blob: 8a61d8775368c22d56360393afa2138c58b51ff4 [file] [log] [blame]
Jean-Paul Calderone897bc252008-02-18 20:50:23 -05001%
2% python.sty for the Python docummentation [works only with with Latex2e]
3%
4
5\NeedsTeXFormat{LaTeX2e}[1995/12/01]
6\ProvidesPackage{python}
7 [1998/01/11 LaTeX package (Python markup)]
8
9\RequirePackage{longtable}
10
11% Uncomment these two lines to ignore the paper size and make the page
12% size more like a typical published manual.
13%\renewcommand{\paperheight}{9in}
14%\renewcommand{\paperwidth}{8.5in} % typical squarish manual
15%\renewcommand{\paperwidth}{7in} % O'Reilly ``Programmming Python''
16
17% These packages can be used to add marginal annotations which indicate
18% index entries and labels; useful for reviewing this messy documentation!
19%
20%\RequirePackage{showkeys}
21%\RequirePackage{showidx}
22
23% for PDF output, use maximal compression & a lot of other stuff
24% (test for PDF recommended by Tanmoy Bhattacharya <tanmoy@qcd.lanl.gov>)
25%
26\newif\ifpy@doing@page@targets
27\py@doing@page@targetsfalse
28
29\ifx\pdfoutput\undefined\else\ifcase\pdfoutput
30\else
31 \input{pdfcolor}
32 \let\py@LinkColor=\NavyBlue
33 \let\py@NormalColor=\Black
34 \pdfcompresslevel=9
35 \pdfpagewidth=\paperwidth % page width of PDF output
36 \pdfpageheight=\paperheight % page height of PDF output
37 %
38 % Pad the number with '0' to 3 digits wide so no page name is a prefix
39 % of any other.
40 %
41 \newcommand{\py@targetno}[1]{\ifnum#1<100 0\fi\ifnum#1<10 0\fi#1}
42 \newcommand{\py@pageno}{\py@targetno\thepage}
43 %
44 % This definition allows the entries in the page-view of the ToC to be
45 % active links. Some work, some don't.
46 %
47 \let\py@OldContentsline=\contentsline
48 %
49 % Macro that takes two args: the name to link to and the content of
50 % the link. This takes care of the PDF magic, getting the colors
51 % the same for each link, and avoids having lots of garbage all over
52 % this style file.
53 \newcommand{\py@linkToName}[2]{%
54 \pdfannotlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]} goto name{#1}%
55 \py@LinkColor#2\py@NormalColor%
56 \pdfendlink%
57 }
58 % Compute the padded page number separately since we end up with a pair of
59 % \relax tokens; this gets the right string computed and works.
60 \renewcommand{\contentsline}[3]{%
61 \def\my@pageno{\py@targetno{#3}}%
62 \py@OldContentsline{#1}{\py@linkToName{page\my@pageno}{#2}}{#3}%
63 }
64 \AtEndDocument{
65 \InputIfFileExists{\jobname.bkm}{\pdfcatalog{/PageMode /UseOutlines}}{}
66 }
67 \newcommand{\py@target}[1]{%
68 \ifpy@doing@page@targets%
69 {\pdfdest name{#1} xyz}%
70 \fi%
71 }
72 \let\py@OldLabel=\label
73 \renewcommand{\label}[1]{%
74 \py@OldLabel{#1}%
75 \py@target{label-#1}%
76 }
77 % This stuff adds a page# destination to every PDF page, where # is three
78 % digits wide, padded with leading zeros. This doesn't really help with
79 % the frontmatter, but does fine with the body.
80 %
81 % This is *heavily* based on the hyperref package.
82 %
83 \def\@begindvi{%
84 \unvbox \@begindvibox
85 \@hyperfixhead
86 }
87 \def\@hyperfixhead{%
88 \let\H@old@thehead\@thehead
89 \global\def\@foo{\py@target{page\py@pageno}}%
90 \expandafter\ifx\expandafter\@empty\H@old@thehead
91 \def\H@old@thehead{\hfil}\fi
92 \def\@thehead{\@foo\relax\H@old@thehead}%
93 }
94\fi\fi
95
96% Increase printable page size (copied from fullpage.sty)
97\topmargin 0pt
98\advance \topmargin by -\headheight
99\advance \topmargin by -\headsep
100
101% attempt to work a little better for A4 users
102\textheight \paperheight
103\advance\textheight by -2in
104
105\oddsidemargin 0pt
106\evensidemargin 0pt
107%\evensidemargin -.25in % for ``manual size'' documents
108\marginparwidth 0.5in
109
110\textwidth \paperwidth
111\advance\textwidth by -2in
112
113
114% Style parameters and macros used by most documents here
115\raggedbottom
116\sloppy
117\parindent = 0mm
118\parskip = 2mm
119\hbadness = 5000 % don't print trivial gripes
120
121\pagestyle{empty} % start this way; change for
122\pagenumbering{roman} % ToC & chapters
123
124% Use this to set the font family for headers and other decor:
125\newcommand{\py@HeaderFamily}{\sffamily}
126
127% Redefine the 'normal' header/footer style when using "fancyhdr" package:
128\@ifundefined{fancyhf}{}{
129 % Use \pagestyle{normal} as the primary pagestyle for text.
