 the same purpose.
1096
1097 \begin{macrodesc}{localmoduletable}{}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001098 If a \file{.syn} file exists for the current
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001099 chapter (or for the entire document in \code{howto} documents), a
1100 \env{synopsistable} is created with the contents loaded from the
1101 \file{.syn} file.
1102 \end{macrodesc}
1103
1104
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001105 \subsection{Table Markup \label{table-markup}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001106
1107 There are three general-purpose table environments defined which
1108 should be used whenever possible. These environments are defined
1109 to provide tables of specific widths and some convenience for
1110 formatting. These environments are not meant to be general
1111 replacements for the standard \LaTeX{} table environments, but can
1112 be used for an advantage when the documents are processed using
1113 the tools for Python documentation processing. In particular, the
1114 generated HTML looks good! There is also an advantage for the
Fred Drake67f193f2001-07-09 16:04:03 +00001115 eventual conversion of the documentation to XML (see section
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001116 \ref{futures}, ``Future Directions'').
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001117
1118 Each environment is named \env{table\var{cols}}, where \var{cols}
1119 is the number of columns in the table specified in lower-case
1120 Roman numerals. Within each of these environments, an additional
1121 macro, \macro{line\var{cols}}, is defined, where \var{cols}
1122 matches the \var{cols} value of the corresponding table
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001123 environment. These are supported for \var{cols} values of
1124 \code{ii}, \code{iii}, and \code{iv}. These environments are all
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001125 built on top of the \env{tabular} environment. Variants based on
1126 the \env{longtable} environment are also provided.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001127
Fred Drake2b853412000-04-11 19:08:30 +00001128 Note that all tables in the standard Python documentation use
1129 vertical lines between columns, and this must be specified in the
1130 markup for each table. A general border around the outside of the
1131 table is not used, but would be the responsibility of the
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001132 processor; the document markup should not include an exterior
1133 border.
1134
1135 The \env{longtable}-based variants of the table environments are
1136 formatted with extra space before and after, so should only be
1137 used on tables which are long enough that splitting over multiple
1138 pages is reasonable; tables with fewer than twenty rows should
1139 never by marked using the long flavors of the table environments.
1140 The header row is repeated across the top of each part of the
1141 table.
Fred Drake2b853412000-04-11 19:08:30 +00001142
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001143 \begin{envdesc}{tableii}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001144 Create a two-column table using the \LaTeX{} column specifier
1145 \var{colspec}. The column specifier should indicate vertical
1146 bars between columns as appropriate for the specific table, but
1147 should not specify vertical bars on the outside of the table
1148 (that is considered a stylesheet issue). The \var{col1font}
1149 parameter is used as a stylistic treatment of the first column
1150 of the table: the first column is presented as
1151 \code{\e\var{col1font}\{column1\}}. To avoid treating the first
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001152 column specially, \var{col1font} may be \samp{textrm}. The
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001153 column headings are taken from the values \var{heading1} and
1154 \var{heading2}.
1155 \end{envdesc}
1156
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001157 \begin{envdesc}{longtableii}{\unspecified}
1158 Like \env{tableii}, but produces a table which may be broken
1159 across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for
1160 \env{tableii}.
1161 \end{envdesc}
1162
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001163 \begin{macrodesc}{lineii}{\p{column1}\p{column2}}
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001164 Create a single table row within a \env{tableii} or
1165 \env{longtableii} environment.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001166 The text for the first column will be generated by applying the
1167 macro named by the \var{col1font} value when the \env{tableii}
1168 was opened.
1169 \end{macrodesc}
1170
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001171 \begin{envdesc}{tableiii}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001172 Like the \env{tableii} environment, but with a third column.
1173 The heading for the third column is given by \var{heading3}.
1174 \end{envdesc}
1175
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001176 \begin{envdesc}{longtableiii}{\unspecified}
1177 Like \env{tableiii}, but produces a table which may be broken
1178 across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for
1179 \env{tableiii}.
