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| author | (no author) <(no author)@929543f6-e4f2-0310-98a6-ba3bd3dd1d04> | 2003-07-02 17:51:01 +0000 |
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| committer | (no author) <(no author)@929543f6-e4f2-0310-98a6-ba3bd3dd1d04> | 2003-07-02 17:51:01 +0000 |
| commit | edf2f3bec1de42965e347eb808f8604151c35bdb (patch) | |
| tree | 783ec29ed403599a0717019ac974ed2fd7366207 /docutils/docs | |
| parent | 97e20d03d7a4f773f24b082b76a34411acc1fefd (diff) | |
| download | docutils-ax.tar.gz | |
This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create branch 'ax'.ax
git-svn-id: http://svn.code.sf.net/p/docutils/code/branches/ax@1551 929543f6-e4f2-0310-98a6-ba3bd3dd1d04
Diffstat (limited to 'docutils/docs')
27 files changed, 0 insertions, 21049 deletions
diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.dtd b/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.dtd deleted file mode 100644 index 79a074cec..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.dtd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,258 +0,0 @@ -<!-- -====================================================================== - Docutils Python Source DTD -====================================================================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This DTD has been placed in the public domain. -:Filename: pysource.dtd - -This DTD (document type definition) extends the Generic DTD (see -below). - -More information about this DTD and the Docutils project can be found -at http://docutils.sourceforge.net/. The latest version of this DTD -is available from http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pysource.dtd. - -The formal public identifier for this DTD is:: - - +//IDN docutils.sourceforge.net//DTD Docutils Python Source//EN//XML ---> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Parameter Entity Overrides -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ENTITY % additional.section.elements - " | package_section | module_section | class_section - | method_section | function_section - | module_attribute_section | function_attribute_section - | class_attribute_section | instance_attribute_section "> - -<!ENTITY % additional.inline.elements - " | package | module | class | method | function - | variable | parameter | type | attribute - | module_attribute | class_attribute | instance_attribute - | exception_class | warning_class "> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Generic DTD -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -This DTD extends the Docutils Generic DTD, available from -http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/docutils.dtd. ---> - -<!ENTITY % docutils PUBLIC - "+//IDN python.org//DTD Docutils Generic//EN//XML" - "docutils.dtd"> -%docutils; - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Additional Section Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT package_section - (package, fullname?, import_list?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST package_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT module_section - (module, fullname?, import_list?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST module_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT class_section - (class, inheritance_list?, fullname?, subclasses?, - %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST class_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT method_section - (method, parameter_list?, fullname?, overrides?, - %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST method_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT function_section - (function, parameter_list?, fullname?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST function_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT module_attribute_section - (attribute, initial_value?, fullname?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST module_attribute_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT function_attribute_section - (attribute, initial_value?, fullname?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST function_attribute_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT class_attribute_section - (attribute, initial_value?, fullname?, overrides?, - %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST class_attribute_section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT instance_attribute_section - (attribute, initial_value?, fullname?, overrides?, - %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST instance_attribute_section %basic.atts;> - -<!-- - Section Subelements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT fullname - (package | module | class | method | function | attribute)+> -<!ATTLIST fullname %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT import_list (import_item+)> -<!ATTLIST import_list %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -Support ``import module``, ``import module as alias``, ``from module -import identifier``, and ``from module import identifier as alias``. ---> -<!ELEMENT import_item (fullname, identifier?, alias?)> -<!ATTLIST import_item %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT inheritance_list (class+)> -<!ATTLIST inheritance_list %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT subclasses (class+)> -<!ATTLIST subclasses %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT parameter_list - ((parameter_item+, optional_parameters*) | optional_parameters+)> -<!ATTLIST parameter_list %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT parameter_item - ((parameter | parameter_tuple), parameter_default?)> -<!ATTLIST parameter_item %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT optional_parameters (parameter_item+, optional_parameters*)> -<!ATTLIST optional_parameters %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT parameter_tuple (parameter | parameter_tuple)+> -<!ATTLIST parameter_tuple %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT parameter_default (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST parameter_default %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT overrides (fullname+)> -<!ATTLIST overrides %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT initial_value (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST initial_value %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Additional Inline Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!-- Also used as the `package_section` identifier/title. --> -<!ELEMENT package (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST package - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- Also used as the `module_section` identifier/title. --> -<!ELEMENT module (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST module - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- -Also used as the `class_section` identifier/title, and in the -`inheritance` element. ---> -<!ELEMENT class (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST class - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- Also used as the `method_section` identifier/title. --> -<!ELEMENT method (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST method - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- Also used as the `function_section` identifier/title. --> -<!ELEMENT function (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST function - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- -??? Use this instead of the ``*_attribute`` elements below? Add a -"type" attribute to differentiate? - -Also used as the identifier/title for `module_attribute_section`, -`class_attribute_section`, and `instance_attribute_section`. ---> -<!ELEMENT attribute (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST attribute - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- -Also used as the `module_attribute_section` identifier/title. A module -attribute is an exported module-level global variable. ---> -<!ELEMENT module_attribute (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST module_attribute - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- Also used as the `class_attribute_section` identifier/title. --> -<!ELEMENT class_attribute (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST class_attribute - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- -Also used as the `instance_attribute_section` identifier/title. ---> -<!ELEMENT instance_attribute (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST instance_attribute - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT variable (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST variable - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- Also used in `parameter_list`. --> -<!ELEMENT parameter (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST parameter - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts; - excess_positional %yesorno; #IMPLIED - excess_keyword %yesorno; #IMPLIED> - -<!ELEMENT type (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST type - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT exception_class (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST exception_class - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT warning_class (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST warning_class - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts;> - -<!-- -Local Variables: -mode: sgml -indent-tabs-mode: nil -fill-column: 70 -End: ---> diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.txt b/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.txt deleted file mode 100644 index ab677a004..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/pysource.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,130 +0,0 @@ -====================== - Python Source Reader -====================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -This document explores issues around extracting and processing -docstrings from Python modules. - -For definitive element hierarchy details, see the "Python Plaintext -Document Interface DTD" XML document type definition, pysource.dtd_ -(which modifies the generic docutils.dtd_). Descriptions below list -'DTD elements' (XML 'generic identifiers' or tag names) corresponding -to syntax constructs. - - -.. contents:: - - -Model -===== - -The Python Source Reader ("PySource") model that's evolving in my mind -goes something like this: - -1. Extract the docstring/namespace [#]_ tree from the module(s) and/or - package(s). - - .. [#] See `Docstring Extractor`_ below. - -2. Run the parser on each docstring in turn, producing a forest of - doctrees (per nodes.py). - -3. Join the docstring trees together into a single tree, running - transforms: - - - merge hyperlinks - - merge namespaces - - create various sections like "Module Attributes", "Functions", - "Classes", "Class Attributes", etc.; see spec/ppdi.dtd - - convert the above special sections to ordinary doctree nodes - -4. Run transforms on the combined doctree. Examples: resolving - cross-references/hyperlinks (including interpreted text on Python - identifiers); footnote auto-numbering; first field list -> - bibliographic elements. - - (Or should step 4's transforms come before step 3?) - -5. Pass the resulting unified tree to the writer/builder. - -I've had trouble reconciling the roles of input parser and output -writer with the idea of modes ("readers" or "directors"). Does the -mode govern the tranformation of the input, the output, or both? -Perhaps the mode should be split into two. - -For example, say the source of our input is a Python module. Our -"input mode" should be the "Python Source Reader". It discovers (from -``__docformat__``) that the input parser is "reStructuredText". If we -want HTML, we'll specify the "HTML" output formatter. But there's a -piece missing. What *kind* or *style* of HTML output do we want? -PyDoc-style, LibRefMan style, etc. (many people will want to specify -and control their own style). Is the output style specific to a -particular output format (XML, HTML, etc.)? Is the style specific to -the input mode? Or can/should they be independent? - -I envision interaction between the input parser, an "input mode" , and -the output formatter. The same intermediate data format would be used -between each of these, being transformed as it progresses. - - -Docstring Extractor -=================== - -We need code that scans a parsed Python module, and returns an ordered -tree containing the names, docstrings (including attribute and -additional docstrings), and additional info (in parentheses below) of -all of the following objects: - -- packages -- modules -- module attributes (+ values) -- classes (+ inheritance) -- class attributes (+ values) -- instance attributes (+ values) -- methods (+ formal parameters & defaults) -- functions (+ formal parameters & defaults) - -(Extract comments too? For example, comments at the start of a module -would be a good place for bibliographic field lists.) - -In order to evaluate interpreted text cross-references, namespaces for -each of the above will also be required. - -See python-dev/docstring-develop thread "AST mining", started on -2001-08-14. - - -Interpreted Text -================ - -DTD elements: package, module, class, method, function, -module_attribute, class_attribute, instance_attribute, variable, -parameter, type, exception_class, warning_class. - -To classify identifiers explicitly, the role is given along with the -identifier in either prefix or suffix form:: - - Use :method:`Keeper.storedata` to store the object's data in - `Keeper.data`:instance_attribute:. - -The role may be one of 'package', 'module', 'class', 'method', -'function', 'module_attribute', 'class_attribute', -'instance_attribute', 'variable', 'parameter', 'type', -'exception_class', 'exception', 'warning_class', or 'warning'. Other -roles may be defined. - -.. _pysource.dtd: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pysource.dtd -.. _docutils.dtd: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/docutils.dtd - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/rst/alternatives.txt b/docutils/docs/dev/rst/alternatives.txt deleted file mode 100644 index b089d58b2..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/rst/alternatives.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2005 +0,0 @@ -================================================== - A Record of reStructuredText Syntax Alternatives -================================================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -The following are ideas, alternatives, and justifications that were -considered for reStructuredText syntax, which did not originate with -Setext_ or StructuredText_. For an analysis of constructs which *did* -originate with StructuredText or Setext, please see `Problems With -StructuredText`_. See the `reStructuredText Markup Specification`_ -for full details of the established syntax. - -.. _Setext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/mirror/setext.html -.. _StructuredText: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/FrontPage -.. _Problems with StructuredText: problems.html -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: reStructuredText.html - - -.. contents:: - - -... Or Not To Do? -================= - -This is the realm of the possible but questionably probable. These -ideas are kept here as a record of what has been proposed, for -posterity and in case any of them prove to be useful. - - -Compound Enumerated Lists -------------------------- - -Allow for compound enumerators, such as "1.1." or "1.a." or "1(a)", to -allow for nested enumerated lists without indentation? - - -Sloppy Indentation of List Items --------------------------------- - -Perhaps the indentation shouldn't be so strict. Currently, this is -required:: - - 1. First line, - second line. - -Anything wrong with this? :: - - 1. First line, - second line. - -Problem? :: - - 1. First para. - - Block quote. (no good: requires some indent relative to first - para) - - Second Para. - - 2. Have to carefully define where the literal block ends:: - - Literal block - - Literal block? - -Hmm... Non-strict indentation isn't such a good idea. - - -Lazy Indentation of List Items ------------------------------- - -Another approach: Going back to the first draft of reStructuredText -(2000-11-27 post to Doc-SIG):: - - - This is the fourth item of the main list (no blank line above). - The second line of this item is not indented relative to the - bullet, which precludes it from having a second paragraph. - -Change that to *require* a blank line above and below, to reduce -ambiguity. This "loosening" may be added later, once the parser's -been nailed down. However, a serious drawback of this approach is to -limit the content of each list item to a single paragraph. - - -David's Idea for Lazy Indentation -````````````````````````````````` - -Consider a paragraph in a word processor. It is a single logical line -of text which ends with a newline, soft-wrapped arbitrarily at the -right edge of the page or screen. We can think of a plaintext -paragraph in the same way, as a single logical line of text, ending -with two newlines (a blank line) instead of one, and which may contain -arbitrary line breaks (newlines) where it was accidentally -hard-wrapped by an application. We can compensate for the accidental -hard-wrapping by "unwrapping" every unindented second and subsequent -line. The indentation of the first line of a paragraph or list item -would determine the indentation for the entire element. Blank lines -would be required between list items when using lazy indentation. - -The following example shows the lazy indentation of multiple body -elements:: - - - This is the first paragraph - of the first list item. - - Here is the second paragraph - of the first list item. - - - This is the first paragraph - of the second list item. - - Here is the second paragraph - of the second list item. - -A more complex example shows the limitations of lazy indentation:: - - - This is the first paragraph - of the first list item. - - Next is a definition list item: - - Term - Definition. The indentation of the term is - required, as is the indentation of the definition's - first line. - - When the definition extends to more than - one line, lazy indentation may occur. (This is the second - paragraph of the definition.) - - - This is the first paragraph - of the second list item. - - - Here is the first paragraph of - the first item of a nested list. - - So this paragraph would be outside of the nested list, - but inside the second list item of the outer list. - - But this paragraph is not part of the list at all. - -And the ambiguity remains:: - - - Look at the hyphen at the beginning of the next line - - is it a second list item marker, or a dash in the text? - - Similarly, we may want to refer to numbers inside enumerated - lists: - - 1. How many socks in a pair? There are - 2. How many pants in a pair? Exactly - 1. Go figure. - -Literal blocks and block quotes would still require consistent -indentation for all their lines. For block quotes, we might be able -to get away with only requiring that the first line of each contained -element be indented. For example:: - - Here's a paragraph. - - This is a paragraph inside a block quote. - Second and subsequent lines need not be indented at all. - - - A bullet list inside - the block quote. - - Second paragraph of the - bullet list inside the block quote. - -Although feasible, this form of lazy indentation has problems. The -document structure and hierarchy is not obvious from the indentation, -making the source plaintext difficult to read. This will also make -keeping track of the indentation while writing difficult and -error-prone. However, these problems may be acceptable for Wikis and -email mode, where we may be able to rely on less complex structure -(few nested lists, for example). - - -Multiple Roles in Interpreted Text ----------------------------------- - -In reStructuredText, inline