130 \fancypagestyle{normal}{
131 \fancyhf{}
132 \fancyfoot[LE,RO]{{\py@HeaderFamily\thepage}}
133 \fancyfoot[LO]{{\py@HeaderFamily\nouppercase{\rightmark}}}
134 \fancyfoot[RE]{{\py@HeaderFamily\nouppercase{\leftmark}}}
135 \renewcommand{\headrulewidth}{0pt}
136 \renewcommand{\footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
137 }
138 % Update the plain style so we get the page number & footer line,
139 % but not a chapter or section title. This is to keep the first
140 % page of a chapter and the blank page between chapters `clean.'
141 \fancypagestyle{plain}{
142 \fancyhf{}
143 \fancyfoot[LE,RO]{{\py@HeaderFamily\thepage}}
144 \renewcommand{\headrulewidth}{0pt}
145 \renewcommand{\footrulewidth}{0.4pt}
146 }
147 % Redefine \cleardoublepage so that the blank page between chapters
148 % gets the plain style and not the fancy style. This is described
149 % in the documentation for the fancyhdr package by Piet von Oostrum.
150 \@ifundefined{chapter}{}{
151 \renewcommand{\cleardoublepage}{
152 \clearpage\if@openright \ifodd\c@page\else
153 \hbox{}
154 \thispagestyle{plain}
155 \newpage
156 \if@twocolumn\hbox{}\newpage\fi\fi\fi
157 }
158 }
159}
160
161% This sets up the {verbatim} environment to be indented and a minipage,
162% and to have all the other mostly nice properties that we want for
163% code samples.
164
165\let\py@OldVerbatim=\verbatim
166\let\py@OldEndVerbatim=\endverbatim
167\RequirePackage{verbatim}
168
169% Variable used by begin code command
170\newlength{\py@codewidth}
171
172\renewcommand{\verbatim}{%
173 \setlength{\parindent}{1cm}%
174 % Calculate the text width for the minipage:
175 \setlength{\py@codewidth}{\linewidth}%
176 \addtolength{\py@codewidth}{-\parindent}%
177 %
178 \par\indent%
179 \begin{minipage}[t]{\py@codewidth}%
180 \small%
181 \py@OldVerbatim%
182}
183\renewcommand{\endverbatim}{%
184 \py@OldEndVerbatim%
185 \end{minipage}%
186}
187
188% This does a similar thing for the {alltt} environment:
189\RequirePackage{alltt}
190\let\py@OldAllTT=\alltt
191\let\py@OldEndAllTT=\endalltt
192
193\renewcommand{\alltt}{%
194 \setlength{\parindent}{1cm}%
195 % Calculate the text width for the minipage:
196 \setlength{\py@codewidth}{\linewidth}%
197 \addtolength{\py@codewidth}{-\parindent}%
198 %
199 \par\indent%
200 \begin{minipage}[t]{\py@codewidth}%
201 \small%
202 \py@OldAllTT%
203}
204\renewcommand{\endalltt}{%
205 \py@OldEndAllTT%
206 \end{minipage}%
207}
208
209
210\newcommand{\py@modulebadkey}{{--just-some-junk--}}
211
212
213%% Lots of index-entry generation support.
214
215% Command to wrap around stuff that refers to function / module /
216% attribute names in the index. Default behavior: like \code{}. To
217% just keep the index entries in the roman font, uncomment the second
218% definition; it matches O'Reilly style more.
219%
220\newcommand{\py@idxcode}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
221%\renewcommand{\py@idxcode}[1]{#1}
222
223% Command to generate two index entries (using subentries)
224\newcommand{\indexii}[2]{\index{#1!#2}\index{#2!#1}}
225
226% And three entries (using only one level of subentries)
227\newcommand{\indexiii}[3]{\index{#1!#2 #3}\index{#2!#3, #1}\index{#3!#1 #2}}
228
229% And four (again, using only one level of subentries)
230\newcommand{\indexiv}[4]{
231\index{#1!#2 #3 #4}
232\index{#2!#3 #4, #1}
233\index{#3!#4, #1 #2}
234\index{#4!#1 #2 #3}
235}
236
237% Command to generate a reference to a function, statement, keyword,
238% operator.