1180 \end{envdesc}
1181
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001182 \begin{macrodesc}{lineiii}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001183 Like the \macro{lineii} macro, but with a third column. The
1184 text for the third column is given by \var{column3}.
1185 \end{macrodesc}
1186
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001187 \begin{envdesc}{tableiv}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}\p{heading4}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001188 Like the \env{tableiii} environment, but with a fourth column.
1189 The heading for the fourth column is given by \var{heading4}.
1190 \end{envdesc}
1191
Fred Drakeda72b932000-09-21 15:58:02 +00001192 \begin{envdesc}{longtableiv}{\unspecified}
1193 Like \env{tableiv}, but produces a table which may be broken
1194 across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for
1195 \env{tableiv}.
1196 \end{envdesc}
1197
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001198 \begin{macrodesc}{lineiv}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}\p{column4}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001199 Like the \macro{lineiii} macro, but with a fourth column. The
1200 text for the fourth column is given by \var{column4}.
1201 \end{macrodesc}
1202
Fred Drakef269e592001-07-17 23:05:57 +00001203 \begin{envdesc}{tablev}{\p{colspec}\p{col1font}\p{heading1}\p{heading2}\p{heading3}\p{heading4}\p{heading5}}
1204 Like the \env{tableiv} environment, but with a fifth column.
1205 The heading for the fifth column is given by \var{heading5}.
1206 \end{envdesc}
1207
1208 \begin{envdesc}{longtablev}{\unspecified}
1209 Like \env{tablev}, but produces a table which may be broken
1210 across page boundaries. The parameters are the same as for
1211 \env{tablev}.
1212 \end{envdesc}
1213
1214 \begin{macrodesc}{linev}{\p{column1}\p{column2}\p{column3}\p{column4}\p{column5}}
1215 Like the \macro{lineiv} macro, but with a fifth column. The
1216 text for the fifth column is given by \var{column5}.
1217 \end{macrodesc}
1218
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001219
1220 An additional table-like environment is \env{synopsistable}. The
1221 table generated by this environment contains two columns, and each
1222 row is defined by an alternate definition of
Fred Drakee15956b2000-04-03 04:51:13 +00001223 \macro{modulesynopsis}. This environment is not normally used by
1224 authors, but is created by the \macro{localmoduletable} macro.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001225
Fred Drake0cac5f62001-08-14 21:36:19 +00001226 Here is a small example of a table given in the documentation for
1227 the \module{warnings} module; markup inside the table cells is
1228 minimal so the markup for the table itself is readily discernable.
1229 Here is the markup for the table:
1230
1231\begin{verbatim}
1232\begin{tableii}{l|l}{exception}{Class}{Description}
1233 \lineii{Warning}
1234 {This is the base class of all warning category classes. It
1235 is a subclass of \exception{Exception}.}
1236 \lineii{UserWarning}
1237 {The default category for \function{warn()}.}
1238 \lineii{DeprecationWarning}
1239 {Base category for warnings about deprecated features.}
1240 \lineii{SyntaxWarning}
1241 {Base category for warnings about dubious syntactic
1242 features.}
1243 \lineii{RuntimeWarning}
1244 {Base category for warnings about dubious runtime features.}
1245\end{tableii}
1246\end{verbatim}
1247
1248 Here is the resulting table:
1249
1250\begin{tableii}{l|l}{exception}{Class}{Description}
1251 \lineii{Warning}
1252 {This is the base class of all warning category classes. It
1253 is a subclass of \exception{Exception}.}
1254 \lineii{UserWarning}
1255 {The default category for \function{warn()}.}
1256 \lineii{DeprecationWarning}
1257 {Base category for warnings about deprecated features.}
1258 \lineii{SyntaxWarning}
1259 {Base category for warnings about dubious syntactic
1260 features.}
1261 \lineii{RuntimeWarning}
1262 {Base category for warnings about dubious runtime features.}
1263\end{tableii}
1264
1265 Note that the class names are implicitly marked using the
1266 \macro{exception} macro, since that is given as the \var{col1font}
1267 value for the \env{tableii} environment. To create a table using
1268 different markup for the first column, use \code{textrm} for the
1269 \var{col1font} value and mark each entry individually.