markup cannot be nested (yet; `see -below`__). This also applies to interpreted text. In order to -simultaneously combine multiple roles for a single piece of text, a -syntax extension would be necessary. Ideas: - -1. Initial idea:: - - `interpreted text`:role1,role2: - -2. Suggested by Jason Diamond:: - - `interpreted text`:role1:role2: - -If a document is so complex as to require nested inline markup, -perhaps another markup system should be considered. By design, -reStructuredText does not have the flexibility of XML. - -__ `Nested Inline Markup`_ - - -Parameterized Interpreted Text ------------------------------- - -In some cases it may be expedient to pass parameters to interpreted -text, analogous to function calls. Ideas: - -1. Parameterize the interpreted text role itself (suggested by Jason - Diamond):: - - `interpreted text`:role1(foo=bar): - - Positional parameters could also be supported:: - - `CSS`:acronym(Cascading Style Sheets): is used for HTML, and - `CSS`:acronym(Content Scrambling System): is used for DVDs. - - Technical problem: current interpreted text syntax does not - recognize roles containing whitespace. Design problem: this smells - like programming language syntax, but reStructuredText is not a - programming language. - -2. Put the parameters inside the interpreted text:: - - `CSS (Cascading Style Sheets)`:acronym: is used for HTML, and - `CSS (Content Scrambling System)`:acronym: is used for DVDs. - - Although this could be defined on an individual basis (per role), - we ought to have a standard. Hyperlinks with embedded URIs already - use angle brackets; perhaps they could be used here too:: - - `CSS <Cascading Style Sheets>`:acronym: is used for HTML, and - `CSS <Content Scrambling System>`:acronym: is used for DVDs. - - Do angle brackets connote URLs too much for this to be acceptable? - How about the "tag" connotation -- does it save them or doom them? - -Does this push inline markup too far? Readability becomes a serious -issue. Substitutions may provide a better alternative (at the expense -of verbosity and duplication) by pulling the details out of the text -flow:: - - |CSS| is used for HTML, and |CSS-DVD| is used for DVDs. - - .. |CSS| acronym:: Cascading Style Sheets - .. |CSS-DVD| acronym:: Content Scrambling System - :text: CSS - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- - -This whole idea may be going beyond the scope of reStructuredText. -Documents requiring this functionality may be better off using XML or -another markup system. - -This argument comes up regularly when pushing the envelope of -reStructuredText syntax. I think it's a useful argument in that it -provides a check on creeping featurism. In many cases, the resulting -verbosity produces such unreadable plaintext that there's a natural -desire *not* to use it unless absolutely necessary. It's a matter of -finding the right balance. - - -Character Processing --------------------- - -Several people have suggested adding some form of character processing -to reStructuredText: - -* Some sort of automated replacement of ASCII sequences: - - - ``--`` to em-dash (or ``--`` to en-dash, and ``---`` to em-dash). - - Convert quotes to curly quote entities. (Essentially impossible - for HTML? Unnecessary for TeX.) - - Various forms of ``:-)`` to smiley icons. - - ``"\ "`` to . Problem with line-wrapping though: it could - end up escaping the newline. - - Escaped newlines to <BR>. - - Escaped period or quote or dash as a disappearing catalyst to - allow character-level inline markup? - -* XML-style character entities, such as "©" for the copyright - symbol. - -Docutils has no need of a character entity subsystem. Supporting -Unicode and text encodings, character entities should be directly -represented in the text: a copyright symbol should be represented by -the copyright symbol character. If this is not possible in an -authoring environment, a pre-processing stage can be added, or a table -of substitution definitions can be devised. - -A "unicode" directive has been implemented to allow direct -specification of esoteric characters. In combination with the -substitution construct, "include" files defining common sets of -character entities can be defined and used. - -To allow for `character-level inline markup`_, a limited form of -character processing has been added to the spec and parser: escaped -whitespace characters are removed from the processed document. Any -further character processing will be of this functional type, rather -than of the character-encoding type. - -.. _character-level inline markup: - reStructuredText.html#character-level-inline-markup - - -Field Lists -=========== - -Prior to the syntax for field lists being finalized, several -alternatives were proposed. - -1. Unadorned RFC822_ everywhere:: - - Author: Me - Version: 1 - - Advantages: clean, precedent (RFC822-compliant). Disadvantage: - ambiguous (these paragraphs are a prime example). - - Conclusion: rejected. - -2. Special case: use unadorned RFC822_ for the very first or very last - text block of a document:: - - """ - Author: Me - Version: 1 - - The rest of the document... - """ - - Advantages: clean, precedent (RFC822-compliant). Disadvantages: - special case, flat (unnested) field lists only, still ambiguous:: - - """ - Usage: cmdname [options] arg1 arg2 ... - - We obviously *don't* want the like above to be interpreted as a - field list item. Or do we? - """ - - Conclusion: rejected for the general case, accepted for specific - contexts (PEPs, email). - -3. Use a directive:: - - .. fields:: - - Author: Me - Version: 1 - - Advantages: explicit and unambiguous, RFC822-compliant. - Disadvantage: cumbersome. - - Conclusion: rejected for the general case (but such a directive - could certainly be written). - -4. Use Javadoc-style:: - - @Author: Me - @Version: 1 - @param a: integer - - Advantages: unambiguous, precedent, flexible. Disadvantages: - non-intuitive, ugly, not RFC822-compliant. - - Conclusion: rejected. - -5. Use leading colons:: - - :Author: Me - :Version: 1 - - Advantages: unambiguous, obvious (*almost* RFC822-compliant), - flexible, perhaps even elegant. Disadvantages: no precedent, not - quite RFC822-compliant. - - Conclusion: accepted! - -6. Use double colons:: - - Author:: Me - Version:: 1 - - Advantages: unambiguous, obvious? (*almost* RFC822-compliant), - flexible, similar to syntax already used for literal blocks and - directives. Disadvantages: no precedent, not quite - RFC822-compliant, similar to syntax already used for literal blocks - and directives. - - Conclusion: rejected because of the syntax similarity & conflicts. - -Why is RFC822 compliance important? It's a universal Internet -standard, and super obvious. Also, I'd like to support the PEP format -(ulterior motive: get PEPs to use reStructuredText as their standard). -But it *would* be easy to get used to an alternative (easy even to -convert PEPs; probably harder to convert python-deviants ;-). - -Unfortunately, without well-defined context (such as in email headers: -RFC822 only applies before any blank lines), the RFC822 format is -ambiguous. It is very common in ordinary text. To implement field -lists unambiguously, we need explicit syntax. - -The following question was posed in a footnote: - - Should "bibliographic field lists" be defined at the parser level, - or at the DPS transformation level? In other words, are they - reStructuredText-specific, or would they also be applicable to - another (many/every other?) syntax? - -The answer is that bibliographic fields are a -reStructuredText-specific markup convention. Other syntaxes may -implement the bibliographic elements explicitly. For example, there -would be no need for such a transformation for an XML-based markup -syntax. - -.. _RFC822: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt - - -Interpreted Text "Roles" -======================== - -The original purpose of interpreted text was as a mechanism for -descriptive markup, to describe the nature or role of a word or -phrase. For example, in XML we could say "<function>len</function>" -to mark up "len" as a function. It is envisaged that within Python -docstrings (inline documentation in Python module source files, the -primary market for reStructuredText) the role of a piece of -interpreted text can be inferred implicitly from the context of the -docstring within the program source. For other applications, however, -the role may have to be indicated explicitly. - -Interpreted text is enclosed in single backquotes (`). - -1. Initially, it was proposed that an explicit role could be indicated - as a word or phrase within the enclosing backquotes: - - - As a prefix, separated by a colon and whitespace:: - - `role: interpreted text` - - - As a suffix, separated by whitespace and a colon:: - - `interpreted text :role` - - There are problems with the initial approach: - - - There could be ambiguity with interpreted text containing colons. - For example, an index entry of "Mission: Impossible" would - require a backslash-escaped colon. - - - The explicit role is descriptive markup, not content, and will - not be visible in the processed output. Putting it inside the - backquotes doesn't feel right; the *role* isn't being quoted. - -2. Tony Ibbs suggested that the role be placed outside the - backquotes:: - - role:`prefix` or `suffix`:role - - This removes the embedded-colons ambiguity, but limits the role - identifier to be a single word (whitespace would be illegal). - Since roles are not meant to be visible after processing, the lack - of whitespace support is not important. - - The suggested syntax remains ambiguous with respect to ratios and - some writing styles. For example, suppose there is a "signal" - identifier, and we write:: - - ...calculate the `signal`:noise ratio. - - "noise" looks like a role. - -3. As an improvement on #2, we can bracket the role with colons:: - - :role:`prefix` or `suffix`:role: - - This syntax is similar to that of field lists, which is fine since - both are doing similar things: describing. - - This is the syntax chosen for reStructuredText. - -4. Another alternative is two colons instead of one:: - - role::`prefix` or `suffix`::role - - But this is used for analogies ("A:B::C:D": "A is to B as C is to - D"). - - Both alternative #2 and #4 lack delimiters on both sides of the - role, making it difficult to parse (by the reader). - -5. Some kind of bracketing could be used: - - - Parentheses:: - - (role)`prefix` or `suffix`(role) - - - Braces:: - - {role}`prefix` or `suffix`{role} - - - Square brackets:: - - [role]`prefix` or `suffix`[role] - - - Angle brackets:: - - <role>`prefix` or `suffix`<role> - - (The overlap of \*ML tags with angle brackets would be too - confusing and precludes their use.) - -Syntax #3 was chosen for reStructuredText. - - -Comments -======== - -A problem with comments (actually, with all indented constructs) is -that they cannot be followed by an indented block -- a block quote -- -without swallowing it up. - -I thought that perhaps comments should be one-liners only. But would -this mean that footnotes, hyperlink targets, and directives must then -also be one-liners? Not a good solution. - -Tony Ibbs suggested a "comment" directive. I added that we could -limit a comment to a single text block, and that a "multi-block -comment" could use "comment-start" and "comment-end" directives. This -would remove the indentation incompatibility. A "comment" directive -automatically suggests "footnote" and (hyperlink) "target" directives -as well. This could go on forever! Bad choice. - -Garth Kidd suggested that an "empty comment", a ".." explicit markup -start with nothing on the first line (except possibly whitespace) and -a blank line immediately following, could serve as an "unindent". An -empty comment does **not** swallow up indented blocks following it, -so block quotes are safe. "A tiny but practical wart." Accepted. - - -Anonymous Hyperlinks -==================== - -Alan Jaffray came up with this idea, along with the following syntax:: - - Search the `Python DOC-SIG mailing list archives`{}_. - - .. _: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/ - -The idea is sound and useful. I suggested a "double underscore" -syntax:: - - Search the `Python DOC-SIG mailing list archives`__. - - .. __: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/ - -But perhaps single underscores are okay? The syntax looks better, but -the hyperlink itself doesn't explicitly say "anonymous":: - - Search the `Python DOC-SIG mailing list archives`_. - - .. _: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/ - -Mixing anonymous and named hyperlinks becomes confusing. The order of -targets is not significant for named hyperlinks, but it is for -anonymous hyperlinks:: - - Hyperlinks: anonymous_, named_, and another anonymous_. - - .. _named: named - .. _: anonymous1 - .. _: anonymous2 - -Without the extra syntax of double underscores, determining which -hyperlink references are anonymous may be difficult. We'd have to -check which references don't have corresponding targets, and match -those up with anonymous targets. Keeping to a simple consistent -ordering (as with auto-numbered footnotes) seems simplest. - -reStructuredText will use the explicit double-underscore syntax for -anonymous hyperlinks. An alternative (see `Reworking Explicit -Markup`_ below) for the somewhat awkward ".. __:" syntax is "__":: - - An anonymous__ reference. - - __ http://anonymous - - -Reworking Explicit Markup -========================= - -Alan Jaffray came up with the idea of `anonymous hyperlinks`_, added -to reStructuredText. Subsequently it was asserted that hyperlinks -(especially anonymous hyperlinks) would play an increasingly important -role in reStructuredText documents, and therefore they require a -simpler and more concise syntax. This prompted a review of the -current and proposed explicit markup syntaxes with regards to -improving usability. - -1. Original syntax:: - - .. _blah: internal hyperlink target - .. _blah: http://somewhere external hyperlink target - .. _blah: blahblah_ indirect hyperlink target - .. __: anonymous internal target - .. __: http://somewhere anonymous external target - .. __: blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - .. [blah] http://somewhere footnote - .. blah:: http://somewhere directive - .. blah: http://somewhere comment - - .. Note:: - - The comment text was intentionally made to look like a hyperlink - target. - - Origins: - - * Except for the colon (a delimiter necessary to allow for - phrase-links), hyperlink target ``.. _blah:`` comes from Setext. - * Comment syntax from Setext. - * Footnote syntax from StructuredText ("named links"). - * Directives and anonymous hyperlinks original to reStructuredText. - - Advantages: - - + Consistent explicit markup indicator: "..". - + Consistent hyperlink syntax: ".. _" & ":". - - Disadvantages: - - - Anonymous target markup is awkward: ".. __:". - - The explicit markup indicator ("..") is excessively overloaded? - - Comment text is limited (can't look like a footnote, hyperlink, - or directive). But this is probably not important. - -2. Alan Jaffray's proposed syntax #1:: - - __ _blah internal hyperlink target - __ blah: http://somewhere external hyperlink target - __ blah: blahblah_ indirect hyperlink target - __ anonymous internal target - __ http://somewhere anonymous external target - __ blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - __ [blah] http://somewhere footnote - .. blah:: http://somewhere directive - .. blah: http://somewhere comment - - The hyperlink-connoted underscores have become first-level syntax. - - Advantages: - - + Anonymous targets are simpler. - + All hyperlink targets are one character shorter. - - Disadvantages: - - - Inconsistent internal hyperlink targets. Unlike all other named - hyperlink targets, there's no colon. There's an extra leading - underscore, but we can't drop it because without it, "blah" looks - like a relative URI. Unless we restore the colon:: - - __ blah: internal hyperlink target - - - Obtrusive markup? - -3. Alan Jaffray's proposed syntax #2:: - - .. _blah internal hyperlink target - .. blah: http://somewhere external hyperlink target - .. blah: blahblah_ indirect hyperlink target - .. anonymous internal target - .. http://somewhere anonymous external target - .. blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - .. [blah] http://somewhere footnote - !! blah: http://somewhere directive - ## blah: http://somewhere comment - - Leading underscores have been (almost) replaced by "..", while - comments and directives have gained their own syntax. - - Advantages: - - + Anonymous hyperlinks are simpler. - + Unique syntax for comments. Connotation of "comment" from - some programming languages (including our favorite). - + Unique syntax for directives. Connotation of "action!". - - Disadvantages: - - - Inconsistent internal hyperlink targets. Again, unlike all other - named hyperlink targets, there's no colon. There's a leading - underscore, matching the trailing underscores of references, - which no other hyperlink targets have. We can't drop that one - leading underscore though: without it, "blah" looks like a - relative URI. Again, unless we restore the colon:: - - .. blah: internal hyperlink target - - - All (except for internal) hyperlink targets lack their leading - underscores, losing the "hyperlink" connotation. - - - Obtrusive syntax for comments. Alternatives:: - - ;; blah: http://somewhere - (also comment syntax in Lisp & others) - ,, blah: http://somewhere - ("comma comma": sounds like "comment"!) - - - Iffy syntax for directives. Alternatives? - -4. Tony Ibbs' proposed syntax:: - - .. _blah: internal hyperlink target - .. _blah: http://somewhere external hyperlink target - .. _blah: blahblah_ indirect hyperlink target - .. anonymous internal target - .. http://somewhere anonymous external target - .. blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - .. [blah] http://somewhere footnote - .. blah:: http://somewhere directive - .. blah: http://somewhere comment - - This is the same as the current syntax, except for anonymous - targets which drop their "__: ". - - Advantage: - - + Anonymous targets are simpler. - - Disadvantages: - - - Anonymous targets lack their leading underscores, losing the - "hyperlink" connotation. - - Anonymous targets are almost indistinguishable from comments. - (Better to know "up front".) - -5. David Goodger's proposed syntax: Perhaps going back to one of - Alan's earlier suggestions might be the best solution. How about - simply adding "__ " as a synonym for ".. __: " in the original - syntax? These would become equivalent:: - - .. __: anonymous internal target - .. __: http://somewhere anonymous external target - .. __: blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - - __ anonymous internal target - __ http://somewhere anonymous external target - __ blahblah_ anonymous indirect target - -Alternative 5 has been adopted. - - -Backquotes in Phrase-Links -========================== - -[From a 2001-06-05 Doc-SIG post in reply to questions from Doug -Hellmann.] - -The first draft of the spec, posted to the Doc-SIG in November 2000, -used square brackets for phrase-links. I changed my mind because: - -1. In the first draft, I had already decided on single-backquotes for - inline literal text. - -2. However, I wanted to minimize the necessity for backslash escapes, - for example when quoting Python repr-equivalent syntax that uses - backquotes. - -3. The processing of identifiers (function/method/attribute/module - etc. names) into hyperlinks is a useful feature. PyDoc recognizes - identifiers heuristically, but it doesn't take much imagination to - come up with counter-examples where PyDoc's heuristics would result - in embarassing failure. I wanted to do it deterministically, and - that called for syntax. I called this construct "interpreted - text". - -4. Leveraging off the ``*emphasis*/**strong**`` syntax, lead to the - idea of using double-backquotes as syntax. - -5. I