239\newcommand{\kwindex}[1]{\indexii{keyword}{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}}}
240\newcommand{\stindex}[1]{\indexii{statement}{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}}}
241\newcommand{\opindex}[1]{\indexii{operator}{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}}}
242\newcommand{\exindex}[1]{\indexii{exception}{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}}}
243\newcommand{\obindex}[1]{\indexii{object}{#1}}
244\newcommand{\bifuncindex}[1]{%
245 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1()}} (built-in function)}}
246
247% Add an index entry for a module
248\newcommand{\py@refmodule}[2]{\index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (#2module)}}
249\newcommand{\refmodindex}[1]{\py@refmodule{#1}{}}
250\newcommand{\refbimodindex}[1]{\py@refmodule{#1}{built-in }}
251\newcommand{\refexmodindex}[1]{\py@refmodule{#1}{extension }}
252\newcommand{\refstmodindex}[1]{\py@refmodule{#1}{standard }}
253
254% Refer to a module's documentation using a hyperlink of the module's
255% name, at least if we're building PDF:
256\@ifundefined{pdfannotlink}{%
257 \newcommand{\refmodule}[2][\py@modulebadkey]{\module{#2}}
258}{%
259 \newcommand{\refmodule}[2][\py@modulebadkey]{%
260 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1\def\py@modulekey{#2}\else\def\py@modulekey{#1}\fi%
261 \py@linkToName{label-module-\py@modulekey}{\module{#2}}%
262 }
263}
264
265% support for the module index
266\newif\ifpy@UseModuleIndex
267\py@UseModuleIndexfalse
268
269\newcommand{\makemodindex}{
270 \newwrite\modindexfile
271 \openout\modindexfile=mod\jobname.idx
272 \py@UseModuleIndextrue
273}
274
275% Add the defining entry for a module
276\newcommand{\py@modindex}[2]{%
277 \renewcommand{\py@thismodule}{#1}
278 \setindexsubitem{(in module #1)}%
279 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (#2module)|textbf}%
280 \ifpy@UseModuleIndex%
281 \@ifundefined{py@modplat@\py@thismodulekey}{
282 \write\modindexfile{\protect\indexentry{#1@{\texttt{#1}}}{\thepage}}%
283 }{\write\modindexfile{\protect\indexentry{#1@{\texttt{#1} %
284 \emph{(\py@platformof[\py@thismodulekey]{})}}}{\thepage}}%
285 }
286 \fi%
287}
288
289% *** XXX *** THE NEXT FOUR MACROS ARE NOW OBSOLETE !!! ***
290
291% built-in & Python modules in the main distribution
292\newcommand{\bimodindex}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{built-in }%
293 \typeout{*** MACRO bimodindex IS OBSOLETE -- USE declaremodule INSTEAD!}}
294\newcommand{\stmodindex}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{standard }%
295 \typeout{*** MACRO stmodindex IS OBSOLETE -- USE declaremodule INSTEAD!}}
296
297% Python & extension modules outside the main distribution
298\newcommand{\modindex}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{}%
299 \typeout{*** MACRO modindex IS OBSOLETE -- USE declaremodule INSTEAD!}}
300\newcommand{\exmodindex}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{extension }%
301 \typeout{*** MACRO exmodindex IS OBSOLETE -- USE declaremodule INSTEAD!}}
302
303% Additional string for an index entry
304\newif\ifpy@usingsubitem\py@usingsubitemfalse
305\newcommand{\py@indexsubitem}{}
306\newcommand{\setindexsubitem}[1]{\renewcommand{\py@indexsubitem}{ #1}%
307 \py@usingsubitemtrue}
308\newcommand{\ttindex}[1]{%
309 \ifpy@usingsubitem
310 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}\py@indexsubitem}%
311 \else%
312 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}}}%
313 \fi%
314}
315\newcommand{\withsubitem}[2]{%
316 \begingroup%
317 \def\ttindex##1{\index{##1@{\py@idxcode{##1}} #1}}%
318 #2%
319 \endgroup%
320}
321
322
323% Module synopsis processing -----------------------------------------------
324%
325\newcommand{\py@thisclass}{}
326\newcommand{\py@thismodule}{}
327\newcommand{\py@thismodulekey}{}
328\newcommand{\py@thismoduletype}{}
329
330\newcommand{\py@standardIndexModule}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{standard }}
331\newcommand{\py@builtinIndexModule}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{built-in }}
332\newcommand{\py@extensionIndexModule}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{extension }}
333\newcommand{\py@IndexModule}[1]{\py@modindex{#1}{}}
334
335\newif\ifpy@HaveModSynopsis \py@HaveModSynopsisfalse
336\newif\ifpy@ModSynopsisFileIsOpen \py@ModSynopsisFileIsOpenfalse
337\newif\ifpy@HaveModPlatform \py@HaveModPlatformfalse
338
339% \declaremodule[key]{type}{name}
340\newcommand{\declaremodule}[3][\py@modulebadkey]{
341 \py@openModSynopsisFile
342 \renewcommand{\py@thismoduletype}{#2}
343 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1
344 \renewcommand{\py@thismodulekey}{#3}
345 \else
346 \renewcommand{\py@thismodulekey}{#1}
347 \fi
348 \@ifundefined{py@#2IndexModule}{%
349 \typeout{*** MACRO declaremodule called with unknown module type: `#2'}
350 \py@IndexModule{#3}%
351 }{%
352 \csname py@#2IndexModule\endcsname{#3}%
353 }
354 \label{module-\py@thismodulekey}
355}
356\newif\ifpy@ModPlatformFileIsOpen \py@ModPlatformFileIsOpenfalse
357\newcommand{\py@ModPlatformFilename}{\jobname.pla}
358\newcommand{\platform}[1]{
359 \ifpy@ModPlatformFileIsOpen\else
360 \newwrite\py@ModPlatformFile
361 \openout\py@ModPlatformFile=\py@ModPlatformFilename