1270
1271 To add a horizontal line between vertical sections of a table, use
1272 the standard \macro{hline} macro between the rows which should be
1273 separated:
1274
1275\begin{verbatim}
1276\begin{tableii}{l|l}{constant}{Language}{Audience}
1277 \lineii{APL}{Masochists.}
1278 \lineii{BASIC}{First-time programmers on PC hardware.}
1279 \lineii{C}{\UNIX{} \&\ Linux kernel developers.}
1280 \hline
1281 \lineii{Python}{Everyone!}
1282\end{tableii}
1283\end{verbatim}
1284
1285 Note that not all presentation formats are capable of displaying a
1286 horizontal rule in this position. This is how the table looks in
1287 the format you're reading now:
1288
1289\begin{tableii}{l|l}{constant}{Language}{Audience}
1290 \lineii{APL}{Masochists.}
1291 \lineii{C}{\UNIX{} \&\ Linux kernel developers.}
1292 \lineii{JavaScript}{Web developers.}
1293 \hline
1294 \lineii{Python}{Everyone!}
1295\end{tableii}
1296
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001297
1298 \subsection{Reference List Markup \label{references}}
1299
1300 Many sections include a list of references to module documentation
1301 or external documents. These lists are created using the
1302 \env{seealso} environment. This environment defines some
1303 additional macros to support creating reference entries in a
1304 reasonable manner.
1305
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001306 The \env{seealso} environment is typically placed in a section
1307 just before any sub-sections. This is done to ensure that
1308 reference links related to the section are not hidden in a
1309 subsection in the hypertext renditions of the documentation.
1310
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001311 \begin{envdesc}{seealso}{}
1312 This environment creates a ``See also:'' heading and defines the
1313 markup used to describe individual references.
1314 \end{envdesc}
1315
Fred Drake48449982000-09-12 17:52:33 +00001316 For each of the following macros, \var{why} should be one or more
1317 complete sentences, starting with a capital letter (unless it
1318 starts with an identifier, which should not be modified), and
1319 ending with the apropriate punctuation.
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001320
Fred Drakeb7cf3782000-09-12 19:58:10 +00001321 These macros are only defined within the content of the
1322 \env{seealso} environment.
1323
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001324 \begin{macrodesc}{seemodule}{\op{key}\p{name}\p{why}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001325 Refer to another module. \var{why} should be a brief
1326 explanation of why the reference may be interesting. The module
1327 name is given in \var{name}, with the link key given in
1328 \var{key} if necessary. In the HTML and PDF conversions, the
1329 module name will be a hyperlink to the referred-to module.
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001330 \strong{Note:} The module must be documented in the same
1331 document (the corresponding \macro{declaremodule} is required).
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001332 \end{macrodesc}
1333
Fred Drake08c5d0c2000-09-11 05:22:30 +00001334 \begin{macrodesc}{seepep}{\p{number}\p{title}\p{why}}
1335 Refer to an Python Enhancement Proposal (PEP). \var{number}
1336 should be the official number assigned by the PEP Editor,
1337 \var{title} should be the human-readable title of the PEP as
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001338 found in the official copy of the document, and \var{why} should
Fred Drake08c5d0c2000-09-11 05:22:30 +00001339 explain what's interesting about the PEP. This should be used
1340 to refer the reader to PEPs which specify interfaces or language
1341 features relevant to the material in the annotated section of the
1342 documentation.
1343 \end{macrodesc}
1344
1345 \begin{macrodesc}{seerfc}{\p{number}\p{title}\p{why}}
1346 Refer to an IETF Request for Comments (RFC). Otherwise very
1347 similar to \macro{seepep}. This should be used
1348 to refer the reader to PEPs which specify protocols or data
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001349 formats relevant to the material in the annotated section of the
1350 documentation.