worked out some rules for inline markup recognition. - -6. In combination with #5, double backquotes lent themselves to inline - literals, neatly satisfying #2, minimizing backslash escapes. In - fact, the spec says that no interpretation of any kind is done - within double-backquote inline literal text; backslashes do *no* - escaping within literal text. - -7. Single backquotes are then freed up for interpreted text. - -8. I already had square brackets required for footnote references. - -9. Since interpreted text will typically turn into hyperlinks, it was - a natural fit to use backquotes as the phrase-quoting syntax for - trailing-underscore hyperlinks. - -The original inspiration for the trailing underscore hyperlink syntax -was Setext. But for phrases Setext used a very cumbersome -``underscores_between_words_like_this_`` syntax. - -The underscores can be viewed as if they were right-pointing arrows: -``-->``. So ``hyperlink_`` points away from the reference, and -``.. _hyperlink:`` points toward the target. - - -Substitution Mechanism -====================== - -Substitutions arose out of a Doc-SIG thread begun on 2001-10-28 by -Alan Jaffray, "reStructuredText inline markup". It reminded me of a -missing piece of the reStructuredText puzzle, first referred to in my -contribution to "Documentation markup & processing / PEPs" (Doc-SIG -2001-06-21). - -Substitutions allow the power and flexibility of directives to be -shared by inline text. They are a way to allow arbitrarily complex -inline objects, while keeping the details out of the flow of text. -They are the equivalent of SGML/XML's named entities. For example, an -inline image (using reference syntax alternative 4d (vertical bars) -and definition alternative 3, the alternatives chosen for inclusion in -the spec):: - - The |biohazard| symbol must be used on containers used to dispose - of medical waste. - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - -The ``|biohazard|`` substitution reference will be replaced in-line by -whatever the ``.. |biohazard|`` substitution definition generates (in -this case, an image). A substitution definition contains the -substitution text bracketed with vertical bars, followed by a an -embedded inline-compatible directive, such as "image". A transform is -required to complete the substitution. - -Syntax alternatives for the reference: - -1. Use the existing interpreted text syntax, with a predefined role - such as "sub":: - - The `biohazard`:sub: symbol... - - Advantages: existing syntax, explicit. Disadvantages: verbose, - obtrusive. - -2. Use a variant of the interpreted text syntax, with a new suffix - akin to the underscore in phrase-link references:: - - (a) `name`@ - (b) `name`# - (c) `name`& - (d) `name`/ - (e) `name`< - (f) `name`:: - (g) `name`: - - - Due to incompatibility with other constructs and ordinary text - usage, (f) and (g) are not possible. - -3. Use interpreted text syntax with a fixed internal format:: - - (a) `:name:` - (b) `name:` - (c) `name::` - (d) `::name::` - (e) `%name%` - (f) `#name#` - (g) `/name/` - (h) `&name&` - (i) `|name|` - (j) `[name]` - (k) `<name>` - (l) `&name;` - (m) `'name'` - - To avoid ML confusion (k) and (l) are definitely out. Square - brackets (j) won't work in the target (the substitution definition - would be indistinguishable from a footnote). - - The ```/name/``` syntax (g) is reminiscent of "s/find/sub" - substitution syntax in ed-like languages. However, it may have a - misleading association with regexps, and looks like an absolute - POSIX path. (i) is visually equivalent and lacking the - connotations. - - A disadvantage of all of these is that they limit interpreted text, - albeit only slightly. - -4. Use specialized syntax, something new:: - - (a) #name# - (b) @name@ - (c) /name/ - (d) |name| - (e) <<name>> - (f) //name// - (g) ||name|| - (h) ^name^ - (i) [[name]] - (j) ~name~ - (k) !name! - (l) =name= - (m) ?name? - (n) >name< - - "#" (a) and "@" (b) are obtrusive. "/" (c) without backquotes - looks just like a POSIX path; it is likely for such usage to appear - in text. - - "|" (d) and "^" (h) are feasible. - -5. Redefine the trailing underscore syntax. See definition syntax - alternative 4, below. - -Syntax alternatives for the definition: - -1. Use the existing directive syntax, with a predefined directive such - as "sub". It contains a further embedded directive resolving to an - inline-compatible object:: - - .. sub:: biohazard - .. image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - - .. sub:: parrot - That bird wouldn't *voom* if you put 10,000,000 volts - through it! - - The advantages and disadvantages are the same as in inline - alternative 1. - -2. Use syntax as in #1, but with an embedded directivecompressed:: - - .. sub:: biohazard image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - - This is a bit better than alternative 1, but still too much. - -3. Use a variant of directive syntax, incorporating the substitution - text, obviating the need for a special "sub" directive name. If we - assume reference alternative 4d (vertical bars), the matching - definition would look like this:: - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - -4. (Suggested by Alan Jaffray on Doc-SIG from 2001-11-06.) - - Instead of adding new syntax, redefine the trailing underscore - syntax to mean "substitution reference" instead of "hyperlink - reference". Alan's example:: - - I had lunch with Jonathan_ today. We talked about Zope_. - - .. _Jonathan: lj [user=jhl] - .. _Zope: http://www.zope.org/ - - A problem with the proposed syntax is that URIs which look like - simple reference names (alphanum plus ".", "-", "_") would be - indistinguishable from substitution directive names. A more - consistent syntax would be:: - - I had lunch with Jonathan_ today. We talked about Zope_. - - .. _Jonathan: lj:: user=jhl - .. _Zope: http://www.zope.org/ - - (``::`` after ``.. _Jonathan: lj``.) - - The "Zope" target is a simple external hyperlink, but the - "Jonathan" target contains a directive. Alan proposed is that the - reference text be replaced by whatever the referenced directive - (the "directive target") produces. A directive reference becomes a - hyperlink reference if the contents of the directive target resolve - to a hyperlink. If the directive target resolves to an icon, the - reference is replaced by an inline icon. If the directive target - resolves to a hyperlink, the directive reference becomes a - hyperlink reference. - - This seems too indirect and complicated for easy comprehension. - - The reference in the text will sometimes become a link, sometimes - not. Sometimes the reference text will remain, sometimes not. We - don't know *at the reference*:: - - This is a `hyperlink reference`_; its text will remain. - This is an `inline icon`_; its text will disappear. - - That's a problem. - -The syntax that has been incorporated into the spec and parser is -reference alternative 4d with definition alternative 3:: - - The |biohazard| symbol... - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - -We can also combine substitution references with hyperlink references, -by appending a "_" (named hyperlink reference) or "__" (anonymous -hyperlink reference) suffix to the substitution reference. This -allows us to click on an image-link:: - - The |biohazard|_ symbol... - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - [height=20 width=20] - .. _biohazard: http://www.cdc.gov/ - -There have been several suggestions for the naming of these -constructs, originally called "substitution references" and -"substitutions". - -1. Candidate names for the reference construct: - - (a) substitution reference - (b) tagging reference - (c) inline directive reference - (d) directive reference - (e) indirect inline directive reference - (f) inline directive placeholder - (g) inline directive insertion reference - (h) directive insertion reference - (i) insertion reference - (j) directive macro reference - (k) macro reference - (l) substitution directive reference - -2. Candidate names for the definition construct: - - (a) substitution - (b) substitution directive - (c) tag - (d) tagged directive - (e) directive target - (f) inline directive - (g) inline directive definition - (h) referenced directive - (i) indirect directive - (j) indirect directive definition - (k) directive definition - (l) indirect inline directive - (m) named directive definition - (n) inline directive insertion definition - (o) directive insertion definition - (p) insertion definition - (q) insertion directive - (r) substitution definition - (s) directive macro definition - (t) macro definition - (u) substitution directive definition - (v) substitution definition - -"Inline directive reference" (1c) seems to be an appropriate term at -first, but the term "inline" is redundant in the case of the -reference. Its counterpart "inline directive definition" (2g) is -awkward, because the directive definition itself is not inline. - -"Directive reference" (1d) and "directive definition" (2k) are too -vague. "Directive definition" could be used to refer to any -directive, not just those used for inline substitutions. - -One meaning of the term "macro" (1k, 2s, 2t) is too -programming-language-specific. Also, macros are typically simple text -substitution mechanisms: the text is substituted first and evaluated -later. reStructuredText substitution definitions are evaluated in -place at parse time and substituted afterwards. - -"Insertion" (1h, 1i, 2n-2q) is almost right, but it implies that -something new is getting added rather than one construct being -replaced by another. - -Which brings us back to "substitution". The overall best names are -"substitution reference" (1a) and "substitution definition" (2v). A -long way to go to add one word! - - -Reworking Footnotes -=================== - -As a further wrinkle (see `Reworking Explicit Markup`_ above), in the -wee hours of 2002-02-28 I posted several ideas for changes to footnote -syntax: - - - Change footnote syntax from ``.. [1]`` to ``_[1]``? ... - - Differentiate (with new DTD elements) author-date "citations" - (``[GVR2002]``) from numbered footnotes? ... - - Render footnote references as superscripts without "[]"? ... - -These ideas are all related, and suggest changes in the -reStructuredText syntax as well as the docutils tree model. - -The footnote has been used for both true footnotes (asides expanding -on points or defining terms) and for citations (references to external -works). Rather than dealing with one amalgam construct, we could -separate the current footnote concept into strict footnotes and -citations. Citations could be interpreted and treated differently -from footnotes. Footnotes would be limited to numerical labels: -manual ("1") and auto-numbered (anonymous "#", named "#label"). - -The footnote is the only explicit markup construct (starts with ".. ") -that directly translates to a visible body element. I've always been -a little bit uncomfortable with the ".. " marker for footnotes because -of this; ".. " has a connotation of "special", but footnotes aren't -especially "special". Printed texts often put footnotes at the bottom -of the page where the reference occurs (thus "foot note"). Some HTML -designs would leave footnotes to be rendered the same positions where -they're defined. Other online and printed designs will gather -footnotes into a section near the end of the document, converting them -to "endnotes" (perhaps using a directive in our case); but this -"special processing" is not an intrinsic property of the footnote -itself, but a decision made by the document author or processing -system. - -Citations are almost invariably collected in a section at the end of a -document or section. Citations "disappear" from where they are -defined and are magically reinserted at some well-defined point. -There's more of a connection to the "special" connotation of the ".. " -syntax. The point at which the list of citations is inserted could be -defined manually by a directive (e.g., ".. citations::"), and/or have -default behavior (e.g., a section automatically inserted at the end of -the document) that might be influenced by options to the Writer. - -Syntax proposals: - -+ Footnotes: - - - Current syntax:: - - .. [1] Footnote 1 - .. [#] Auto-numbered footnote. - .. [#label] Auto-labeled footnote. - - - The syntax proposed in the original 2002-02-28 Doc-SIG post: - remove the ".. ", prefix a "_":: - - _[1] Footnote 1 - _[#] Auto-numbered footnote. - _[#label] Auto-labeled footnote. - - The leading underscore syntax (earlier dropped because - ``.. _[1]:`` was too verbose) is a useful reminder that footnotes - are hyperlink targets. - - - Minimal syntax: remove the ".. [" and "]", prefix a "_", and - suffix a ".":: - - _1. Footnote 1. - _#. Auto-numbered footnote. - _#label. Auto-labeled footnote. - - ``_1.``, ``_#.``, and ``_#label.`` are markers, - like list markers. - - Footnotes could be rendered something like this in HTML - - | 1. This is a footnote. The brackets could be dropped - | from the label, and a vertical bar could set them - | off from the rest of the document in the HTML. - - Two-way hyperlinks on the footnote marker ("1." above) would also - help to differentiate footnotes from enumerated lists. - - If converted to endnotes (by a directive/transform), a horizontal - half-line might be used instead. Page-oriented output formats - would typically use the horizontal line for true footnotes. - -+ Footnote references: - - - Current syntax:: - - [1]_, [#]_, [#label]_ - - - Minimal syntax to match the minimal footnote syntax above:: - - 1_, #_, #label_ - - As a consequence, pure-numeric hyperlink references would not be - possible; they'd be interpreted as footnote references. - -+ Citation references: no change is proposed from the current footnote - reference syntax:: - - [GVR2001]_ - -+ Citations: - - - Current syntax (footnote syntax):: - - .. [GVR2001] Python Documentation; van Rossum, Drake, et al.; - http://www.python.org/doc/ - - - Possible new syntax:: - - _[GVR2001] Python Documentation; van Rossum, Drake, et al.; - http://www.python.org/doc/ - - _[DJG2002] - Docutils: Python Documentation Utilities project; Goodger - et al.; http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - - Without the ".. " marker, subsequent lines would either have to - align as in one of the above, or we'd have to allow loose - alignment (I'd rather not):: - - _[GVR2001] Python Documentation; van Rossum, Drake, et al.; - http://www.python.org/doc/ - -I proposed adopting the "minimal" syntax for footnotes and footnote -references, and adding citations and citation references to -reStructuredText's repertoire. The current footnote syntax for -citations is better than the alternatives given. - -From a reply by Tony Ibbs on 2002-03-01: - - However, I think easier with examples, so let's create one:: - - Fans of Terry Pratchett are perhaps more likely to use - footnotes [1]_ in their own writings than other people - [2]_. Of course, in *general*, one only sees footnotes - in academic or technical writing - it's use in fiction - and letter writing is not normally considered good - style [4]_, particularly in emails (not a medium that - lends itself to footnotes). - - .. [1] That is, little bits of referenced text at the - bottom of the page. - .. [2] Because Terry himself does, of course [3]_. - .. [3] Although he has the distinction of being - *funny* when he does it, and his fans don't always - achieve that aim. - .. [4] Presumably because it detracts from linear - reading of the text - this is, of course, the point. - - and look at it with the second syntax proposal:: - - Fans of Terry Pratchett are perhaps more likely to use - footnotes [1]_ in their own writings than other people - [2]_. Of course, in *general*, one only sees footnotes - in academic or technical writing - it's use in fiction - and letter writing is not normally considered good - style [4]_, particularly in emails (not a medium that - lends itself to footnotes). - - _[1] That is, little bits of referenced text at the - bottom of the page. - _[2] Because Terry himself does, of course [3]_. - _[3] Although he has the distinction of being - *funny* when he does it, and his fans don't always - achieve that aim. - _[4] Presumably because it detracts from linear - reading of the text - this is, of course, the point. - - (I note here that if I have gotten the indentation of the - footnotes themselves correct, this is clearly not as nice. And if - the indentation should be to the left margin instead, I like that - even less). - - and the third (new) proposal:: - - Fans of Terry Pratchett are perhaps more likely to use - footnotes 1_ in their own writings than other people - 2_. Of course, in *general*, one only sees footnotes - in academic or technical writing - it's use in fiction - and letter writing is not normally considered good - style 4_, particularly in emails (not a medium that - lends itself to footnotes). - - _1. That is, little bits of referenced text at the - bottom of the page. - _2. Because Terry himself does, of course 3_. - _3. Although he has the distinction of being - *funny* when he does it, and his fans don't always - achieve that aim. - _4. Presumably because it detracts from linear - reading of the text - this is, of course, the point. - - I think I don't, in practice, mind the targets too much (the use - of a dot after the number helps a lot here), but I do have a - problem with the body text, in that I don't naturally separate out - the footnotes as different than the rest of the text - instead I - keep wondering why there are numbers interspered in the text. The - use of brackets around the numbers ([ and ]) made me somehow parse - the footnote references as "odd" - i.e., not part of the body text - - and thus both easier to skip, and also (paradoxically) easier to - pick out so that I could follow them. - - Thus, for the moment (and as always susceptable to argument), I'd - say -1 on the new form of footnote reference (i.e., I much prefer - the existing ``[1]_`` over the proposed ``1_``), and ambivalent - over the proposed target change. - - That leaves David's problem of wanting to distinguish footnotes - and citations - and the only thing I can propose there is that - footnotes are numeric or # and citations are not (which, as a - human being, I can probably cope with!). - -From a reply by Paul Moore on 2002-03-01: - - I think the current footnote syntax ``[1]_`` is *exactly* the - right balance of distinctness vs unobtrusiveness. I very - definitely don't think this should change. - - On the target change, it doesn't matter much to me. - -From a further reply by Tony Ibbs on 2002-03-01, referring to the -"[1]" form and actual usage in email: - - Clearly this is a form people are used to, and thus we should - consider it strongly (in the same way that the usage of ``*..