362 \py@ModPlatformFileIsOpentrue
363 \fi
364}
365\InputIfFileExists{\jobname.pla}{}{}
366\newcommand{\py@platformof}[2][\py@modulebadkey]{%
367 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1 \def\py@key{#2}%
368 \else \def\py@key{#1}%
369 \fi%
370 \csname py@modplat@\py@key\endcsname%
371}
372\newcommand{\ignorePlatformAnnotation}[1]{}
373
374% \moduleauthor{name}{email}
375\newcommand{\moduleauthor}[2]{}
376
377% \sectionauthor{name}{email}
378\newcommand{\sectionauthor}[2]{}
379
380
381\newcommand{\py@defsynopsis}{Module has no synopsis.}
382\newcommand{\py@modulesynopsis}{\py@defsynopsis}
383\newcommand{\modulesynopsis}[1]{
384 \py@HaveModSynopsistrue
385 \renewcommand{\py@modulesynopsis}{#1}
386}
387
388% define the file
389\newwrite\py@ModSynopsisFile
390
391% hacked from \addtocontents from latex.ltx:
392\long\def\py@writeModSynopsisFile#1{%
393 \protected@write\py@ModSynopsisFile%
394 {\let\label\@gobble \let\index\@gobble \let\glossary\@gobble}%
395 {\string#1}%
396}
397\newcommand{\py@closeModSynopsisFile}{
398 \ifpy@ModSynopsisFileIsOpen
399 \closeout\py@ModSynopsisFile
400 \py@ModSynopsisFileIsOpenfalse
401 \fi
402}
403\newcommand{\py@openModSynopsisFile}{
404 \ifpy@ModSynopsisFileIsOpen\else
405 \openout\py@ModSynopsisFile=\py@ModSynopsisFilename
406 \py@ModSynopsisFileIsOpentrue
407 \fi
408}
409
410\newcommand{\py@ProcessModSynopsis}{
411 \ifpy@HaveModSynopsis
412 \py@writeModSynopsisFile{\modulesynopsis%
413 {\py@thismodulekey}{\py@thismodule}%
414 {\py@thismoduletype}{\py@modulesynopsis}}%
415 \py@HaveModSynopsisfalse
416 \fi
417 \renewcommand{\py@modulesynopsis}{\py@defsynopsis}
418}
419\AtEndDocument{\py@ProcessModSynopsis\py@closeModSynopsisFile}
420
421
422\long\def\py@writeModPlatformFile#1{%
423 \protected@write\py@ModPlatformFile%
424 {\let\label\@gobble \let\index\@gobble \let\glossary\@gobble}%
425 {\string#1}%
426}
427
428
429\newcommand{\localmoduletable}{
430 \IfFileExists{\py@ModSynopsisFilename}{
431 \begin{synopsistable}
432 \input{\py@ModSynopsisFilename}
433 \end{synopsistable}
434 }{}
435}
436
437\@ifundefined{pdfoutput}{
438 \newcommand{\py@ModSynopsisSummary}[4]{\bfcode{#2} & #4\\}
439}{
440 \newcommand{\py@ModSynopsisSummary}[4]{%
441 \py@linkToName{label-module-#1}{\bfcode{#2}} & #4\\
442 }
443}
444\newenvironment{synopsistable}{
445 % key, name, type, synopsis
446 \let\modulesynopsis=\py@ModSynopsisSummary
447 \begin{tabular}{ll}
448}{
449 \end{tabular}
450}
451%
452% --------------------------------------------------------------------------
453
454
455\newcommand{\py@reset}{
456 \py@usingsubitemfalse
457 \py@ProcessModSynopsis
458 \renewcommand{\py@thisclass}{}
459 \renewcommand{\py@thismodule}{}
460 \renewcommand{\py@thismodulekey}{}
461 \renewcommand{\py@thismoduletype}{}
462}
463
464% Augment the sectioning commands used to get our own font family in place,
465% and reset some internal data items:
466\renewcommand{\section}{\py@reset%
467 \@startsection{section}{1}{\z@}%
468 {-3.5ex \@plus -1ex \@minus -.2ex}%
469 {2.3ex \@plus.2ex}%
470 {\reset@font\Large\py@HeaderFamily}}
471\renewcommand{\subsection}{\@startsection{subsection}{2}{\z@}%
472 {-3.25ex\@plus -1ex \@minus -.2ex}%
473 {1.5ex \@plus .2ex}%
474 {\reset@font\large\py@HeaderFamily}}
475\renewcommand{\subsubsection}{\@startsection{subsubsection}{3}{\z@}%
476 {-3.25ex\@plus -1ex \@minus -.2ex}%
477 {1.5ex \@plus .2ex}%
478 {\reset@font\normalsize\py@HeaderFamily}}
479\renewcommand{\paragraph}{\@startsection{paragraph}{4}{\z@}%
480 {3.25ex \@plus1ex \@minus.2ex}%
481 {-1em}%
482 {\reset@font\normalsize\py@HeaderFamily}}
483\renewcommand{\subparagraph}{\@startsection{subparagraph}{5}{\parindent}%
484 {3.25ex \@plus1ex \@minus .2ex}%
485 {-1em}%
486 {\reset@font\normalsize\py@HeaderFamily}}
487
488
489% This gets the underscores closer to the right width; the only change
490% from standard LaTeX is the width specified.
491
492\DeclareTextCommandDefault{\textunderscore}{%
493 \leavevmode \kern.06em\vbox{\hrule\@width.55em}}
494
495% Underscore hack (only act like subscript operator if in math mode)
496%
497% The following is due to Mark Wooding (the old version didn't work with
498% Latex 2e.
499
500\DeclareRobustCommand\hackscore{%
501 \ifmmode_\else\textunderscore\fi%
502}
503\begingroup
504\catcode`\_\active
505\def\next{%
506 \AtBeginDocument{\catcode`\_\active\def_{\hackscore{}}}%
507}
508\expandafter\endgroup\next
509
510
511% Now for a lot of semantically-loaded environments that do a ton of magical
512% things to get the right formatting and index entries for the stuff in
513% Python modules and C API.
514
515
516% {fulllineitems} is used in one place in libregex.tex, but is really for
517% internal use in this file.
518%
519\newcommand{\py@itemnewline}[1]{%
520 \@tempdima\linewidth%
521 \advance\@tempdima \leftmargin\makebox[\@tempdima][l]{#1}%
522}
523
524\newenvironment{fulllineitems}{
525 \begin{list}{}{\labelwidth \leftmargin \labelsep 0pt
526 \rightmargin 0pt \topsep -\parskip \partopsep \parskip
527 \itemsep -\parsep
528 \let\makelabel=\py@itemnewline}
529}{\end{list}}
530
531% \optional is mostly for use in the arguments parameters to the various
532% {*desc} environments defined below, but may be used elsewhere. Known to
533% be used in the debugger chapter.