1351 \end{macrodesc}
1352
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001353 \begin{macrodesc}{seetext}{\p{text}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001354 Add arbitrary text \var{text} to the ``See also:'' list. This
1355 can be used to refer to off-line materials or on-line materials
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001356 using the \macro{url} macro. This should consist of one or more
1357 complete sentences.
1358 \end{macrodesc}
1359
Fred Drake48449982000-09-12 17:52:33 +00001360 \begin{macrodesc}{seetitle}{\op{url}\p{title}\p{why}}
1361 Add a reference to an external document named \var{title}. If
1362 \var{url} is given, the title is made a hyperlink in the HTML
1363 version of the documentation, and displayed below the title in
1364 the typeset versions of the documentation.
1365 \end{macrodesc}
1366
Fred Drake5802e482000-07-06 05:24:41 +00001367 \begin{macrodesc}{seeurl}{\p{url}\p{why}}
1368 References to specific on-line resources should be given using
1369 the \macro{seeurl} macro. No title is associated with the
1370 reference, but the \var{why} text may include a title marked
1371 using the \macro{citetitle} macro.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001372 \end{macrodesc}
1373
1374
1375 \subsection{Index-generating Markup \label{indexing}}
1376
1377 Effective index generation for technical documents can be very
Fred Drakee15956b2000-04-03 04:51:13 +00001378 difficult, especially for someone familiar with the topic but not
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001379 the creation of indexes. Much of the difficulty arises in the
1380 area of terminology: including the terms an expert would use for a
1381 concept is not sufficient. Coming up with the terms that a novice
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001382 would look up is fairly difficult for an author who, typically, is
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001383 an expert in the area she is writing on.
1384
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001385 The truly difficult aspects of index generation are not areas with
1386 which the documentation tools can help. However, ease
Fred Drakee15956b2000-04-03 04:51:13 +00001387 of producing the index once content decisions are made is within
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001388 the scope of the tools. Markup is provided which the processing
1389 software is able to use to generate a variety of kinds of index
1390 entry with minimal effort. Additionally, many of the environments
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +00001391 described in section \ref{info-units}, ``Information Units,'' will
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001392 generate appropriate entries into the general and module indexes.
1393
1394 The following macro can be used to control the generation of index
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001395 data, and should be used in the document preamble:
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001396
1397 \begin{macrodesc}{makemodindex}{}
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001398 This should be used in the document preamble if a ``Module
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001399 Index'' is desired for a document containing reference material
1400 on many modules. This causes a data file
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +00001401 \code{lib\var{jobname}.idx} to be created from the
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001402 \macro{declaremodule} macros. This file can be processed by the
1403 \program{makeindex} program to generate a file which can be
1404 \macro{input} into the document at the desired location of the
1405 module index.
1406 \end{macrodesc}
1407
1408 There are a number of macros that are useful for adding index
1409 entries for particular concepts, many of which are specific to
1410 programming languages or even Python.
1411
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001412 \begin{macrodesc}{bifuncindex}{\p{name}}
Fred Drakeec8b9051999-04-23 20:01:17 +00001413 Add an index entry referring to a built-in function named
1414 \var{name}; parentheses should not be included after
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001415 \var{name}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001416 \end{macrodesc}
1417
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001418 \begin{macrodesc}{exindex}{\p{exception}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001419 Add a reference to an exception named \var{exception}. The
1420 exception may be either string- or class-based.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001421 \end{macrodesc}
1422
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001423 \begin{macrodesc}{kwindex}{\p{keyword}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001424 Add a reference to a language keyword (not a keyword parameter
1425 in a function or method call).