*`` - to mean emphasis was taken partly from email practise). - - Equally clearly, there is something "magical" for people in the - use of a similar form (i.e., ``[1]``) for both footnote reference - and footnote target - it seems natural to keep them similar. - - ... - - I think that this established plaintext usage leads me to strongly - believe we should retain square brackets at both ends of a - footnote. The markup of the reference end (a single trailing - underscore) seems about as minimal as we can get away with. The - markup of the target end depends on how one envisages the thing - - if ".." means "I am a target" (as I tend to see it), then that's - good, but one can also argue that the "_[1]" syntax has a neat - symmetry with the footnote reference itself, if one wishes (in - which case ".." presumably means "hidden/special" as David seems - to think, which is why one needs a ".." *and* a leading underline - for hyperlink targets. - -Given the persuading arguments voiced, we'll leave footnote & footnote -reference syntax alone. Except that these discussions gave rise to -the "auto-symbol footnote" concept, which has been added. Citations -and citation references have also been added. - - -Auto-Enumerated Lists -===================== - -The advantage of auto-numbered enumerated lists would be similar to -that of auto-numbered footnotes: lists could be written and rearranged -without having to manually renumber them. The disadvantages are also -the same: input and output wouldn't match exactly; the markup may be -ugly or confusing (depending on which alternative is chosen). - -1. Use the "#" symbol. Example:: - - #. Item 1. - #. Item 2. - #. Item 3. - - Advantages: simple, explicit. Disadvantage: enumeration sequence - cannot be specified (limited to arabic numerals); ugly. - -2. As a variation on #1, first initialize the enumeration sequence? - For example:: - - a) Item a. - #) Item b. - #) Item c. - - Advantages: simple, explicit, any enumeration sequence possible. - Disadvantages: ugly; perhaps confusing with mixed concrete/abstract - enumerators. - -3. Alternative suggested by Fred Bremmer, from experience with MoinMoin:: - - 1. Item 1. - 1. Item 2. - 1. Item 3. - - Advantages: enumeration sequence is explicit (could be multiple - "a." or "(I)" tokens). Disadvantages: perhaps confusing; otherwise - erroneous input (e.g., a duplicate item "1.") would pass silently, - either causing a problem later in the list (if no blank lines - between items) or creating two lists (with blanks). - - Take this input for example:: - - 1. Item 1. - - 1. Unintentional duplicate of item 1. - - 2. Item 2. - - Currently the parser will produce two list, "1" and "1,2" (no - warnings, because of the presence of blank lines). Using Fred's - notation, the current behavior is "1,1,2 -> 1 1,2" (without blank - lines between items, it would be "1,1,2 -> 1 [WARNING] 1,2"). What - should the behavior be with auto-numbering? - - Fred has produced a patch__, whose initial behavior is as follows:: - - 1,1,1 -> 1,2,3 - 1,2,2 -> 1,2,3 - 3,3,3 -> 3,4,5 - 1,2,2,3 -> 1,2,3 [WARNING] 3 - 1,1,2 -> 1,2 [WARNING] 2 - - (After the "[WARNING]", the "3" would begin a new list.) - - I have mixed feelings about adding this functionality to the spec & - parser. It would certainly be useful to some users (myself - included; I often have to renumber lists). Perhaps it's too - clever, asking the parser to guess too much. What if you *do* want - three one-item lists in a row, each beginning with "1."? You'd - have to use empty comments to force breaks. Also, I question - whether "1,2,2 -> 1,2,3" is optimal behavior. - - In response, Fred came up with "a stricter and more explicit rule - [which] would be to only auto-number silently if *all* the - enumerators of a list were identical". In that case:: - - 1,1,1 -> 1,2,3 - 1,2,2 -> 1,2 [WARNING] 2 - 3,3,3 -> 3,4,5 - 1,2,2,3 -> 1,2 [WARNING] 2,3 - 1,1,2 -> 1,2 [WARNING] 2 - - Should any start-value be allowed ("3,3,3"), or should - auto-numbered lists be limited to begin with ordinal-1 ("1", "A", - "a", "I", or "i")? - - __ http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=548802 - &group_id=38414&atid=422032 - -4. Alternative proposed by Tony Ibbs:: - - #1. First item. - #3. Aha - I edited this in later. - #2. Second item. - - The initial proposal required unique enumerators within a list, but - this limits the convenience of a feature of already limited - applicability and convenience. Not a useful requirement; dropped. - - Instead, simply prepend a "#" to a standard list enumerator to - indicate auto-enumeration. The numbers (or letters) of the - enumerators themselves are not significant, except: - - - as a sequence indicator (arabic, roman, alphabetic; upper/lower), - - - and perhaps as a start value (first list item). - - Advantages: explicit, any enumeration sequence possible. - Disadvantages: a bit ugly. - - -Inline External Targets -======================= - -Currently reStructuredText has two hyperlink syntax variations: - -* Named hyperlinks:: - - This is a named reference_ of one word ("reference"). Here is - a `phrase reference`_. Phrase references may even cross `line - boundaries`_. - - .. _reference: http://www.example.org/reference/ - .. _phrase reference: http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/ - .. _line boundaries: http://www.example.org/line_boundaries/ - - + Advantages: - - - The plaintext is readable. - - Each target may be reused multiple times (e.g., just write - ``"reference_"`` again). - - No syncronized ordering of references and targets is necessary. - - + Disadvantages: - - - The reference text must be repeated as target names; could lead - to mistakes. - - The target URLs may be located far from the references, and hard - to find in the plaintext. - -* Anonymous hyperlinks (in current reStructuredText):: - - This is an anonymous reference__. Here is an anonymous - `phrase reference`__. Phrase references may even cross `line - boundaries`__. - - __ http://www.example.org/reference/ - __ http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/ - __ http://www.example.org/line_boundaries/ - - + Advantages: - - - The plaintext is readable. - - The reference text does not have to be repeated. - - + Disadvantages: - - - References and targets must be kept in sync. - - Targets cannot be reused. - - The target URLs may be located far from the references. - -For comparison and historical background, StructuredText also has two -syntaxes for hyperlinks: - -* First, ``"reference text":URL``:: - - This is a "reference":http://www.example.org/reference/ - of one word ("reference"). Here is a "phrase - reference":http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/. - -* Second, ``"reference text", http://example.com/absolute_URL``:: - - This is a "reference", http://www.example.org/reference/ - of one word ("reference"). Here is a "phrase reference", - http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/. - -Both syntaxes share advantages and disadvantages: - -+ Advantages: - - - The target is specified immediately adjacent to the reference. - -+ Disadvantages: - - - Poor plaintext readability. - - Targets cannot be reused. - - Both syntaxes use double quotes, common in ordinary text. - - In the first syntax, the URL and the last word are stuck - together, exacerbating the line wrap problem. - - The second syntax is too magical; text could easily be written - that way by accident (although only absolute URLs are recognized - here, perhaps because of the potential for ambiguity). - -A new type of "inline external hyperlink" has been proposed. - -1. On 2002-06-28, Simon Budig proposed__ a new syntax for - reStructuredText hyperlinks:: - - This is a reference_(http://www.example.org/reference/) of one - word ("reference"). Here is a `phrase - reference`_(http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/). Are - these examples, (single-underscore), named? If so, `anonymous - references`__(http://www.example.org/anonymous/) using two - underscores would probably be preferable. - - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2002-June/002648.html - - The syntax, advantages, and disadvantages are similar to those of - StructuredText. - - + Advantages: - - - The target is specified immediately adjacent to the reference. - - + Disadvantages: - - - Poor plaintext readability. - - Targets cannot be reused (unless named, but the semantics are - unclear). - - + Problems: - - - The ``"`ref`_(URL)"`` syntax forces the last word of the - reference text to be joined to the URL, making a potentially - very long word that can't be wrapped (URLs can be very long). - The reference and the URL should be separate. This is a - symptom of the following point: - - - The syntax produces a single compound construct made up of two - equally important parts, *with syntax in the middle*, *between* - the reference and the target. This is unprecedented in - reStructuredText. - - - The "inline hyperlink" text is *not* a named reference (there's - no lookup by name), so it shouldn't look like one. - - - According to the IETF standards RFC 2396 and RFC 2732, - parentheses are legal URI characters and curly braces are legal - email characters, making their use prohibitively difficult. - - - The named/anonymous semantics are unclear. - -2. After an analysis__ of the syntax of (1) above, we came up with the - following compromise syntax:: - - This is an anonymous reference__ - __<http://www.example.org/reference/> of one word - ("reference"). Here is a `phrase reference`__ - __<http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/>. `Named - references`_ _<http://www.example.org/anonymous/> use single - underscores. - - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2002-July/002670.html - - The syntax builds on that of the existing "inline internal - targets": ``an _`inline internal target`.`` - - + Advantages: - - - The target is specified immediately adjacent to the reference, - improving maintainability: - - - References and targets are easily kept in sync. - - The reference text does not have to be repeated. - - - The construct is executed in two parts: references identical to - existing references, and targets that are new but not too big a - stretch from current syntax. - - - There's overwhelming precedent for quoting URLs with angle - brackets [#]_. - - + Disadvantages: - - - Poor plaintext readability. - - Lots of "line noise". - - Targets cannot be reused (unless named; see below). - - To alleviate the readability issue slightly, we could allow the - target to appear later, such as after the end of the sentence:: - - This is a named reference__ of one word ("reference"). - __<http://www.example.org/reference/> Here is a `phrase - reference`__. __<http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/> - - Problem: this could only work for one reference at a time - (reference/target pairs must be proximate [refA trgA refB trgB], - not interleaved [refA refB trgA trgB] or nested [refA refB trgB - trgA]). This variation is too problematic; references and inline - external targets will have to be kept imediately adjacent (see (3) - below). - - The ``"reference__ __<target>"`` syntax is actually for "anonymous - inline external targets", emphasized by the double underscores. It - follows that single trailing and leading underscores would lead to - *implicitly named* inline external targets. This would allow the - reuse of targets by name. So after ``"reference_ _<target>"``, - another ``"reference_"`` would point to the same target. - - .. [#] - From RFC 2396 (URI syntax): - - The angle-bracket "<" and ">" and double-quote (") - characters are excluded [from URIs] because they are often - used as the delimiters around URI in text documents and - protocol fields. - - Using <> angle brackets around each URI is especially - recommended as a delimiting style for URI that contain - whitespace. - - From RFC 822 (email headers): - - Angle brackets ("<" and ">") are generally used to indicate - the presence of a one machine-usable reference (e.g., - delimiting mailboxes), possibly including source-routing to - the machine. - -3. If it is best for references and inline external targets to be - immediately adjacent, then they might as well be integrated. - Here's an alternative syntax embedding the target URL in the - reference:: - - This is an anonymous `reference <http://www.example.org - /reference/>`__ of one word ("reference"). Here is a `phrase - reference <http://www.example.org/phrase_reference/>`__. - - Advantages and disadvantages are similar to those in (2). - Readability is still an issue, but the syntax is a bit less - heavyweight (reduced line noise). Backquotes are required, even - for one-word references; the target URL is included within the - reference text, forcing a phrase context. - - We'll call this variant "embedded URIs". - - Problem: how to refer to a title like "HTML Anchors: <a>" (which - ends with an HTML/SGML/XML tag)? We could either require more - syntax on the target (like ``"`reference text - __<http://example.com/>`__"``), or require the odd conflicting - title to be escaped (like ``"`HTML Anchors: \<a>`__"``). The - latter seems preferable, and not too onerous. - - Similarly to (2) above, a single trailing underscore would convert - the reference & inline external target from anonymous to implicitly - named, allowing reuse of targets by name. - - I think this is the least objectionable of the syntax alternatives. - -Other syntax variations have been proposed (by Brett Cannon and Benja -Fallenstein):: - - `phrase reference`->http://www.example.com - - `phrase reference`@http://www.example.com - - `phrase reference`__ ->http://www.example.com - - `phrase reference` [-> http://www.example.com] - - `phrase reference`__ [-> http://www.example.com] - - `phrase reference` <http://www.example.com>_ - -None of these variations are clearly superior to #3 above. Some have -problems that exclude their use. - -With any kind of inline external target syntax it comes down to the -conflict between maintainability and plaintext readability. I don't -see a major problem with reStructuredText's maintainability, and I -don't want to sacrifice plaintext readability to "improve" it. - -The proponents of inline external targets want them for easily -maintainable web pages. The arguments go something like this: - -- Named hyperlinks are difficult to maintain because the reference - text is duplicated as the target name. - - To which I said, "So use anonymous hyperlinks." - -- Anonymous hyperlinks are difficult to maintain becuase the - references and targets have to be kept in sync. - - "So keep the targets close to the references, grouped after each - paragraph. Maintenance is trivial." - -- But targets grouped after paragraphs break the flow of text. - - "Surely less than URLs embedded in the text! And if the intent is - to produce web pages, not readable plaintext, then who cares about - the flow of text?" - -Many participants have voiced their objections to the proposed syntax: - - Garth Kidd: "I strongly prefer the current way of doing it. - Inline is spectactularly messy, IMHO." - - Tony Ibbs: "I vehemently agree... that the inline alternatives - being suggested look messy - there are/were good reasons they've - been taken out... I don't believe I would gain from the new - syntaxes." - - Paul Moore: "I agree as well. The proposed syntax is far too - punctuation-heavy, and any of the alternatives discussed are - ambiguous or too subtle." - -Others have voiced their support: - - fantasai: "I agree with Simon. In many cases, though certainly - not in all, I find parenthesizing the url in plain text flows - better than relegating it to a footnote." - - Ken Manheimer: "I'd like to weigh in requesting some kind of easy, - direct inline reference link." - -(Interesting that those *against* the proposal have been using -reStructuredText for a while, and those *for* the proposal are either -new to the list ["fantasai", background unknown] or longtime -StructuredText users [Ken Manheimer].) - -I was initially ambivalent/against the proposed "inline external -targets". I value reStructuredText's readability very highly, and -although the proposed syntax offers convenience, I don't know if the -convenience is worth the cost in ugliness. Does the proposed syntax -compromise readability too much, or should the choice be left up to -the author? Perhaps if the syntax is *allowed* but its use strongly -*discouraged*, for aesthetic/readability reasons? - -After a great deal of thought and much input from users, I've decided -that there are reasonable use cases for this construct. The -documentation should strongly caution against its use in most -situations, recommending independent block-level targets instead. -Syntax #3 above ("embedded URIs") will be used. - - -Doctree Representation of Transitions -===================================== - -(Although not reStructuredText-specific, this section fits best in -this document.) - -Having added the "horizontal rule" construct to the `reStructuredText -Markup Specification`_, a decision had to be made as to how to reflect -the construct in the implementation of the document tree. Given this -source:: - - Document - ======== - - Paragraph 1 - - -------- - - Paragraph 2 - -The horizontal rule indicates a "transition" (in prose terms) or the -start of a new "division". Before implementation, the parsed document -tree would be:: - - <document> - <section name="document"> - <title> - Document - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1 - -------- <--- error here - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2 - -There are several possibilities for the implementation: - -1. Implement horizontal rules as "divisions" or segments. A - "division" is a title-less, non-hierarchical section. The first - try at an implementation looked like this:: - - <document> - <section name="document"> - <title> - Document - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1 - <division> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2 - - But the two paragraphs are really at the same level; they shouldn't - appear to be at different levels. There's really an invisible - "first division". The horizontal rule splits the document body - into two segments, which should be treated uniformly. - -2. Treating "divisions" uniformly brings us to the second - possibility:: - - <document> - <section name="document"> - <title> - Document - <division> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1 - <division> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2 - - With this change, documents and sections will directly contain - divisions and sections, but not body elements. Only divisions will - directly contain body elements. Even without a horizontal rule - anywhere, the body elements of a document or section would be - contained within a division element. This makes the document tree - deeper. This is similar to the way HTML_ treats document contents: - grouped within a ``<body>`` element. - -3. Implement them as "transitions", empty elements:: - - <document> - <section name="document"> - <title> - Document - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1 - <transition> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2 - - A transition would be a "point element", not containing anything, - only identifying a point within the document structure. This keeps - the document tree flatter, but the idea of a "point element" like - "transition" smells bad. A transition isn't a thing itself, it's - the space between two divisions. However, transitions are a - practical solution. - -Solution 3 was chosen for incorporation into the document tree model. - -.. _HTML: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/ - - -Nested Inline Markup -==================== - -These are collected notes on a long-discussed issue. The original -mailing list messages should be referred to for details. - -* In a 2001-10-31 discussion I wrote: - - Try, for example, `Ed Loper's 2001-03-21 post`_, which details - some rules for nested inline markup. I think the complexity is - prohibitive for the marginal benefit. (And if you can understand - that tree without going mad, you're a better man than I. ;-) - - Inline markup is already fragile. Allowing nested inline markup - would only be asking for trouble IMHO. If it proves absolutely - necessary, it can be added later. The rules for what can appear - inside what must be well thought out first though. - - .. _Ed Loper's 2001-03-21 post: - http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-March/001487.html - - -- http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-October/002354.html - -* In a 2001-11-09 Doc-SIG post, I wrote: - - The problem is that in the - what-you-see-is-more-or-less-what-you-get markup language that - is reStructuredText, the symbols used for inline markup ("*", - "**", "`", "``", etc.) may preclude nesting. - - I've rethought this position. Nested markup is not precluded, just - tricky. People and software parse "double and 'single' quotes" all - the time. Continuing, - - I've thought over how we might implement nested inline - markup. The