534%
535% Typical usage:
536%
537% \begin{funcdesc}{myfunc}{reqparm\optional{, optparm}}
538% ^^^ ^^^
539% No space here No space here
540%
541% When a function has multiple optional parameters, \optional should be
542% nested, not chained. This is right:
543%
544% \begin{funcdesc}{myfunc}{\optional{parm1\optional{, parm2}}}
545%
546\let\py@badkey=\@undefined
547
548\newcommand{\optional}[1]{%
549 {\textnormal{\Large[}}{#1}\hspace{0.5mm}{\textnormal{\Large]}}}
550
551% This can be used when a function or method accepts an varying number
552% of arguments, such as by using the *args syntax in the parameter list.
553\newcommand{\py@moreargs}{...}
554
555% This can be used when you don't want to document the parameters to a
556% function or method, but simply state that it's an alias for
557% something else.
558\newcommand{\py@unspecified}{...}
559
560% C functions ------------------------------------------------------------
561% \begin{cfuncdesc}[refcount]{type}{name}{arglist}
562% Note that the [refcount] slot should only be filled in by
563% tools/anno-api.py; it pulls the value from the refcounts database.
564\newenvironment{cfuncdesc}[4][\py@badkey]{
565 \begin{fulllineitems}
566 \item[\code{#2 \bfcode{#3}(\py@varvars{#4})}\index{#3@{\py@idxcode{#3()}}}]
567 \ifx#1\@undefined\else%
568 \emph{Return value: \textbf{#1}.}\\
569 \fi
570}{\end{fulllineitems}}
571
572% C variables ------------------------------------------------------------
573% \begin{cvardesc}{type}{name}
574\newenvironment{cvardesc}[2]{
575 \begin{fulllineitems}
576 \item[\code{#1 \bfcode{#2}}\index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2}}}]
577}{\end{fulllineitems}}
578
579% C data types -----------------------------------------------------------
580% \begin{ctypedesc}[index name]{typedef name}
581\newenvironment{ctypedesc}[2][\py@badkey]{
582 \begin{fulllineitems}
583 \item[\bfcode{#2}%
584 \ifx#1\@undefined%
585 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2}} (C type)}
586 \else%
587 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (C type)}
588 \fi]
589}{\end{fulllineitems}}
590
591% Funky macros -----------------------------------------------------------
592% \begin{csimplemacro}{name}
593% -- "simple" because it has no args; NOT for constant definitions!
594\newenvironment{csimplemacrodesc}[1]{
595 \begin{fulllineitems}
596 \item[\bfcode{#1}\index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (macro)}]
597}{\end{fulllineitems}}
598
599% simple functions (not methods) -----------------------------------------
600% \begin{funcdesc}{name}{args}
601\newcommand{\funcline}[2]{%
602 \funclineni{#1}{#2}%
603 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1()}} (in module \py@thismodule)}}
604\newenvironment{funcdesc}[2]{
605 \begin{fulllineitems}
606 \funcline{#1}{#2}
607}{\end{fulllineitems}}
608
609% similar to {funcdesc}, but doesn't add to the index
610\newcommand{\funclineni}[2]{\item[\code{\bfcode{#1}(\py@varvars{#2})}]}
611\newenvironment{funcdescni}[2]{
612 \begin{fulllineitems}
613 \funclineni{#1}{#2}
614}{\end{fulllineitems}}
615
616% classes ----------------------------------------------------------------
617% \begin{classdesc}{name}{constructor args}
618\newenvironment{classdesc}[2]{
619 % Using \renewcommand doesn't work for this, for unknown reasons:
620 \global\def\py@thisclass{#1}
621 \begin{fulllineitems}
622 \item[\strong{class }\code{\bfcode{#1}(\py@varvars{#2})}%
623 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (class in \py@thismodule)}]
624}{\end{fulllineitems}}
625
626% \begin{excclassdesc}{name}{constructor args}
627% but indexes as an exception
628\newenvironment{excclassdesc}[2]{
629 % Using \renewcommand doesn't work for this, for unknown reasons:
630 \global\def\py@thisclass{#1}
631 \begin{fulllineitems}
632 \item[\strong{exception }\code{\bfcode{#1}(\py@varvars{#2})}%
633 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (exception in \py@thismodule)}]
634}{\end{fulllineitems}}
635
636
637\let\py@classbadkey=\@undefined
638
639% object method ----------------------------------------------------------
640% \begin{methoddesc}[classname]{methodname}{args}
641\newcommand{\methodline}[3][\@undefined]{
642 \methodlineni{#2}{#3}
643 \ifx#1\@undefined
644 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2()}} (\py@thisclass\ method)}
645 \else
646 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2()}} (#1 method)}
647 \fi
648}
649\newenvironment{methoddesc}[3][\@undefined]{
650 \begin{fulllineitems}
651 \ifx#1\@undefined
652 \methodline{#2}{#3}
653 \else
654 \def\py@thisclass{#1}