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001426 \end{macrodesc}
1427
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001428 \begin{macrodesc}{obindex}{\p{object type}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001429 Add an index entry for a built-in object type.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001430 \end{macrodesc}
1431
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001432 \begin{macrodesc}{opindex}{\p{operator}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001433 Add a reference to an operator, such as \samp{+}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001434 \end{macrodesc}
1435
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001436 \begin{macrodesc}{refmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001437 Add an index entry for module \var{module}; if \var{module}
1438 contains an underscore, the optional parameter \var{key} should
1439 be provided as the same string with underscores removed. An
1440 index entry ``\var{module} (module)'' will be generated. This
1441 is intended for use with non-standard modules implemented in
1442 Python.
1443 \end{macrodesc}
1444
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001445 \begin{macrodesc}{refexmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001446 As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be
1447 ``\var{module} (extension module).'' This is intended for use
1448 with non-standard modules not implemented in Python.
1449 \end{macrodesc}
1450
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001451 \begin{macrodesc}{refbimodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001452 As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be
1453 ``\var{module} (built-in module).'' This is intended for use
1454 with standard modules not implemented in Python.
1455 \end{macrodesc}
1456
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001457 \begin{macrodesc}{refstmodindex}{\op{key}\p{module}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001458 As for \macro{refmodindex}, but the index entry will be
1459 ``\var{module} (standard module).'' This is intended for use
1460 with standard modules implemented in Python.
1461 \end{macrodesc}
1462
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001463 \begin{macrodesc}{stindex}{\p{statement}}
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001464 Add an index entry for a statement type, such as \keyword{print}
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001465 or \keyword{try}/\keyword{finally}.
1466
1467 XXX Need better examples of difference from \macro{kwindex}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001468 \end{macrodesc}
1469
1470
1471 Additional macros are provided which are useful for conveniently
1472 creating general index entries which should appear at many places
1473 in the index by rotating a list of words. These are simple macros
1474 that simply use \macro{index} to build some number of index
1475 entries. Index entries build using these macros contain both
1476 primary and secondary text.
1477
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001478 \begin{macrodesc}{indexii}{\p{word1}\p{word2}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001479 Build two index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using
1480 \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2}\}} and
1481 \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word1}\}}.
1482 \end{macrodesc}
1483
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001484 \begin{macrodesc}{indexiii}{\p{word1}\p{word2}\p{word3}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001485 Build three index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using
1486 \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2} \var{word3}\}},
1487 \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word3}, \var{word1}\}}, and
1488 \code{\e index\{\var{word3}!\var{word1} \var{word2}\}}.
1489 \end{macrodesc}
1490
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001491 \begin{macrodesc}{indexiv}{\p{word1}\p{word2}\p{word3}\p{word4}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001492 Build four index entries. This is exactly equivalent to using
1493 \code{\e index\{\var{word1}!\var{word2} \var{word3} \var{word4}\}},
1494 \code{\e index\{\var{word2}!\var{word3} \var{word4}, \var{word1}\}},
1495 \code{\e index\{\var{word3}!\var{word4}, \var{word1} \var{word2}\}},
1496 and
1497 \code{\e index\{\var{word4}!\var{word1} \var{word2} \var{word3}\}}.
1498 \end{macrodesc}
1499
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001500 \subsection{Grammar Production Displays \label{grammar-displays}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001501
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001502 Special markup is available for displaying the productions of a
1503 formal grammar. The markup is simple and does not attempt to
1504 model all aspects of BNF (or any derived forms), but provides
1505 enough to allow context-free grammars to be displayed in a way
1506 that causes uses of a symbol to be rendered as hyperlinks to the
1507 definition of the symbol. There is one environment and a pair of
1508 macros:
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001509
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001510 \begin{envdesc}{productionlist}{\op{language}}
1511 This environment is used to enclose a group of productions. The
1512 two macros are only defined within this environment. If a
1513 document descibes more than one language, the optional parameter
1514 \var{language} should be used to distinguish productions between
1515 languages. The value of the parameter should be a short name
1516 that can be used as part of a filename; colons or other
1517 characters that can't be used in filename across platforms
1518 should be included.