first algorithm ("first identify the outer inline - markup as we do now, then recursively scan for nested inline - markup") won't work; counterexamples were given in my `last post - <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-November/002363.html>`__. - - The second algorithm makes my head hurt:: - - while 1: - scan for start-string - if found: - push on stack - scan for start or end string - if new start string found: - recurse - elif matching end string found: - pop stack - elif non-matching end string found: - if its a markup error: - generate warning - elif the initial start-string was misinterpreted: - # e.g. in this case: ***strong** in emphasis* - restart with the other interpretation - # but it might be several layers back ... - ... - - This is similar to how the parser does section title - recognition, but sections are much more regular and - deterministic. - - Bottom line is, I don't think the benefits are worth the effort, - even if it is possible. I'm not going to try to write the code, - at least not now. If somebody codes up a consistent, working, - general solution, I'll be happy to consider it. - - -- http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-November/002388.html - -* In a `2003-05-06 Docutils-Users post`__ Paul Tremblay proposed a new - syntax to allow for easier nesting. It eventually evolved into - this:: - - :role:[inline text] - - The duplication with the existing interpreted text syntax is - problematic though. - - __ http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.docutils.user/317 - -* Could the parser be extended to parse nested interpreted text? :: - - :emphasis:`Some emphasized text with :strong:`some more - emphasized text` in it and **perhaps** :reference:`a link`` - -* In a `2003-06-18 Docutils-Develop post`__, Mark Nodine reported on - his implementation of a form of nested inline markup in his - Perl-based parser (unpublished). He brought up some interesting - ideas. The implementation was flawed, however, by the change in - semantics required for backslash escapes. - - __ http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.docutils.devel/795 - -It may be possible to accomplish nested inline markup in general with -a more powerful inline markup parser. There may be some issues, but -I'm not averse to the idea of nested inline markup in general. I just -don't have the time or inclination to write a new parser now. Of -course, a good patch would be welcome! - -I envisage something like this. Explicit-role interpreted text must -be nestable. Prefix-based is probably preferred, since suffix-based -will look like inline literals:: - - ``text`:role1:`:role2: - -But it can be disambiguated, so it ought to be left up to the author:: - - `\ `text`:role1:`:role2: - -In addition, other forms of inline markup may be nested if -unambiguous:: - - *emphasized ``literal`` and |substitution ref| and link_* - -IOW, the parser ought to be as permissive as possible. - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/rst/problems.txt b/docutils/docs/dev/rst/problems.txt deleted file mode 100644 index a8747af88..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/rst/problems.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,870 +0,0 @@ -============================== - Problems With StructuredText -============================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -There are several problems, unresolved issues, and areas of -controversy within StructuredText_ (Classic and Next Generation). In -order to resolve all these issues, this analysis brings all of the -issues out into the open, enumerates all the alternatives, and -proposes solutions to be incorporated into the reStructuredText_ -specification. - - -.. contents:: - - -Formal Specification -==================== - -The description in the original StructuredText.py has been criticized -for being vague. For practical purposes, "the code *is* the spec." -Tony Ibbs has been working on deducing a `detailed description`_ from -the documentation and code of StructuredTextNG_. Edward Loper's -STMinus_ is another attempt to formalize a spec. - -For this kind of a project, the specification should always precede -the code. Otherwise, the markup is a moving target which can never be -adopted as a standard. Of course, a specification may be revised -during lifetime of the code, but without a spec there is no visible -control and thus no confidence. - - -Understanding and Extending the Code -==================================== - -The original StructuredText_ is a dense mass of sparsely commented -code and inscrutable regular expressions. It was not designed to be -extended and is very difficult to understand. StructuredTextNG_ has -been designed to allow input (syntax) and output extensions, but its -documentation (both internal [comments & docstrings], and external) is -inadequate for the complexity of the code itself. - -For reStructuredText to become truly useful, perhaps even part of -Python's standard library, it must have clear, understandable -documentation and implementation code. For the implementation of -reStructuredText to be taken seriously, it must be a sterling example -of the potential of docstrings; the implementation must practice what -the specification preaches. - - -Section Structure via Indentation -================================= - -Setext_ required that body text be indented by 2 spaces. The original -StructuredText_ and StructuredTextNG_ require that section structure -be indicated through indentation, as "inspired by Python". For -certain structures with a very limited, local extent (such as lists, -block quotes, and literal blocks), indentation naturally indicates -structure or hierarchy. For sections (which may have a very large -extent), structure via indentation is unnecessary, unnatural and -ambiguous. Rather, the syntax of the section title *itself* should -indicate that it is a section title. - -The original StructuredText states that "A single-line paragraph whose -immediately succeeding paragraphs are lower level is treated as a -header." Requiring indentation in this way is: - -- Unnecessary. The vast majority of docstrings and standalone - documents will have no more than one level of section structure. - Requiring indentation for such docstrings is unnecessary and - irritating. - -- Unnatural. Most published works use title style (type size, face, - weight, and position) and/or section/subsection numbering rather - than indentation to indicate hierarchy. This is a tradition with a - very long history. - -- Ambiguous. A StructuredText header is indistinguishable from a - one-line paragraph followed by a block quote (precluding the use of - block quotes). Enumerated section titles are ambiguous (is it a - header? is it a list item?). Some additional adornment must be - required to confirm the line's role as a title, both to a parser and - to the human reader of the source text. - -Python's use of significant whitespace is a wonderful (if not -original) innovation, however requiring indentation in ordinary -written text is hypergeneralization. - -reStructuredText_ indicates section structure through title adornment -style (as exemplified by this document). This is far more natural. -In fact, it is already in widespread use in plain text documents, -including in Python's standard distribution (such as the toplevel -README_ file). - - -Character Escaping Mechanism -============================ - -No matter what characters are chosen for markup, some day someone will -want to write documentation *about* that markup or using markup -characters in a non-markup context. Therefore, any complete markup -language must have an escaping or encoding mechanism. For a -lightweight markup system, encoding mechanisms like SGML/XML's '*' -are out. So an escaping mechanism is in. However, with carefully -chosen markup, it should be necessary to use the escaping mechanism -only infrequently. - -reStructuredText_ needs an escaping mechanism: a way to treat -markup-significant characters as the characters themselves. Currently -there is no such mechanism (although ZWiki uses '!'). What are the -candidates? - -1. ``!`` (http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/NGEscaping) -2. ``\`` -3. ``~`` -4. doubling of characters - -The best choice for this is the backslash (``\``). It's "the single -most popular escaping character in the world!", therefore familiar and -unsurprising. Since characters only need to be escaped under special -circumstances, which are typically those explaining technical -programming issues, the use of the backslash is natural and -understandable. Python docstrings can be raw (prefixed with an 'r', -as in 'r""'), which would obviate the need for gratuitous doubling-up -of backslashes. - -(On 2001-03-29 on the Doc-SIG mailing list, GvR endorsed backslash -escapes, saying, "'nuff said. Backslash it is." Although neither -legally binding nor irrevocable nor any kind of guarantee of anything, -it is a good sign.) - -The rule would be: An unescaped backslash followed by any markup -character escapes the character. The escaped character represents the -character itself, and is prevented from playing a role in any markup -interpretation. The backslash is removed from the output. A literal -backslash is represented by an "escaped backslash," two backslashes in -a row. - -A carefully constructed set of recognition rules for inline markup -will obviate the need for backslash-escapes in almost all cases; see -`Delimitation of Inline Markup`_ below. - -When an expression (requiring backslashes and other characters used -for markup) becomes too complicated and therefore unreadable, a -literal block may be used instead. Inside literal blocks, no markup -is recognized, therefore backslashes (for the purpose of escaping -markup) become unnecessary. - -We could allow backslashes preceding non-markup characters to remain -in the output. This would make describing regular expressions and -other uses of backslashes easier. However, this would complicate the -markup rules and would be confusing. - - -Blank Lines in Lists -==================== - -Oft-requested in Doc-SIG (the earliest reference is dated 1996-08-13) -is the ability to write lists without requiring blank lines between -items. In docstrings, space is at a premium. Authors want to convey -their API or usage information in as compact a form as possible. -StructuredText_ requires blank lines between all body elements, -including list items, even when boundaries are obvious from the markup -itself. - -In reStructuredText, blank lines are optional between list items. -However, in order to eliminate ambiguity, a blank line is required -before the first list item and after the last. Nested lists also -require blank lines before the list start and after the list end. - - -Bullet List Markup -================== - -StructuredText_ includes 'o' as a bullet character. This is dangerous -and counter to the language-independent nature of the markup. There -are many languages in which 'o' is a word. For example, in Spanish:: - - Llamame a la casa - o al trabajo. - - (Call me at home or at work.) - -And in Japanese (when romanized):: - - Senshuu no doyoubi ni tegami - o kakimashita. - - ([I] wrote a letter on Saturday last week.) - -If a paragraph containing an 'o' word wraps such that the 'o' is the -first text on a line, or if a paragraph begins with such a word, it -could be misinterpreted as a bullet list. - -In reStructuredText_, 'o' is not used as a bullet character. '-', -'*', and '+' are the possible bullet characters. - - -Enumerated List Markup -====================== - -StructuredText enumerated lists are allowed to begin with numbers and -letters followed by a period or right-parenthesis, then whitespace. -This has surprising consequences for writing styles. For example, -this is recognized as an enumerated list item by StructuredText:: - - Mr. Creosote. - -People will write enumerated lists in all different ways. It is folly -to try to come up with the "perfect" format for an enumerated list, -and limit the docstring parser's recognition to that one format only. - -Rather, the parser should recognize a variety of enumerator styles. -It is also recommended that the enumerator of the first list item be -ordinal-1 ('1', 'A', 'a', 'I', or 'i'), as output formats may not be -able to begin a list at an arbitrary enumeration. - -An initial idea was to require two or more consistent enumerated list -items in a row. This idea proved impractical and was dropped. In -practice, the presence of a proper enumerator is enough to reliably -recognize an enumerated list item; any ambiguities are reported by the -parser. Here's the original idea for posterity: - - The parser should recognize a variety of enumerator styles, mark - each block as a potential enumerated list item (PELI), and - interpret the enumerators of adjacent PELIs to decide whether they - make up a consistent enumerated list. - - If a PELI is labeled with a "1.", and is immediately followed by a - PELI labeled with a "2.", we've got an enumerated list. Or "(A)" - followed by "(B)". Or "i)" followed by "ii)", etc. The chances - of accidentally recognizing two adjacent and consistently labeled - PELIs, are acceptably small. - - For an enumerated list to be recognized, the following must be - true: - - - the list must consist of multiple adjacent list items (2 or - more) - - the enumerators must all have the same format - - the enumerators must be sequential - - -Definition List Markup -====================== - -StructuredText uses ' -- ' (whitespace, two hyphens, whitespace) on -the first line of a paragraph to indicate a definition list item. The -' -- ' serves to separate the term (on the left) from the definition -(on the right). - -Many people use ' -- ' as an em-dash in their text, conflicting with -the StructuredText usage. Although the Chicago Manual of Style says -that spaces should not be used around an em-dash, Peter Funk pointed -out that this is standard usage in German (according to the Duden, the -official German reference), and possibly in other languages as well. -The widespread use of ' -- ' precludes its use for definition lists; -it would violate the "unsurprising" criterion. - -A simpler, and at least equally visually distinctive construct -(proposed by Guido van Rossum, who incidentally is a frequent user of -' -- ') would do just as well:: - - term 1 - Definition. - - term 2 - Definition 2, paragraph 1. - - Definition 2, paragraph 2. - -A reStructuredText definition list item consists of a term and a -definition. A term is a simple one-line paragraph. A definition is a -block indented relative to the term, and may contain multiple -paragraphs and other body elements. No blank line precedes a -definition (this distinguishes definition lists from block quotes). - - -Literal Blocks -============== - -The StructuredText_ specification has literal blocks indicated by -'example', 'examples', or '::' ending the preceding paragraph. STNG -only recognizes '::'; 'example'/'examples' are not implemented. This -is good; it fixes an unnecessary language dependency. The problem is -what to do with the sometimes- unwanted '::'. - -In reStructuredText_ '::' at the end of a paragraph indicates that -subsequent *indented* blocks are treated as literal text. No further -markup interpretation is done within literal blocks (not even -backslash-escapes). If the '::' is preceded by whitespace, '::' is -omitted from the output; if '::' was the sole content of a paragraph, -the entire paragraph is removed (no 'empty' paragraph remains). If -'::' is preceded by a non-whitespace character, '::' is replaced by -':' (i.e., the extra colon is removed). - -Thus, a section could begin with a literal block as follows:: - - Section Title - ------------- - - :: - - print "this is example literal" - - -Tables -====== - -The table markup scheme in classic StructuredText was horrible. Its -omission from StructuredTextNG is welcome, and its markup will not be -repeated here. However, tables themselves are useful in -documentation. Alternatives: - -1. This format is the most natural and obvious. It was independently - invented (no great feat of creation!), and later found to be the - format supported by the `Emacs table mode`_:: - - +------------+------------+------------+--------------+ - | Header 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 | Header 4 | - +============+============+============+==============+ - | Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 & 4 span (Row 1) | - +------------+------------+------------+--------------+ - | Column 1 & 2 span | Column 3 | - Column 4 | - +------------+------------+------------+ - Row 2 & 3 | - | 1 | 2 | 3 | - span | - +------------+------------+------------+--------------+ - - Tables are described with a visual outline made up of the - characters '-', '=', '|', and '+': - - - The hyphen ('-') is used for horizontal lines (row separators). - - The equals sign ('=') is optionally used as a header separator - (as of version 1.5.24, this is not supported by the Emacs table - mode). - - The vertical bar ('|') is used for for vertical lines (column - separators). - - The plus sign ('+') is used for intersections of horizontal and - vertical lines. - - Row and column spans are possible simply by omitting the column or - row separators, respectively. The header row separator must be - complete; in other words, a header cell may not span into the table - body. Each cell contains body elements, and may have multiple - paragraphs, lists, etc. Initial spaces for a left margin are - allowed; the first line of text in a cell determines its left - margin. - -2. Below is a simpler table structure. It may be better suited to - manual input than alternative #1, but there is no Emacs editing - mode available. One disadvantage is that it resembles section - titles; a one-column table would look exactly like section & - subsection titles. :: - - ============ ============ ============ ============== - Header 1 Header 2 Header 3 Header 4 - ============ ============ ============ ============== - Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 & 4 span (Row 1) - ------------ ------------ --------------------------- - Column 1 & 2 span Column 3 - Column 4 - ------------------------- ------------ - Row 2 & 3 - 1 2 3 - span - ============ ============ ============ ============== - - The table begins with a top border of equals signs with a space at - each column boundary (regardless of spans). Each row is - underlined. Internal row separators are underlines of '-', with - spaces at column boundaries. The last of the optional head rows is - underlined with '=', again with spaces at column boundaries. - Column spans have no spaces in their underline. Row spans simply - lack an underline at the row boundary. The bottom boundary of the - table consists of '=' underlines. A blank line is required - following a table. - -3. A minimalist alternative is as follows:: - - ==== ===== ======== ======== ======= ==== ===== ===== - Old State Input Action New State Notes - ----------- -------- ----------------- ----------- - ids types new type sys.msg. dupname ids types - ==== ===== ======== ======== ======= ==== ===== ===== - -- -- explicit -- -- new True - -- -- implicit -- -- new False - None False explicit -- -- new True - old False explicit implicit old new True - None True explicit explicit new None True - old True explicit explicit new,old None True [1] - None False implicit implicit new None False - old False implicit implicit new,old None False - None True implicit implicit new None True - old True implicit implicit new old True - ==== ===== ======== ======== ======= ==== ===== ===== - - The table begins with a top border of equals signs with one or more - spaces at each column boundary (regardless of spans). There must - be at least two columns in the table (to differentiate it from - section headers). Each line starts a new row. The rightmost - column is unbounded; text may continue past the edge of the table. - Each row/line must contain spaces at column boundaries, except for - explicit column spans. Underlines of '-' can be used to indicate - column spans, but should be used sparingly if at all. Lines - containing column span underlines may not contain any other text. - The last of the optional head rows is underlined with '=', again - with spaces at column boundaries. The bottom boundary of the table - consists of '=' underlines. A blank line is required following a - table. - - This table sums up the features. Using all the features in such a - small space is not pretty though:: - - ======== ======== ======== - Header 2 & 3 Span - ------------------ - Header 1 Header 2 Header 3 - ======== ======== ======== - Each line is a new row. - Each row consists of one line only. - Row spans are not possible. - The last column may spill over to the right. - Column spans are possible with an underline joining columns. - ---------------------------- - The span is limited to the row above the underline. - ======== ======== ======== - -4. As a variation of alternative 3, bullet list syntax in the first - column could be used to indicate row starts. Multi-line rows are - possible, but row spans are not. For example:: - - ===== ===== - col 1 col 2 - ===== ===== - - 1 Second column of row 1. - - 2 Second column of row 2. - Second line of paragraph. - - 3 Second column of row 3. - - Second paragraph of row 3, - column 2 - ===== ===== - - Column spans would be indicated on the line after the last line of - the row. To indicate a real bullet list within a first-column - cell, simply nest the bullets. - -5. In a further variation, we could simply assume that whitespace in - the first column implies a multi-line row; the text in other - columns is continuation text. For example:: - - ===== ===== - col 1 col 2 - ===== ===== - 1 Second column of row 1. - 2 Second column of row 2. - Second line of paragraph. - 3 Second column of row 3. - - Second paragraph of row 3, - column 2 - ===== ===== - - Limitations of this approach: - - - Cells in the first column are limited to one line of text. - - - Cells in the first column *must* contain some text; blank cells - would lead to a misinterpretation. An empty comment ("..") is - sufficient. - -6. Combining alternative 3 and 4, a bullet list in the first column - could mean multi-line rows, and no bullet list means single-line - rows only. - -Alternatives 1 and 5 has been adopted by reStructuredText. - - -Delimitation of Inline Markup -============================= - -StructuredText specifies that inline markup must begin with -whitespace, precluding such constructs as parenthesized or quoted -emphatic text:: - - "**What?