655 \methodline{#2}{#3}
656 \fi
657}{\end{fulllineitems}}
658
659% similar to {methoddesc}, but doesn't add to the index
660% (never actually uses the optional argument)
661\newcommand{\methodlineni}[3][\py@classbadkey]{%
662 \item[\code{\bfcode{#2}(\py@varvars{#3})}]}
663\newenvironment{methoddescni}[3][\py@classbadkey]{
664 \begin{fulllineitems}
665 \methodlineni{#2}{#3}
666}{\end{fulllineitems}}
667
668% object data attribute --------------------------------------------------
669% \begin{memberdesc}[classname]{membername}
670\newcommand{\memberline}[2][\py@classbadkey]{%
671 \ifx#1\@undefined
672 \memberlineni{#2}
673 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2}} (\py@thisclass\ attribute)}
674 \else
675 \memberlineni{#2}
676 \index{#2@{\py@idxcode{#2}} (#1 attribute)}
677 \fi
678}
679\newenvironment{memberdesc}[2][\py@classbadkey]{
680 \begin{fulllineitems}
681 \ifx#1\@undefined
682 \memberline{#2}
683 \else
684 \def\py@thisclass{#1}
685 \memberline{#2}
686 \fi
687}{\end{fulllineitems}}
688
689% similar to {memberdesc}, but doesn't add to the index
690% (never actually uses the optional argument)
691\newcommand{\memberlineni}[2][\py@classbadkey]{\item[\bfcode{#2}]}
692\newenvironment{memberdescni}[2][\py@classbadkey]{
693 \begin{fulllineitems}
694 \memberlineni{#2}
695}{\end{fulllineitems}}
696
697% For exceptions: --------------------------------------------------------
698% \begin{excdesc}{name}
699% -- for constructor information, use excclassdesc instead
700\newenvironment{excdesc}[1]{
701 \begin{fulllineitems}
702 \item[\strong{exception }\bfcode{#1}%
703 \index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (exception in \py@thismodule)}]
704}{\end{fulllineitems}}
705
706% Module data or constants: ----------------------------------------------
707% \begin{datadesc}{name}
708\newcommand{\dataline}[1]{%
709 \datalineni{#1}\index{#1@{\py@idxcode{#1}} (data in \py@thismodule)}}
710\newenvironment{datadesc}[1]{
711 \begin{fulllineitems}
712 \dataline{#1}
713}{\end{fulllineitems}}
714
715% similar to {datadesc}, but doesn't add to the index
716\newcommand{\datalineni}[1]{\item[\bfcode{#1}]\nopagebreak}
717\newenvironment{datadescni}[1]{
718 \begin{fulllineitems}
719 \datalineni{#1}
720}{\end{fulllineitems}}
721
722% bytecode instruction ---------------------------------------------------
723% \begin{opcodedesc}{name}{var}
724% -- {var} may be {}
725\newenvironment{opcodedesc}[2]{
726 \begin{fulllineitems}
727 \item[\bfcode{#1}\quad\var{#2}]
728}{\end{fulllineitems}}
729
730
731\newcommand{\nodename}[1]{\label{#1}}
732
733% For these commands, use \command{} to get the typography right, not
734% {\command}. This works better with the texinfo translation.
735\newcommand{\ABC}{{\sc abc}}
736\newcommand{\UNIX}{{\sc Unix}}
737\newcommand{\POSIX}{POSIX}
738\newcommand{\ASCII}{{\sc ascii}}
739\newcommand{\Cpp}{C\protect\raisebox{.18ex}{++}}
740\newcommand{\C}{C}
741\newcommand{\EOF}{{\sc eof}}
742\newcommand{\NULL}{\constant{NULL}}
743
744% Also for consistency: spell Python "Python", not "python"!
745
746% code is the most difficult one...
747\newcommand{\code}[1]{\textrm{\@vobeyspaces\@noligs\def\{{\char`\{}\def\}{\char`\}}\def\~{\char`\~}\def\^{\char`\^}\def\e{\char`\\}\def\${\char`\$}\def\#{\char`\#}\def\&{\char`\&}\def\%{\char`\%}%
748\texttt{#1}}}
749
750\newcommand{\bfcode}[1]{\code{\bfseries#1}} % bold-faced code font
751\newcommand{\kbd}[1]{\code{#1}}
752\newcommand{\samp}[1]{`\code{#1}'}
753% This weird definition of \var{} allows it to always appear in roman
754% italics, and won't get funky in code fragments when we play around
755% with fonts. This also works directly in math mode.
756\newcommand{\var}[1]{%
757 \ifmmode%
758 \hbox{\normalsize\textrm{\textit{#1\/}}}%
759 \else%
760 \normalsize\textrm{\textit{#1\/}}%
761 \fi%
762}
763\renewcommand{\emph}[1]{{\em #1}}
764\newcommand{\dfn}[1]{\emph{#1}}
765\newcommand{\strong}[1]{{\bf #1}}
766% let's experiment with a new font:
767\newcommand{\file}[1]{`{\small\textsf{#1}}'}
768\newcommand{\filenq}[1]{{\small\textsf{#1}}}
769
770% Use this def/redef approach for \url{} since hyperref defined this already,
771% but only if we actually used hyperref:
772\@ifundefined{pdfannotlink}{
773 \newcommand{\py@url}[1]{\mbox{\small\textsf{#1}}}
774}{
775 \newcommand{\py@url}[1]{{%
776 \pdfannotlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]} user{/S /URI /URI (#1)}%
777 \py@LinkColor% color of the link text
778 \mbox{\small\textsf{#1}}%
779 \py@NormalColor% Turn it back off; these are declarative
780 \pdfendlink}% and don't appear bound to the current
781 }% formatting "box".