1519 \end{envdesc}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001520
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001521 \begin{macrodesc}{production}{\p{name}\p{definition}}
1522 A production rule in the grammar. The rule defines the symbol
1523 \var{name} to be \var{definition}. \var{name} should not
1524 contain any markup, and the use of hyphens in a document which
1525 supports more than one grammar is undefined. \var{definition}
1526 may contain \macro{token} macros and any additional content
1527 needed to describe the grammatical model of \var{symbol}. Only
1528 one \macro{production} may be used to define a symbol ---
1529 multiple definitions are not allowed.
1530 \end{macrodesc}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001531
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001532 \begin{macrodesc}{token}{\p{name}}
1533 The name of a symbol defined by a \macro{production} macro, used
1534 in the \var{definition} of a symbol. Where possible, this will
1535 be rendered as a hyperlink to the definition of the symbol
1536 \var{name}.
1537 \end{macrodesc}
Fred Drake42934682000-04-03 15:00:28 +00001538
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001539 Note that the entire grammar does not need to be defined in a
1540 single \env{productionlist} environment; any number of
1541 groupings may be used to describe the grammar. Every use of the
1542 \macro{token} must correspond to a \macro{production}.
1543
1544 The following is an example taken from the
1545 \citetitle[../ref/identifiers.html]{Python Reference Manual}:
1546
1547\begin{verbatim}
1548\begin{productionlist}
1549 \production{identifier}
1550 {(\token{letter}|"_") (\token{letter} | \token{digit} | "_")*}
1551 \production{letter}
1552 {\token{lowercase} | \token{uppercase}}
1553 \production{lowercase}
1554 {"a"..."z"}
1555 \production{uppercase}
1556 {"A"..."Z"}
1557 \production{digit}
1558 {"0"..."9"}
1559\end{productionlist}
1560\end{verbatim}
1561
1562
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001563\section{Graphical Interface Components \label{gui-markup}}
Fred Drake432cef02001-07-06 22:34:33 +00001564
1565 The components of graphical interfaces will be assigned markup, but
1566 the specifics have not been determined.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001567
1568
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001569\section{Processing Tools \label{tools}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001570
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001571 \subsection{External Tools \label{tools-external}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001572
1573 Many tools are needed to be able to process the Python
1574 documentation if all supported formats are required. This
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001575 section lists the tools used and when each is required. Consult
1576 the \file{Doc/README} file to see if there are specific version
1577 requirements for any of these.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001578
1579 \begin{description}
1580 \item[\program{dvips}]
1581 This program is a typical part of \TeX{} installations. It is
1582 used to generate PostScript from the ``device independent''
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001583 \file{.dvi} files. It is needed for the conversion to
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001584 PostScript.
1585
1586 \item[\program{emacs}]
1587 Emacs is the kitchen sink of programmers' editors, and a damn
1588 fine kitchen sink it is. It also comes with some of the
1589 processing needed to support the proper menu structures for
1590 Texinfo documents when an info conversion is desired. This is
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001591 needed for the info conversion. Using \program{xemacs}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001592 instead of FSF \program{emacs} may lead to instability in the
1593 conversion, but that's because nobody seems to maintain the
1594 Emacs Texinfo code in a portable manner.
1595
1596 \item[\program{latex}]
Fred Drakeb5f17f22001-08-28 18:09:11 +00001597 \LaTeX{} is a large and extensible macro package by Leslie
1598 Lamport, based on \TeX, a world-class typesetter by Donald
1599 Knuth. It is used for the conversion to PostScript, and is
1600 needed for the HTML conversion as well (\LaTeX2HTML requires
1601 one of the intermediate files it creates).
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001602
1603 \item[\program{latex2html}]
1604 Probably the longest Perl script anyone ever attempted to
1605 maintain. This converts \LaTeX{} documents to HTML documents,
1606 and does a pretty reasonable job. It is required for the
1607 conversions to HTML and GNU info.
1608
1609 \item[\program{lynx}]
1610 This is a text-mode Web browser which includes an
1611 HTML-to-plain text conversion. This is used to convert
1612 \code{howto} documents to text.