**" she cried. (*exit stage left*) - -The `reStructuredText markup specification`_ allows for such -constructs and disambiguates inline markup through a set of -recognition rules. These recognition rules define the context of -markup start-strings and end-strings, allowing markup characters to be -used in most non-markup contexts without a problem (or a backslash). -So we can say, "Use asterisks (*) around words or phrases to -*emphasisze* them." The '(*)' will not be recognized as markup. This -reduces the need for markup escaping to the point where an escape -character is *almost* (but not quite!) unnecessary. - - -Underlining -=========== - -StructuredText uses '_text_' to indicate underlining. To quote David -Ascher in his 2000-01-21 Doc-SIG mailing list post, "Docstring -grammar: a very revised proposal": - - The tagging of underlined text with _'s is suboptimal. Underlines - shouldn't be used from a typographic perspective (underlines were - designed to be used in manuscripts to communicate to the - typesetter that the text should be italicized -- no well-typeset - book ever uses underlines), and conflict with double-underscored - Python variable names (__init__ and the like), which would get - truncated and underlined when that effect is not desired. Note - that while *complete* markup would prevent that truncation - ('__init__'), I think of docstring markups much like I think of - type annotations -- they should be optional and above all do no - harm. In this case the underline markup does harm. - -Underlining is not part of the reStructuredText specification. - - -Inline Literals -=============== - -StructuredText's markup for inline literals (text left as-is, -verbatim, usually in a monospaced font; as in HTML <TT>) is single -quotes ('literals'). The problem with single quotes is that they are -too often used for other purposes: - -- Apostrophes: "Don't blame me, 'cause it ain't mine, it's Chris'."; - -- Quoting text: - - First Bruce: "Well Bruce, I heard the prime minister use it. - 'S'hot enough to boil a monkey's bum in 'ere your Majesty,' he - said, and she smiled quietly to herself." - - In the UK, single quotes are used for dialogue in published works. - -- String literals: s = '' - -Alternatives:: - - 'text' \'text\' ''text'' "text" \"text\" ""text"" - #text# @text@ `text` ^text^ ``text'' ``text`` - -The examples below contain inline literals, quoted text, and -apostrophes. Each example should evaluate to the following HTML:: - - Some <TT>code</TT>, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does <TT>a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`</TT> work? - - 0. Some code, with a quote, double, ain't it grand? - Does a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3` work? - 1. Some 'code', with a \'quote\', "double", ain\'t it grand? - Does 'a[b] = \'c\' + "d" + `2^3`' work? - 2. Some \'code\', with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does \'a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`\' work? - 3. Some ''code'', with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does ''a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`'' work? - 4. Some "code", with a 'quote', \"double\", ain't it grand? - Does "a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`" work? - 5. Some \"code\", with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does \"a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`\" work? - 6. Some ""code"", with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does ""a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`"" work? - 7. Some #code#, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does #a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`# work? - 8. Some @code@, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does @a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`@ work? - 9. Some `code`, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does `a[b] = 'c' + "d" + \`2^3\`` work? - 10. Some ^code^, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does ^a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2\^3`^ work? - 11. Some ``code'', with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does ``a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3`'' work? - 12. Some ``code``, with a 'quote', "double", ain't it grand? - Does ``a[b] = 'c' + "d" + `2^3\``` work? - -Backquotes (#9 & #12) are the best choice. They are unobtrusive and -relatviely rarely used (more rarely than ' or ", anyhow). Backquotes -have the connotation of 'quotes', which other options (like carets, -#10) don't. - -Analogously with ``*emph*`` & ``**strong**``, double-backquotes (#12) -could be used for inline literals. If single-backquotes are used for -'interpreted text' (context-sensitive domain-specific descriptive -markup) such as function name hyperlinks in Python docstrings, then -double-backquotes could be used for absolute-literals, wherein no -processing whatsoever takes place. An advantage of double-backquotes -would be that backslash-escaping would no longer be necessary for -embedded single-backquotes; however, embedded double-backquotes (in an -end-string context) would be illegal. See `Backquotes in -Phrase-Links`__ in `Record of reStructuredText Syntax Alternatives`__. - -__ alternatives.html#backquotes-in-phrase-links -__ alternatives.html - -Alternative choices are carets (#10) and TeX-style quotes (#11). For -examples of TeX-style quoting, see -http://www.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/CustomizingTheDocumentProcessor. - -Some existing uses of backquotes: - -1. As a synonym for repr() in Python. -2. For command-interpolation in shell scripts. -3. Used as open-quotes in TeX code (and carried over into plaintext - by TeXies). - -The inline markup start-string and end-string recognition rules -defined by the `reStructuredText markup specification`_ would allow -all of these cases inside inline literals, with very few exceptions. -As a fallback, literal blocks could handle all cases. - -Outside of inline literals, the above uses of backquotes would require -backslash-escaping. However, these are all prime examples of text -that should be marked up with inline literals. - -If either backquotes or straight single-quotes are used as markup, -TeX-quotes are too troublesome to support, so no special-casing of -TeX-quotes should be done (at least at first). If TeX-quotes have to -be used outside of literals, a single backslash-escaped would suffice: -\``TeX quote''. Ugly, true, but very infrequently used. - -Using literal blocks is a fallback option which removes the need for -backslash-escaping:: - - like this:: - - Here, we can do ``absolutely'' anything `'`'\|/|\ we like! - -No mechanism for inline literals is perfect, just as no escaping -mechanism is perfect. No matter what we use, complicated inline -expressions involving the inline literal quote and/or the backslash -will end up looking ugly. We can only choose the least often ugly -option. - -reStructuredText will use double backquotes for inline literals, and -single backqoutes for interpreted text. - - -Hyperlinks -========== - -There are three forms of hyperlink currently in StructuredText_: - -1. (Absolute & relative URIs.) Text enclosed by double quotes - followed by a colon, a URI, and concluded by punctuation plus white - space, or just white space, is treated as a hyperlink:: - - "Python":http://www.python.org/ - -2. (Absolute URIs only.) Text enclosed by double quotes followed by a - comma, one or more spaces, an absolute URI and concluded by - punctuation plus white space, or just white space, is treated as a - hyperlink:: - - "mail me", mailto:me@mail.com - -3. (Endnotes.) Text enclosed by brackets link to an endnote at the - end of the document: at the beginning of the line, two dots, a - space, and the same text in brackets, followed by the end note - itself:: - - Please refer to the fine manual [GVR2001]. - - .. [GVR2001] Python Documentation, Release 2.1, van Rossum, - Drake, et al., http://www.python.org/doc/ - -The problem with forms 1 and 2 is that they are neither intuitive nor -unobtrusive (they break design goals 5 & 2). They overload -double-quotes, which are too often used in ordinary text (potentially -breaking design goal 4). The brackets in form 3 are also too common -in ordinary text (such as [nested] asides and Python lists like [12]). - -Alternatives: - -1. Have no special markup for hyperlinks. - -2. A. Interpret and mark up hyperlinks as any contiguous text - containing '://' or ':...@' (absolute URI) or '@' (email - address) after an alphanumeric word. To de-emphasize the URI, - simply enclose it in parentheses: - - Python (http://www.python.org/) - - B. Leave special hyperlink markup as a domain-specific extension. - Hyperlinks in ordinary reStructuredText documents would be - required to be standalone (i.e. the URI text inline in the - document text). Processed hyperlinks (where the URI text is - hidden behind the link) are important enough to warrant syntax. - -3. The original Setext_ introduced a mechanism of indirect hyperlinks. - A source link word ('hot word') in the text was given a trailing - underscore:: - - Here is some text with a hyperlink_ built in. - - The hyperlink itself appeared at the end of the document on a line - by itself, beginning with two dots, a space, the link word with a - leading underscore, whitespace, and the URI itself:: - - .. _hyperlink http://www.123.xyz - - Setext used ``underscores_instead_of_spaces_`` for phrase links. - -With some modification, alternative 3 best satisfies the design goals. -It has the advantage of being readable and relatively unobtrusive. -Since each source link must match up to a target, the odd variable -ending in an underscore can be spared being marked up (although it -should generate a "no such link target" warning). The only -disadvantage is that phrase-links aren't possible without some -obtrusive syntax. - -We could achieve phrase-links if we enclose the link text: - -1. in double quotes:: - - "like this"_ - -2. in brackets:: - - [like this]_ - -3. or in backquotes:: - - `like this`_ - -Each gives us somewhat obtrusive markup, but that is unavoidable. The -bracketed syntax (#2) is reminiscent of links on many web pages -(intuitive), although it is somewhat obtrusive. Alternative #3 is -much less obtrusive, and is consistent with interpreted text: the -trailing underscore indicates the interpretation of the phrase, as a -hyperlink. #3 also disambiguates hyperlinks from footnote references. -Alternative #3 wins. - -The same trailing underscore markup can also be used for footnote and -citation references, removing the problem with ordinary bracketed text -and Python lists:: - - Please refer to the fine manual [GVR2000]_. - - .. [GVR2000] Python Documentation, van Rossum, Drake, et al., - http://www.python.org/doc/ - -The two-dots-and-a-space syntax was generalized by Setext for -comments, which are removed from the (visible) processed output. -reStructuredText uses this syntax for comments, footnotes, and link -target, collectively termed "explicit markup". For link targets, in -order to eliminate ambiguity with comments and footnotes, -reStructuredText specifies that a colon always follow the link target -word/phrase. The colon denotes 'maps to'. There is no reason to -restrict target links to the end of the document; they could just as -easily be interspersed. - -Internal hyperlinks (links from one point to another within a single -document) can be expressed by a source link as before, and a target -link with a colon but no URI. In effect, these targets 'map to' the -element immediately following. - -As an added bonus, we now have a perfect candidate for -reStructuredText directives, a simple extension mechanism: explicit -markup containing a single word followed by two colons and whitespace. -The interpretation of subsequent data on the directive line or -following is directive-dependent. - -To summarize:: - - .. This is a comment. - - .. The line below is an example of a directive. - .. version:: 1 - - This is a footnote [1]_. - - This internal hyperlink will take us to the footnotes_ area below. - - Here is a one-word_ external hyperlink. - - Here is `a hyperlink phrase`_. - - .. _footnotes: - .. [1] Footnote text goes here. - - .. external hyperlink target mappings: - .. _one-word: http://www.123.xyz - .. _a hyperlink phrase: http://www.123.xyz - -The presence or absence of a colon after the target link -differentiates an indirect hyperlink from a footnote, respectively. A -footnote requires brackets. Backquotes around a target link word or -phrase are required if the phrase contains a colon, optional -otherwise. - -Below are examples using no markup, the two StructuredText hypertext -styles, and the reStructuredText hypertext style. Each example -contains an indirect link, a direct link, a footnote/endnote, and -bracketed text. In HTML, each example should evaluate to:: - - <P>A <A HREF="http://spam.org">URI</A>, see <A HREF="#eggs2000"> - [eggs2000]</A> (in Bacon [Publisher]). Also see - <A HREF="http://eggs.org">http://eggs.org</A>.</P> - - <P><A NAME="eggs2000">[eggs2000]</A> "Spam, Spam, Spam, Eggs, - Bacon, and Spam"</P> - -1. No markup:: - - A URI http://spam.org, see eggs2000 (in Bacon [Publisher]). - Also see http://eggs.org. - - eggs2000 "Spam, Spam, Spam, Eggs, Bacon, and Spam" - -2. StructuredText absolute/relative URI syntax - ("text":http://www.url.org):: - - A "URI":http://spam.org, see [eggs2000] (in Bacon [Publisher]). - Also see "http://eggs.org":http://eggs.org. - - .. [eggs2000] "Spam, Spam, Spam, Eggs, Bacon, and Spam" - - Note that StructuredText does not recognize standalone URIs, - forcing doubling up as shown in the second line of the example - above. - -3. StructuredText absolute-only URI syntax - ("text", mailto:you@your.com):: - - A "URI", http://spam.org, see [eggs2000] (in Bacon - [Publisher]). Also see "http://eggs.org", http://eggs.org. - - .. [eggs2000] "Spam, Spam, Spam, Eggs, Bacon, and Spam" - -4. reStructuredText syntax:: - - 4. A URI_, see [eggs2000]_ (in Bacon [Publisher]). - Also see http://eggs.org. - - .. _URI: http:/spam.org - .. [eggs2000] "Spam, Spam, Spam, Eggs, Bacon, and Spam" - -The bracketed text '[Publisher]' may be problematic with -StructuredText (syntax 2 & 3). - -reStructuredText's syntax (#4) is definitely the most readable. The -text is separated from the link URI and the footnote, resulting in -cleanly readable text. - -.. _StructuredText: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/FrontPage -.. _Setext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/mirror/setext.html -.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html -.. _detailed description: - http://www.tibsnjoan.demon.co.uk/STNG-format.html -.. _STMinus: http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~edloper/pydoc/stminus.html -.. _StructuredTextNG: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/StructuredTextNG -.. _README: http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/~checkout~/ - python/python/dist/src/README -.. _Emacs table mode: http://table.sourceforge.net/ -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: reStructuredText.html - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/semantics.txt b/docutils/docs/dev/semantics.txt deleted file mode 100644 index cd20e15f6..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/semantics.