782}
783\let\url=\py@url
784\newcommand{\email}[1]{{\small\textsf{#1}}}
785\newcommand{\newsgroup}[1]{{\small\textsf{#1}}}
786
787\newcommand{\py@varvars}[1]{{%
788 {\let\unspecified=\py@unspecified%
789 \let\moreargs=\py@moreargs%
790 \var{#1}}}}
791
792% I'd really like to get rid of this!
793\newif\iftexi\texifalse
794
795% This is used to get l2h to put the copyright and abstract on
796% a separate HTML page.
797\newif\ifhtml\htmlfalse
798
799
800% These should be used for all references to identifiers which are
801% used to refer to instances of specific language constructs. See the
802% names for specific semantic assignments.
803%
804% For now, don't do anything really fancy with them; just use them as
805% logical markup. This might change in the future.
806%
807\newcommand{\module}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
808\newcommand{\keyword}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
809\newcommand{\exception}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
810\newcommand{\class}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
811\newcommand{\function}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
812\newcommand{\member}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
813\newcommand{\method}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
814
815\newcommand{\pytype}[1]{#1} % built-in Python type
816
817\newcommand{\cfunction}[1]{\texttt{#1}}
818\newcommand{\ctype}[1]{\texttt{#1}} % C struct or typedef name
819\newcommand{\cdata}[1]{\texttt{#1}} % C variable, typically global
820
821\newcommand{\mimetype}[1]{{\small\textsf{#1}}}
822% The \! is a "negative thin space" in math mode.
823\newcommand{\regexp}[1]{%
824 {\tiny$^{^\lceil}\!\!$%
825 {\normalsize\code{#1}}%
826 $\!\rfloor\!$%
827 }}
828\newcommand{\envvar}[1]{%
829 #1%
830 \index{#1@{#1}}%
831 \index{environment variables!{#1}}%
832}
833\newcommand{\makevar}[1]{#1} % variable in a Makefile
834\newcommand{\character}[1]{\samp{#1}}
835
836% constants defined in Python modules or C headers, not language constants:
837\newcommand{\constant}[1]{\code{#1}} % manifest constant, not syntactic
838
839\newcommand{\manpage}[2]{{\emph{#1}(#2)}}
840\newcommand{\pep}[1]{PEP #1\index{Python Enhancement Proposals!PEP #1}}
841\newcommand{\rfc}[1]{RFC #1\index{RFC!RFC #1}}
842\newcommand{\program}[1]{\strong{#1}}
843\newcommand{\programopt}[1]{\strong{#1}}
844% Note that \longprogramopt provides the '--'!
845\newcommand{\longprogramopt}[1]{\strong{-{}-#1}}
846
847% cited titles: \citetitle{Title of Work}
848% online: \citetitle[url-to-resource]{Title of Work}
849\newcommand{\citetitle}[2][URL]{\emph{#2}}
850
851
852% Deprecation stuff.
853% Should be extended to allow an index / list of deprecated stuff. But
854% there's a lot of stuff that needs to be done to make that automatable.
855%
856% First parameter is the release number that deprecates the feature, the
857% second is the action the should be taken by users of the feature.
858%
859% Example:
860% \deprecated{1.5.1}{Use \method{frobnicate()} instead.}
861%
862\newcommand{\deprecated}[2]{%
863 \strong{Deprecated since release #1.} #2\par}
864
865% New stuff.
866% This should be used to mark things which have been added to the
867% development tree but that aren't in the release, but are documented.
868% This allows release of documentation that already includes updated
869% descriptions. Place at end of descriptor environment.
870%
871% Example:
872% \versionadded{1.5.2}
873% \versionchanged[short explanation]{2.0}
874%
875\newcommand{\versionadded}[1]{%
876 { New in version #1. }}
877\newcommand{\versionchanged}[2][\py@badkey]{%
878 \ifx#1\@undefined%
879 { Changed in version #2. }%
880 \else%
881 { Changed in version #2:\ #1. }%
882 \fi%
883}
884
885
886% Tables.
887%
888\newenvironment{tableii}[4]{%
889 \begin{center}%
890 \def\lineii##1##2{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2\\}%
891 \begin{tabular}{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4} \\* \hline%
892}{%
893 \end{tabular}%
894 \end{center}%
895}
896
897\newenvironment{longtableii}[4]{%
898 \begin{center}%
899 \def\lineii##1##2{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2\\}%
900 \begin{longtable}[c]{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4} \\* \hline\endhead%
901}{%
902 \end{longtable}%
903 \end{center}%
904}
905
906\newenvironment{tableiii}[5]{%
907 \begin{center}%
908 \def\lineiii##1##2##3{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2&##3\\}%
909 \begin{tabular}{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4}&\strong{#5} \\%
910 \hline%
911}{%
912 \end{tabular}%
913 \end{center}%
914}
915
916\newenvironment{longtableiii}[5]{%
917 \begin{center}%
918 \def\lineiii##1##2##3{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2&##3\\}%
919 \begin{longtable}[c]{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4}&\strong{#5} \\%
920 \hline\endhead%
921}{%
922 \end{longtable}%
923 \end{center}%
924}
925
926\newenvironment{tableiv}[6]{%
927 \begin{center}%
928 \def\lineiv##1##2##3##4{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2&##3&##4\\}%
929 \begin{tabular}{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4}&\strong{#5}&\strong{#6} \\%
930 \hline%
931}{%
932 \end{tabular}%
933 \end{center}%
934}
935
936\newenvironment{longtableiv}[6]{%
937 \begin{center}%
938 \def\lineiv##1##2##3##4{\csname#2\endcsname{##1}&##2&##3&##4\\}%
939 \begin{longtable}[c]{#1}\strong{#3}&\strong{#4}&\strong{#5}&\strong{#6}%
940 \\%
941 \hline\endhead%
942}{%
943 \end{longtable}%
944 \end{center}%
945}
946
947% Cross-referencing (AMK, new impl. FLD)
948% Sample usage:
949% \begin{seealso}
950% \seemodule{rand}{Uniform random number generator.}; % Module xref
951% \seetext{\emph{Encyclopedia Britannica}}. % Ref to a book
952%
953% % A funky case: module name contains '_'; have to supply an optional key
954% \seemodule[copyreg]{copy_reg}{Interface constructor registration for
955% \module{pickle}.}
956% \end{seealso}
957%
958% Note that the last parameter for \seemodule and \seetext should be complete
959% sentences and be terminated with the proper punctuation.