1613
1614 \item[\program{make}]
1615 Just about any version should work for the standard documents,
1616 but GNU \program{make} is required for the experimental
1617 processes in \file{Doc/tools/sgmlconv/}, at least while
Fred Drakeb5f17f22001-08-28 18:09:11 +00001618 they're experimental. This is not required for running the
Fred Drakef9dc0432001-08-29 02:34:10 +00001619 \program{mkhowto} script.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001620
1621 \item[\program{makeindex}]
1622 This is a standard program for converting \LaTeX{} index data
1623 to a formatted index; it should be included with all \LaTeX{}
1624 installations. It is needed for the PDF and PostScript
1625 conversions.
1626
1627 \item[\program{makeinfo}]
1628 GNU \program{makeinfo} is used to convert Texinfo documents to
1629 GNU info files. Since Texinfo is used as an intermediate
1630 format in the info conversion, this program is needed in that
1631 conversion.
1632
1633 \item[\program{pdflatex}]
1634 pdf\TeX{} is a relatively new variant of \TeX, and is used to
1635 generate the PDF version of the manuals. It is typically
1636 installed as part of most of the large \TeX{} distributions.
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +00001637 \program{pdflatex} is pdf\TeX{} using the \LaTeX{} format.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001638
1639 \item[\program{perl}]
1640 Perl is required for \LaTeX2HTML{} and one of the scripts used
1641 to post-process \LaTeX2HTML output, as well as the
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001642 HTML-to-Texinfo conversion. This is required for
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001643 the HTML and GNU info conversions.
1644
1645 \item[\program{python}]
1646 Python is used for many of the scripts in the
1647 \file{Doc/tools/} directory; it is required for all
1648 conversions. This shouldn't be a problem if you're interested
1649 in writing documentation for Python!
1650 \end{description}
1651
1652
Fred Drakef1b3de82001-07-24 14:38:34 +00001653 \subsection{Internal Tools \label{tools-internal}}
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001654
1655 This section describes the various scripts that are used to
1656 implement various stages of document processing or to orchestrate
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001657 entire build sequences. Most of these tools are only useful
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001658 in the context of building the standard documentation, but some
1659 are more general.
1660
1661 \begin{description}
1662 \item[\program{mkhowto}]
Fred Drake87f768e1999-05-17 15:22:45 +00001663 This is the primary script used to format third-party
1664 documents. It contains all the logic needed to ``get it
1665 right.'' The proper way to use this script is to make a
1666 symbolic link to it or run it in place; the actual script file
1667 must be stored as part of the documentation source tree,
1668 though it may be used to format documents outside the
Fred Drakece444982000-04-11 18:52:52 +00001669 tree. Use \program{mkhowto} \longprogramopt{help}
Fred Draked290c101999-11-09 18:03:00 +00001670 for a list of
Fred Draked2a727f1999-05-27 21:45:54 +00001671 command line options.
Fred Drake87f768e1999-05-17 15:22:45 +00001672
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +00001673 \program{mkhowto} can be used for both \code{howto} and
1674 \code{manual} class documents. (For the later, be sure to get
1675 the latest version from the Python CVS repository rather than
1676 the version distributed in the \file{latex-1.5.2.tgz} source
1677 archive.)
1678
Fred Drake87f768e1999-05-17 15:22:45 +00001679 XXX Need more here.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001680 \end{description}
1681
1682
1683\section{Future Directions \label{futures}}
1684
1685 The history of the Python documentation is full of changes, most of
1686 which have been fairly small and evolutionary. There has been a
1687 great deal of discussion about making large changes in the markup
1688 languages and tools used to process the documentation. This section
1689 deals with the nature of the changes and what appears to be the most
1690 likely path of future development.
1691
1692 \subsection{Structured Documentation \label{structured}}
1693
1694 Most of the small changes to the \LaTeX{} markup have been made
1695 with an eye to divorcing the markup from the presentation, making
1696 both a bit more maintainable. Over the course of 1998, a large
1697 number of changes were made with exactly this in mind; previously,
1698 changes had been made but in a less systematic manner and with
1699 more concern for not needing to update the existing content. The
1700 result has been a highly structured and semantically loaded markup
1701 language implemented in \LaTeX. With almost no basic \TeX{} or
1702 \LaTeX{} markup in use, however, the markup syntax is about the
1703 only evidence of \LaTeX{} in the actual document sources.