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,119 +0,0 @@ -===================== - Docstring Semantics -===================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -These are notes for a possible future PEP providing the final piece of -the Python docstring puzzle: docstring semantics or documentation -methodology. `PEP 257`_, Docstring Conventions, sketches out some -guidelines, but does not get into methodology details. - -I haven't explored documentation methodology more because, in my -opinion, it is a completely separate issue from syntax, and it's even -more controversial than syntax. Nobody wants to be told how to lay -out their documentation, a la JavaDoc_. I think the JavaDoc way is -butt-ugly, but it *is* an established standard for the Java world. -Any standard documentation methodology has to be formal enough to be -useful but remain light enough to be usable. If the methodology is -too strict, too heavy, or too ugly, many/most will not want to use it. - -I think a standard methodology could benefit the Python community, but -it would be a hard sell. A PEP would be the place to start. For most -human-readable documentation needs, the free-form text approach is -adequate. We'd only need a formal methodology if we want to extract -the parameters into a data dictionary, index, or summary of some kind. - - -PythonDoc -========= - -(Not to be confused with Daniel Larsson's pythondoc_ project.) - -A Python version of the JavaDoc_ semantics (not syntax). A set of -conventions which are understood by the Docutils. What JavaDoc has -done is to establish a syntax that enables a certain documentation -methodology, or standard *semantics*. JavaDoc is not just syntax; it -prescribes a methodology. - -- Use field lists or definition lists for "tagged blocks". By this I - mean that field lists can be used similarly to JavaDoc's ``@tag`` - syntax. That's actually one of the motivators behind field lists. - For example, we could have:: - - """ - :Parameters: - - `lines`: a list of one-line strings without newlines. - - `until_blank`: Stop collecting at the first blank line if - true (1). - - `strip_indent`: Strip common leading indent if true (1, - default). - - :Return: - - a list of indented lines with mininum indent removed; - - the amount of the indent; - - whether or not the block finished with a blank line or at - the end of `lines`. - """ - - This is taken straight out of docutils/statemachine.py, in which I - experimented with a simple documentation methodology. Another - variation I've thought of exploits the Grouch_-compatible - "classifier" element of definition lists. For example:: - - :Parameters: - `lines` : [string] - List of one-line strings without newlines. - `until_blank` : boolean - Stop collecting at the first blank line if true (1). - `strip_indent` : boolean - Strip common leading indent if true (1, default). - -- Field lists could even be used in a one-to-one correspondence with - JavaDoc ``@tags``, although I doubt if I'd recommend it. Several - ports of JavaDoc's ``@tag`` methodology exist in Python, most - recently Ed Loper's "epydoc_". - - -Other Ideas -=========== - -- Can we extract comments from parsed modules? Could be handy for - documenting function/method parameters:: - - def method(self, - source, # path of input file - dest # path of output file - ): - - This would save having to repeat parameter names in the docstring. - - Idea from Mark Hammond's 1998-06-23 Doc-SIG post, "Re: [Doc-SIG] - Documentation tool": - - it would be quite hard to add a new param to this method without - realising you should document it - -- Frederic Giacometti's `iPhrase Python documentation conventions`_ is - an attachment to his Doc-SIG post of 2001-05-30. - - -.. _PEP 257: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0257.html -.. _JavaDoc: http://java.sun.com/j2se/javadoc/ -.. _pythondoc: http://starship.python.net/crew/danilo/pythondoc/ -.. _Grouch: http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/grouch/ -.. _epydoc: http://epydoc.sf.net/ -.. _iPhrase Python documentation conventions: - http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-May/001840.html - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/dev/todo.txt b/docutils/docs/dev/todo.txt deleted file mode 100644 index eab2208fe..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/dev/todo.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2114 +0,0 @@ -================= - Docutils_ Notes -================= -:Author: David Goodger (with input from many) -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Date: $Date$ -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - -.. contents:: - - -To Do -===== - -Priority items are marked with "@" symbols. The more @s, the higher -the priority. Items in question form (containing "?") are ideas which -require more thought and debate; they are potential to-do's. - -Many of these items are awaiting champions. If you see something -you'd like to tackle, please do! - - -Bugs ----- - -* The "contents" directive now automatically names the "topic" - produced (using its title), so that it can be referred to by name. - However, this naming happens late in the game, after most references - have been resolved. So the following indirect target produces a - warning because the name "contents" is not available when resolved:: - - .. contents:: - - .. _alternate name for contents: contents_ - - Fixing this may be tricky, and isn't a high priority. - - Idea: two-pass hyperlink resolution, ignoring errors on the first - pass? - - Perhaps the directive should do a bit more work up-front: create the - "topic" and "title", and leave the "pending" node for contents. - -* The parser doesn't know anything about double-width characters such - as Chinese hanza & Japanese kanji/kana. Also, it's dependent on - whitespace and punctuation as markup delimiters, which may not be - applicable in these languages. - -* In text inserted by the "include" directive, errors are often not - reported with the correct "source" or "line" numbers. Perhaps all - Reporter calls need a "base_node" parameter. There's a test in - test/test_parsers/test_rst/test_directives/test_include.py - (commented out, because the test fails). - -* tools/buildhtml.py needs a mechanism to skip directories - (e.g. licenses, test). Perhaps a ".prune-buildhtml" file? A - command-line option wouldn't work because it would require user - action. - - -General -------- - -* Refactor - - - Rename methods & variables according to the `Python coding - conventions`_ below. - - - The name-to-id conversion and hyperlink resolution code needs to be - checked for correctness and refactored. I'm afraid it's a bit of - a spaghetti mess now. - -* Add validation? See http://pytrex.sourceforge.net, RELAX NG, pyRXP. - -* Ask Python-dev for opinions (GvR for a pronouncement) on special - variables (__author__, __version__, etc.): convenience vs. namespace - pollution. Ask opinions on whether or not Docutils should recognize - & use them. - -* In ``docutils.readers.get_reader_class`` (& ``parsers`` & - ``writers`` too), should we be importing "standalone" or - "docutils.readers.standalone"? (This would avoid importing - top-level modules if the module name is not in docutils/readers. - Potential nastiness.) - -* Perhaps store a _`name-to-id mapping file`? This could be stored - permanently, read by subsequent processing runs, and updated with - new entries. ("Persistent ID mapping"?) - -* Need a Unicode to HTML entities codec for HTML writer? - -* Perhaps the ``Component.supports`` method should deal with - individual features ("meta" etc.) instead of formats ("html" etc.)? - -* Standalone Reader: Implement an option to turn off the DocTitle - transform? - -* Add /usr/etc/docutils.conf to config file list? System-wide, - whereas /etc/docutils.conf is machine-specific. - /usr/local/etc/docutils.conf too? See the `Filesystem Hierarchy - Standard`_. - - .. _Filesystem Hierarchy Standard: http://www.pathname.com/fhs. - -* Add _`object numbering and object references` (tables & figures). - These would be the equivalent of DocBook's "formal" elements. - - We may need _`persistent sequences`, such as chapter numbers. See - `OpenOffice.org XML`_ "fields". Should the sequences be automatic - or manual (user-specifyable)? - - We need to name the objects: - - - "name" option for the "figure" directive? :: - - .. figure:: image.png - :name: image's name - - To name tables, we could use a "table" directive:: - - .. table:: optional title here - :name: table's name - - ===== ===== - x not x - ===== ===== - True False - False True - ===== ===== - - This would also allow other options to be set, like border - styles. The same technique could be used for other objects. - - - The object could also be done this way:: - - .. _figure name: - - .. figure:: image.png - - This may be a more general solution, equally applicable to tables. - However, explicit naming using an option seems simpler to users. - - We'll also need syntax for object references. See `OpenOffice.org - XML`_ "reference fields": - - - Parameterized substitutions? For example:: - - See |figure (figure name)|, on |page (figure name)|. - - .. |figure (name)| figure-ref:: (name) - .. |page (name)| page-ref:: (name) - - The result would be:: - - See figure 3.11 on page 157. - - But this would require substitution directives to be processed at - reference-time, not at definition-time as they are now. Or, - perhaps the directives could just leave ``pending`` elements - behind, and the transforms do the work? How to pass the data - through? Too complicated. - - - An interpreted text approach is simpler and better:: - - See :figure:`figure name` on :page:`figure name`. - - The "figure" and "page" roles could generate appropriate - boilerplate text. The position of the role (prefix or suffix) - could also be utilized. - - See `Interpreted Text`_ below. - - .. _OpenOffice.org XML: http://xml.openoffice.org/ - -* Think about large documents made up of multiple subdocument files. - Issues: continuity (`persistent sequences`_ above), cross-references - (`name-to-id mapping file`_ above and `targets in other documents`_ - below). - - When writing a book, the author probably wants to split it up into - files, perhaps one per chapter (but perhaps even more detailed). - However, we'd like to be able to have references from one chapter to - another, and have continuous numbering (pages and chapters, as - applicable). Of course, none of this is implemented yet. There has - been some thought put into some aspects; see `the "include" - directive`__ and the `Reference Merging`_ transform below. - - When I was working with SGML in Japan, we had a system where there - was a top-level coordinating file, book.sgml, which contained the - top-level structure of a book: the <book> element, containing the - book <title> and empty component elements (<preface>, <chapter>, - <appendix>, etc.), each with filename attributes pointing to the - actual source for the component. Something like this:: - - <book id="bk01"> - <title>Title of the Book</title> - <preface inrefid="pr01"></preface> - <chapter inrefid="ch01"></chapter> - <chapter inrefid="ch02"></chapter> - <chapter inrefid="ch03"></chapter> - <appendix inrefid="ap01"></appendix> - </book> - - (The "inrefid" attribute stood for "insertion reference ID".) - - The processing system would process each component separately, but - it would recognize and use the book file to coordinate chapter and - page numbering, and keep a persistent ID to (title, page number) - mapping database for cross-references. Docutils could use a similar - system for large-scale, multipart documents. - - __ rst/directives.html#including-an-external-document-fragment - - Aahz's idea: - - First the ToC:: - - .. ToC-list:: - Introduction.txt - Objects.txt - Data.txt - Control.txt - - Then a sample use:: - - .. include:: ToC.txt - - As I said earlier in chapter :chapter:`Objects.txt`, the - reference count gets increased every time a binding is made. - - Which produces:: - - As I said earlier in chapter 2, the - reference count gets increased every time a binding is made. - - The ToC in this form doesn't even need to be references to actual - reST documents; I'm simply doing it that way for a minimum of - future-proofing, in case I do want to add the ability to pick up - references within external chapters. - - Perhaps, instead of ToC (which would overload the "contents" - directive concept already in use), we could use "manifest". A - "manifest" directive might associate local reference names with - files:: - - .. manifest:: - intro: Introduction.txt - objects: Objects.txt - data: Data.txt - control: Control.txt - - Then the sample becomes:: - - .. include:: manifest.txt - - As I said earlier in chapter :chapter:`objects`, the - reference count gets increased every time a binding is made. - -* Add functional testing to Docutils: Readers, Writers, front ends. - -* Changes to sandbox/davidg/infrastructure/docutils-update? - - - Modify the script to only update the snapshots if files have - actually changed in CVS (saving some SourceForge server cycles). - - - Make passing the test suite a prerequisite to snapshot update, - but only if the process is completely automatic. - - - Rewrite in Python? - -* Publisher: "Ordinary setup" shouldn't requre specific ordering; at - the very least, there ought to be error checking higher up in the - call chain. [Aahz] - - ``Publisher.get_settings`` requires that all components be set up - before it's called. Perhaps the I/O *objects* shouldn't be set, but - I/O *classes*. Then options are set up (``.set_options``), and - ``Publisher.set_io`` (or equivalent code) is called with source & - destination paths, creating the I/O objects. - - Perhaps I/O objects shouldn't be instantiated until required. For - split output, the Writer may be called multiple times, once for each - doctree, and each doctree should have a separate Output object (with - a different path). Is the "Builder" pattern applicable here? - -* Perhaps I/O objects should become full-fledged components (i.e. - subclasses of ``docutils.Component``, as are Readers, Parsers, and - Writers now), and thus have associated option/setting specs and - transforms. - -* Multiple file I/O suggestion from Michael Hudson: use a file-like - object or something you can iterate over to get file-like objects. - -* Language modules: in accented languages it may be useful to have - both accented and unaccented entries in the ``bibliographic_fields`` - mapping for versatility. - -* Add a "--strict-language" option & setting: no English fallback for - language-dependent features. - -* Add an "--input-language" option & setting? Specify a different - language module for input (bibliographic fields, directives) than - for output. The "--language" option would set both input & output - languages. - -* Auto-generate reference tables for language-dependent features? - Could be generated from the source modules. A special command-line - option could be added to Docutils front ends to do this. (Idea from - Engelbert Gruber.) - -* Change the "class" attribute of elements (set with - Element.set_class) to a list? - -* Enable feedback of some kind from internal decisions, such as - reporting the successful input encoding. Modify runtime settings? - System message? Simple stderr output? - -* Perhaps we need to re-evaluate the config file format, possibly - enabling a section for each Docutils component so that (for example) - HTML's and LaTeX's stylesheets don't interfere with each other. - - Idea: adopt sections in the config file corresponding to Docutils - components, which define flat namespaces that can be applied in an - overlay fashion defined by the components themselves. For example, - if the "pep_html" writer defines itself as derivative of the - "html4css1" writer, the "stylesheet" setting in the "[html4css1]" - section will be used unless the "[pep_html]" section overrides it. - In the absence of any "stylesheet" setting in either section, a - "stylesheet" setting in "[general]" would be used. This would also - allow component-specific definitions of general or - other-component-specific settings, such as writer-specific overrides - for the "trim_footnote_reference_space" parser setting. - -* The "docutils.conf" included with Docutils should become complete, - with examples of every setting (possibly commented). It's currently - sparse, requiring doc lookups. - -* Add internationalization to footer boilerplate text (resulting from - "--generator", "--source-link", and "--date" etc.), allowing - translations. - - -Documentation -------------- - -* User docs. What's needed? - - -Implementation Docs -``````````````````` - -* Internal module documentation (docstrings). - -* spec/doctree.txt: DTD element structural relationships, semantics, - and attributes. In progress; element descriptions to be completed. - -* How-to docs: In spec/howto/. - - - How a Writer works & how to write one - - - Transforms - -* Document the ``pending`` elements, how they're generated and what - they do. - -* Document the transforms (perhaps in docstrings?): how they're used, - what they do, dependencies & order considerations. - -* Document the HTML classes used by html4css1.py. - - -Specification -````````````` - -* Complete PEP 258 Docutils Design Specification. - - - Fill in the blanks in API details. - - - Specify the nodes.py internal data structure implementation? - - [Tibs:] Eventually we need to have direct documentation in - there on how it all hangs together - the DTD is not enough - (indeed, is it still meant to be correct? [Yes, it is. - --DG]). - -* Rework PEP 257, separating style from spec from tools, wrt Docutils? - See Doc-SIG from 2001-06-19/20. - - -Web Site -```````` - -* Add an "examples" directory, beside "tools" and "docs", for - interesting examples of Docutils usage? Have a top-level README.txt - file and a subdirectory for each example. (Martin Blais) - - -Python Source Reader --------------------- - -General: - -* Analyze Tony Ibbs' PySource code. - -* Analyze Doug Hellmann's HappyDoc project. - -* Investigate how POD handles literate programming. - -* Take the best ideas and integrate them into Docutils 0.3. - -Miscellaneous ideas: - -* If we can detect that a comment block begins with ``##``, a la - JavaDoc, it might be useful to indicate interspersed section headers - & explanatory text in a module. For example:: - - """Module docstring.""" - - ## - # Constants - # ========= - - a = 1 - b = 2 - - ## - # Exception Classes - # ================= - - class MyException(Exception): pass - - # etc. - -* Should standalone strings also become (module/class) docstrings? - Under what conditions? We want to prevent arbitrary strings from - becomming docstrings of prior attribute assignments etc. Assume - that there must be no blank lines between attributes and attribute - docstrings? (Use lineno of NEWLINE token.) - - Triple-quotes are sometimes used for multi-line comments (such as - commenting out blocks of code). How to reconcile? - -* HappyDoc's idea of using comment blocks when there's no docstring - may be useful to get around the conflict between `additional - docstrings`_ and ``from __future__ import`` for module docstrings. - A module could begin like this:: - - #!/usr/bin/env python - # :Author: Me - # :Copyright: whatever - - """This is the public module docstring (``__doc__``).""" - - # More docs, in comments. - # All comments at the beginning of a module could be - # accumulated as docstrings. - # We can't have another docstring here, because of the - # ``__future__`` statement. - - from __future__ import division - - Using the JavaDoc convention of a doc-comment block beginning with - ``##`` is useful though. It allows doc-comments and implementation - comments. - - .. _additional docstrings: pep-0258.html#additional-docstrings - -* HappyDoc uses an initial comment block to set "parser configuration - values". Do the same thing for Docutils, to set runtime settings on - a per-module basis? I.e.:: - - # Docutils:setting=value - - Could be used to turn on/off function parameter comment recognition - & other marginal features. Could be used as a general mechanism to - augment config files and command-line options (but which takes - precedence?). - -* Multi-file output should be divisible at arbitrary level. - -* Support all forms of ``import`` statements: - - - ``import module``: listed as "module" - - ``import module as alias``: "alias (module)" - - ``from module import identifier``: "identifier (from module)" - - ``from module import identifier as alias``: "alias (identifier - from module)" - - ``from module import *``: "all identifiers (``*``) from module" - -* Have links to colorized Python source files from API docs? And - vice-versa: backlinks from the colorized source files to the API - docs! - -* In summaries, use the first *sentence* of a docstring if the first - line is not followed by a blank line. - - -reStructuredText Parser ------------------------ - -Also see the `... Or Not To Do?`__ list. - -__ rst/alternatives.html#or-not-to-do - -* Clean up the code; refactor as required. - -* Add motivation sections for constructs in spec. - -* Allow very long titles (on two or more lines)? - -* And for the sake of completeness, should definition list terms be - allowed to be very long (two or more lines) also? - -* Support generic hyperlink references to _`targets in other - documents`? Not in an HTML-centric way, though (it's trivial to say - ``http://www.example.com/doc#name``, and useless in non-HTML - contexts). XLink/XPointer? ``.. baseref::``? See Doc-SIG - 2001-08-10. - -* .. _adaptable file extensions: - - In target URLs, it would be useful to not explicitly specify the - file extension. If we're generating HTML, then ".html" is - appropriate; if PDF, then ".pdf"; etc. How about using ".*" to - indicate "choose the most appropriate filename extension? For - example:: - - .. _Another Document: another.