960
961\@ifundefined{pdfannotlink}{%
962 \newcommand{\py@seemodule}[3][\py@modulebadkey]{%
963 \par%
964 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1\def\py@modulekey{#2}\else\def\py@modulekey{#1}\fi%
965 \begin{fulllineitems}
966 \item[Module \module{#2} (section \ref{module-\py@modulekey}):]
967 #3
968 \end{fulllineitems}
969 }
970}{\newcommand{\py@seemodule}[3][\py@modulebadkey]{%
971 \par%
972 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1\def\py@modulekey{#2}\else\def\py@modulekey{#1}\fi%
973 \begin{fulllineitems}
974 \item[\py@linkToName{label-module-\py@modulekey}{Module \module{#2}}
975 (section \ref{module-\py@modulekey}):]
976 #3
977 \end{fulllineitems}
978 }
979}
980% \seetitle[url]{title}{why it's interesting}
981\newcommand{\py@seetitle}[3][\py@modulebadkey]{%
982 \par
983 \begin{fulllineitems}
984 \item[\citetitle{#2}]
985 \ifx\py@modulebadkey#1\else
986 \item[{\small{(\url{#1})}}]
987 \fi
988 #3
989 \end{fulllineitems}
990}
991% \seepep{number}{title}{why it's interesting}
992\newcommand{\py@seepep}[3]{%
993 \par%
994 \begin{fulllineitems}
995 \item[\pep{#1}, ``\emph{#2}'']
996 #3
997 \end{fulllineitems}
998}
999% \seerfc{number}{title}{why it's interesting}
1000\newcommand{\py@seerfc}[3]{%
1001 \par%
1002 \begin{fulllineitems}
1003 \item[\rfc{#1}, ``\emph{#2}'']
1004 #3
1005 \end{fulllineitems}
1006}
1007% \seeurl{url}{why it's interesting}
1008\newcommand{\py@seeurl}[2]{%
1009 \par%
1010 \begin{fulllineitems}
1011 \item[\url{#1}]
1012 #2
1013 \end{fulllineitems}
1014}
1015\newenvironment{seealso}[0]{
1016 \par
1017 \strong{See Also:}\par
1018 \def\seetext##1{\par{##1}}
1019 \let\seemodule=\py@seemodule
1020 \let\seepep=\py@seepep
1021 \let\seerfc=\py@seerfc
1022 \let\seetitle=\py@seetitle
1023 \let\seeurl=\py@seeurl
1024}{\par}
1025
1026
1027% Allow the Python release number to be specified independently of the
1028% \date{}. This allows the date to reflect the document's date and
1029% release to specify the Python release that is documented.
1030%
1031\newcommand{\py@release}{}
1032\newcommand{\version}{}
1033\newcommand{\shortversion}{}
1034\newcommand{\releasename}{Release}
1035\newcommand{\release}[1]{%
1036 \renewcommand{\py@release}{\releasename\space\version}%
1037 \renewcommand{\version}{#1}}
1038\newcommand{\setshortversion}[1]{%
1039 \renewcommand{\shortversion}{#1}}
1040
1041% Allow specification of the author's address separately from the
1042% author's name. This can be used to format them differently, which
1043% is a good thing.
1044%
1045\newcommand{\py@authoraddress}{}
1046\newcommand{\authoraddress}[1]{\renewcommand{\py@authoraddress}{#1}}
1047\let\developersaddress=\authoraddress
1048\let\developer=\author
1049\let\developers=\author
1050
1051% This sets up the fancy chapter headings that make the documents look
1052% at least a little better than the usual LaTeX output.
1053%
1054\@ifundefined{ChTitleVar}{}{
1055 \ChNameVar{\raggedleft\normalsize\py@HeaderFamily}
1056 \ChNumVar{\raggedleft \bfseries\Large\py@HeaderFamily}
1057 \ChTitleVar{\raggedleft \rm\Huge\py@HeaderFamily}
1058 % This creates chapter heads without the leading \vspace*{}:
1059 \def\@makechapterhead#1{%
1060 {\parindent \z@ \raggedright \normalfont
1061 \ifnum \c@secnumdepth >\m@ne
1062 \DOCH
1063 \fi
1064 \interlinepenalty\@M
1065 \DOTI{#1}
1066 }
1067 }
1068}
1069
1070
1071% Definition lists; requested by AMK for HOWTO documents. Probably useful
1072% elsewhere as well, so keep in in the general style support.
1073%
1074\newenvironment{definitions}{%
1075 \begin{description}%
1076 \def\term##1{\item[##1]\mbox{}\\*[0mm]}
1077}{%
1078 \end{description}%
1079}
1080
1081% Tell TeX about pathological hyphenation cases:
1082\hyphenation{Base-HTTP-Re-quest-Hand-ler}