1704
1705 One side effect of this is that while we've been able to use
1706 standard ``engines'' for manipulating the documents, such as
1707 \LaTeX{} and \LaTeX2HTML, most of the actual transformations have
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +00001708 been created specifically for Python. The \LaTeX{} document
1709 classes and \LaTeX2HTML support are both complete implementations
1710 of the specific markup designed for these documents.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001711
1712 Combining highly customized markup with the somewhat esoteric
1713 systems used to process the documents leads us to ask some
1714 questions: Can we do this more easily? and, Can we do this
1715 better? After a great deal of discussion with the community, we
1716 have determined that actively pursuing modern structured
Fred Drake2c4e0091999-03-29 14:55:55 +00001717 documentation systems is worth some investment of time.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001718
1719 There appear to be two real contenders in this arena: the Standard
1720 General Markup Language (SGML), and the Extensible Markup Language
1721 (XML). Both of these standards have advantages and disadvantages,
1722 and many advantages are shared.
1723
1724 SGML offers advantages which may appeal most to authors,
1725 especially those using ordinary text editors. There are also
1726 additional abilities to define content models. A number of
Fred Drake67f193f2001-07-09 16:04:03 +00001727 high-quality tools with demonstrated maturity are available, but
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001728 most are not free; for those which are, portability issues remain
1729 a problem.
1730
1731 The advantages of XML include the availability of a large number
1732 of evolving tools. Unfortunately, many of the associated
1733 standards are still evolving, and the tools will have to follow
1734 along. This means that developing a robust tool set that uses
1735 more than the basic XML 1.0 recommendation is not possible in the
1736 short term. The promised availability of a wide variety of
1737 high-quality tools which support some of the most important
1738 related standards is not immediate. Many tools are likely to be
Fred Drake67f193f2001-07-09 16:04:03 +00001739 free, and the portability issues of those which are, are not
1740 expected to be significant.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001741
Fred Drake67f193f2001-07-09 16:04:03 +00001742 It turns out that converting to an XML or SGML system holds
1743 promise for translators as well; how much can be done to ease the
1744 burden on translators remains to be seen, and may have some impact
1745 on the schema and specific technologies used.
1746
1747 XXX Eventual migration to XML.
1748
1749 The documentation will be moved to XML in the future, and tools
1750 are being written which will convert the documentation from the
1751 current format to something close to a finished version, to the
1752 extent that the desired information is already present in the
1753 documentation. Some XSLT stylesheets have been started for
1754 presenting a preliminary XML version as HTML, but the results are
1755 fairly rough..
1756
1757 The timeframe for the conversion is not clear since there doesn't
1758 seem to be much time available to work on this, but the appearant
1759 benefits are growing more substantial at a moderately rapid pace.
1760
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001761
1762 \subsection{Discussion Forums \label{discussion}}
1763
1764 Discussion of the future of the Python documentation and related
Fred Drake7a737df1999-04-23 14:41:44 +00001765 topics takes place in the Documentation Special Interest Group, or
1766 ``Doc-SIG.'' Information on the group, including mailing list
1767 archives and subscription information, is available at
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001768 \url{http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/}. The SIG is open to all
1769 interested parties.
1770
1771 Comments and bug reports on the standard documents should be sent
1772 to \email{python-docs@python.org}. This may include comments
Fred Drakeadade921999-04-22 13:05:27 +00001773 about formatting, content, grammatical and spelling errors, or
Fred Draked1fb7791999-05-17 16:33:54 +00001774 this document. You can also send comments on this document
1775 directly to the author at \email{fdrake@acm.org}.
Fred Drakeacffaee1999-03-16 16:09:13 +00001776
1777\end{document}