* - - Should the choice be from among existing files only? Documents - only, or objects (images, etc.) also? (How to differentiate? - Element context [within "image"]?) - - This may not be just a parser issue though; it may need framework - support. - -* Implement the header row separator modification to table.el. (Wrote - to Takaaki Ota & the table.el mailing list on 2001-08-12, suggesting - support for "=====" header rows. On 2001-08-17 he replied, saying - he'd put it on his to-do list, but "don't hold your breath".) - -* Tony says inline markup rule 7 could do with a *little* more - exposition in the spec, to make clear what is going on for people - with head colds. - -* @@ Fix the parser's indentation handling to conform with the - stricter definition in the spec. (Explicit markup blocks should be - strict or forgiving?) - -* @@ Tighten up the spec for indentation of "constructs using complex - markers": field lists and option lists? Bodies may begin on the - same line as the marker or on a subsequent line (with blank lines - optional). Require that for bodies beginning on the same line as - the marker, all lines be in strict alignment. Currently, this is - acceptable:: - - :Field-name-of-medium-length: Field body beginning on the same - line as the field name. - - This proposal would make the above example illegal, instead - requiring strict alignment. A field body may either begin on the - same line:: - - :Field-name-of-medium-length: Field body beginning on the same - line as the field name. - - Or it may begin on a subsequent line:: - - :Field-name-of-medium-length: - Field body beginning on a line subsequent to that of the - field name. - - This would be especially relevant in degenerate cases like this:: - - :Number-of-African-swallows-requried-to-carry-a-coconut: - It would be very difficult to align the field body with - the left edge of the first line if it began on the same - line as the field name. - -* Allow for variant styles by interpreting indented lists as if they - weren't indented? For example, currently the list below will be - parsed as a list within a block quote:: - - paragraph - - * list item 1 - * list item 2 - - But a lot of people seem to write that way, and HTML browsers make - it look as if that's the way it should be. The parser could check - the contents of block quotes, and if they contain only a single - list, remove the block quote wrapper. There would be two problems: - - 1. What if we actually *do* want a list inside a block quote? - - 2. What if such a list comes immediately after an indented - construct, such as a literal block? - - Both could be solved using empty comments (problem 2 already exists - for a block quote after a literal block). But that's a hack. - - Perhaps a runtime setting, allowing or disabling this convenience, - would be appropriate. But that raises issues too: - - User A, who writes lists indented (and their config file is set - up to allow it), sends a file to user B, who doesn't (and their - config file disables indented lists). The result of processing - by the two users will be different. - - It may seem minor, but it adds ambiguity to the parser, which is - bad. - - See the Doc-SIG discussion starting 2001-04-18 with Ed Loper's - "Structuring: a summary; and an attempt at EBNF", item 4. Also - docutils-users, 2003-02-17. - -* Make the parser modular. Allow syntax constructs to be added or - disabled at run-time. Or is subclassing enough? - -* Continue to report (info, level 1) enumerated lists whose start - value is not ordinal-1? - -* Generalize the "doctest block" construct (which is overly - Python-centric) to other interactive sessions? "Doctest block" - could be renamed to "I/O block" or "interactive block", and each of - these could also be recognized as such by the parser: - - - Shell sessions:: - - $ cat example1.txt - A block beginning with a "$ " prompt is interpreted as a shell - session interactive block. As with Doctest blocks, the - interactive block ends with the first blank line, and wouldn't - have to be indented. - - - Root shell sessions:: - - # cat example2.txt - A block beginning with a "# " prompt is interpreted as a root - shell session (the user is or has to be logged in as root) - interactive block. Again, the block ends with a blank line. - - Other standard (and unambiguous) interactive session prompts could - easily be added (such as "> " for WinDOS). - - Tony Ibbs spoke out against this idea (2002-06-14 Doc-SIG thread - "docutils feedback"). - -* Generalize the "literal block" construct to allow blocks with a - per-line quoting to avoid indentation? For example, in this email - reply quoting the original, the block quoted with "``>``" (and - prefaced by "``::``") would be treated as a literal block:: - - John Doe wrote:: - - >> Great idea! - > - > Why didn't I think of that? - - You just did! ;-) - - The literal block would have to be a continuous text block (the - first blank line ends it) where every line begins with the same - non-alphanumeric non-whitespace character. - -* Should the "doctest" element go away, and the construct simply be a - front-end to generic literal blocks? - -* Add support for pragma (syntax-altering) directives. - - Some pragma directives could be local-scope unless explicitly - specified as global/pragma using ":global:" options. - -* Remove leading numbers from section titles for implicit link names? - A section titled "3. Conclusion" could then be referred to by - "``Conclusion_``" (i.e., without the "3."). - -* Syntax for the "line-block" directive? How about a - literal-block-like prefix, perhaps "``;;``"? (It is, after all, a - *semi-literal* literal block, no?) Example:: - - Take it away, Eric the Orchestra Leader! ;; - - A one, two, a one two three four - - Half a bee, philosophically, - must, *ipso facto*, half not be. - But half the bee has got to be, - *vis a vis* its entity. D'you see? - - But can a bee be said to be - or not to be an entire bee, - when half the bee is not a bee, - due to some ancient injury? - - Singing... - - Another idea: in an ordinary paragraph, if the first line ends with - a backslash (escaping the newline), interpret the entire paragraph - as a verse block? For example:: - - Add just one backslash\ - And this paragraph becomes - An awful haiku - - (And arguably invalid, since in Japanese the word "haiku" contains - three syllables.) - -* Implement auto-enumerated lists? See `Auto-Enumerated Lists`__. - - __ rst/alternatives.html#auto-enumerated-lists - -* Support whitespace in angle-bracketed standalone URLs according to - Appendix E ("Recommendations for Delimiting URI in Context") of `RFC - 2396`_. - - .. _RFC 2396: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt - -* Use the vertical spacing of the source text to determine the - corresponding vertical spacing of the output? - -* [From Mark Nodine] For cells in simple tables that comprise a - single line, the justification can be inferred according to the - following rules: - - 1. If the text begins at the leftmost column of the cell, - then left justification, ELSE - 2. If the text begins at the rightmost column of the cell, - then right justification, ELSE - 3. Center justification. - - The onus is on the author to make the text unambiguous by adding - blank columns as necessary. There should be a parser setting to - turn off justification-recognition (normally on would be fine). - - Decimal justification? - -* Make enumerated list parsing more strict, so that this would parse - as a paragraph with an info message:: - - 1. line one - 3. line two - -* Line numbers in system messages are inconsistent in the parser. - Fix? - -* Generalize the "target-notes" directive into a command-line option - somehow? See docutils-develop 2003-02-13. - -* Include the _`character entity substitution definition files` - `temporarily stored here <tmp/charents>`__, perhaps in a - ``docutils/parsers/rst/includes/`` directory. See `misc.include`_ - below. - -* Should ^L (or something else in reST) be defined to mean - force/suggest page breaks in whatever output we have? - - A "break" or "page-break" directive would be easy to add. A new - doctree element would be required though (perhaps "break"). The - final behavior would be up to the Writer. The directive argument - could be one of page/column/recto/verso for added flexibility. - - Currently ^L (Python's "\f") characters are treated as whitespace. - They're converted to single spaces, actually, as are vertical tabs - (^K, Python's "\v"). It would be possible to recognize form feeds - as markup, but it requires some thought and discussion first. Are - there any downsides? Many editing environments do not allow the - insertion of control characters. Will it cause any harm? It would - be useful as a shorthand for the directive. - - It's common practice to use ^L before Emacs "Local Variables" - lists:: - - ^L - .. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: - - These are already present in many PEPs and Docutils project - documents. From the Emacs manual (info): - - A "local variables list" goes near the end of the file, in the - last page. (It is often best to put it on a page by itself.) - - It would be unfortunate if this construct caused a final blank page - to be generated (for those Writers that recognize the page breaks). - We'll have to add a transform that looks for a "break" plus zero or - more comments at the end of a document, and removes them. - -* Could the "break" concept above be extended to inline forms? - E.g. "^L" in the middle of a sentence could cause a line break. - Only recognize it at the end of a line (i.e., "\f\n")? - - Or is formfeed inappropriate? Perhaps vertical tab ("\v"), but even - that's a stretch. Can't use carriage returns, since they're - commonly used for line endings. - -* Allow a "::"-only paragraph (first line, actually) to introduce a - literal block without a blank line? (Idea from Paul Moore.) :: - - :: - This is a literal block - - Is indentation enough to make the separation between a paragraph - which contains just a ``::`` and the literal text unambiguous? - There's one problem with this concession. What if one wants a - definition list item which defines the term "::"? We'd have to - escape it. Currenty, "\::" doesn't work (although it should; - **bug**), and ":\:" is misinterpreted as a field name (name "\"; - also a **bug**). Assuming these bugs are squashed, I suppose it's a - useful special case. It would only be reasonable to apply it to - "::"-only paragraphs though. I think the blank line is visually - necessary if there's text before the "::":: - - The text in this paragraph needs separation - from the literal block following:: - This doesn't look right. - - Another idea. Would it be worthwhile to allow literal blocks to - begin without a newline after the "::"? Example:: - - :: while True: - print 'hello world' - - Perhaps. Perhaps not. - -* Add new syntax for _`nested inline markup`? Or extend the parser to - parse nested inline markup somehow? See the `collected notes - <http://docutils.sf.net/spec/rst/alternatives.html#nested-inline-markup>`__. - -* Idea from Beni Cherniavsky:: - - I'm writing a README document linking to all other interesting - files in its directory. If these were full URLs I could just - write them in the text but these are relative links that can't - be auto-recognized. The shortest way to make such links that I - found was `file_name <file_name>`_. Perhaps a shortcut for such - usage could be added, e.g. `<file_name>`_ would take the target - as the link name? - - IOW these would be equivalent:: - - `<file_name>`_ - `file_name <file_name>`_ - - Another possibility is to drop the backticks. Should the angle - brackets be kept in the output or not? This syntax could be adopted - in addition to the one above:: - - <file_name>_ - - -Directives -`````````` - -Directives below are often referred to as "module.directive", the -directive function. The "module." is not part of the directive name -when used in a document. - -* Allow directives to be added at run-time? - -* Use the language module for directive option names? - -* Add "substitution_only" and "substitution_ok" function attributes, - and automate context checking? - -* Implement options on existing directives: - - - Add a "name" option to directives, to set an author-supplied - identifier? - - - _`images.image`: "border"? "link"? - - Units of measure? (See docutils-users, 2003-03-02.) - - - _`images.figure`: "title" and "number", to indicate a formal - figure? - - - _`parts.sectnum`: "local"?, "start", "refnum" - - A "local" option could enable numbering for sections from a - certain point down, and sections in the rest of the document are - not numbered. For example, a reference section of a manual might - be numbered, but not the rest. OTOH, an all-or-nothing approach - would probably be enough. - - The "start" option will specify the sequence set to use at the - same time as the starting value, for the first part of the section - number (i.e., section, not subsection). For example:: - - .. sectnum: :start: 1 - - .. sectnum: :start: A - - .. sectnum: :start: 5 - - .. sectnum: :start: I - - The first one is the default: start at 1, numbered. The second - one specifies letters, and start at "A". The third specifies - numbers, start at 5. The last example could signal Roman - numerals, although I don't know if they'd be applicable here. - Enumerated lists already do all this; perhaps that code could be - reused. - - Here comes the tricky part. The "sectnum" directive should be - usable multiple times in a single document. For example, in a - long document with "chapter" and "appendix" sections, there could - be a second "sectnum" before the first appendix, changing the - sequence used (from 1,2,3... to A,B,C...). This is where the - "local" concept comes in. This part of the implementation can be - left for later. - - A "refnum" option (better name?) would insert reference names - (targets) consisting of the reference number. Then a URL could be - of the form ``http://host/document.html#2.5`` (or "2-5"?). Allow - internal references by number? Allow name-based *and* - number-based ids at the same time, or only one or the other (which - would the table of contents use)? Usage issue: altering the - section structure of a document could render hyperlinks invalid. - - - _`parts.contents`: Add a "suppress" or "prune" option? It would - suppress contents display for sections in a branch from that point - down. Or a new directive, like "prune-contents"? - - Add an option to include topics in the TOC? Another for sidebars? - See docutils-develop 2003-01-29. - - - _`misc.include`: - - - "encoding" option? Take default from runtime settings. Use - Input component to read it in? - - - Option to select a range of lines? - - - Option to label lines? - - - Default directory for "built-in includes", using the C syntax - ``#include <name>``? - - Use C-preprocessor semantics for locating include files? - E.g., ``.. include:: file.txt`` will read another file into - the current one, relative to the current file's directory, - and ``.. include:: <standard>`` will read a standard include - file from ``docutils/include/``. (Should "quotes" be - required around non-standard include files?) - - -- http://sf.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_id=1938401 - - I now think that ``docutils/parsers/rst/include/`` is a better - place for these files, since they're reStructuredText-specific. - - Keeping standard data files together with the package code makes - sense to me. It seems much less complex to implement than a - separate system data directory, such as ``/usr/share/docutils``. - Any reason a system data directory should be used? How does - Distutils handle data files? - - How about an environment variable, say RSTINCLUDEPATH or - RSTPATH? This could be combined with a setting/option to allow - user-defined include directories. - - For a specific application, see the discussion of `character - entity substitution definition files`_ above. - -* Implement directives. Each of the list items below begins with an - identifier of the form, "module_name.directive_function_name". The - directive name itself could be the same as the - directive_function_name, or it could differ. - - - _`html.imagemap` (Useful outside of HTML? If not, replace with - image only in non-HTML writers?) - - - _`parts.endnotes` (or "footnotes"): See `Footnote & Citation Gathering`_. - - - _`parts.citations`: See `Footnote & Citation Gathering`_. - - - _`misc.exec`: Execute Python code & insert the results. Perhaps - dangerous? Call it "python" to allow for other languages? - - - _`misc.system`?: Execute an ``os.system()`` call, and insert the - results (possibly as a literal block). Definitely dangerous! How - to make it safe? Perhaps such processing should be left outside - of the document, in the user's production system (a makefile or a - script or whatever). Or, the directive could be disabled by - default and only enabled with an explicit command-line option or - config file setting. Even then, an interactive prompt may be - useful, such as: - - The file.txt document you are processing contains a "system" - directive requesting that the ``sudo rm -rf /`` command be - executed. Allow it to execute? (y/N) - - - _`misc.eval`: Evaluate an expression & insert the text. At parse - time or at substitution time? Dangerous? Perhaps limit to canned - macros; see text.date_ below. - - - _`misc.encoding`: Specify the character encoding of the input - data. But there are problems: - - - When it sees the directive, the parser will already have read - the input data, and encoding determination will already have - been done. - - - If a file with an "encoding" directive is edited and saved with - a different encoding, the directive may cause data corruption. - - - _`misc.language`: Specify the language of a document. There is a - problem similar to the first problem listed for misc.encoding_, - although to a lesser degree. - - - _`misc.settings`: Set any Docutils runtime setting from within a - document? - - - _`misc.charents`: Equivalent to:: - - .. include:: {includepath}/charents.txt - - - Docutils already has the ability to say "use this content for - Writer X" (via the "raw" directive), but it doesn't have the - ability to say "use this content for any Writer other than X". It - wouldn't be difficult to add this ability though. - - My first idea would be to add a set of conditional directives. - Let's call them "writer-is" and "writer-is-not" for discussion - purposes (don't worry about implemention details). We might - have:: - - .. writer-is:: text-only - - :: - - +----------+ - | SNMP | - +----------+ - | UDP | - +----------+ - | IP | - +----------+ - | Ethernet | - +----------+ - - .. writer-is:: pdf - - .. figure:: protocol_stack.eps - - .. writer-is-not:: text-only pdf - - .. figure:: protocol_stack.png - - This could be an interface to the Filter transform - (docutils.transforms.components.Filter). - - The ideas in `adaptable file extensions`_ above may also be - applicable here. - - Here's an example of a directive that could produce multiple - outputs (*both* raw troff pass-through *and* a GIF, for example) - and allow the Writer to select. :: - - .. eqn:: - - .EQ - delim %% - .EN - %sum from i=o to inf c sup i~=~lim from {m -> inf} - sum from i=0 to m sup i% - .EQ - delim off - .EN - - - _`body.qa` (directive a.k.a. "faq", "questions"): Questions & - Answers. Implement as a generic two-column marked list? As a - standalone (non-directive) construct? (Is the markup ambiguous?) - Add support to parts.contents. - - New elements would be required. Perhaps:: - - <!ELEMENT question_list (question_list_item+)> - <!ATTLIST question_list - numbering (none | local | global) - #IMPLIED - start NUMBER #IMPLIED> - <!ELEMENT question_list_item (question, answer*)> - <!ELEMENT question %text.model;> - <!ELEMENT answer (%body.elements;)+> - - Originally I thought of implementing a Q&A list with special - syntax:: - - Q: What am I? - - A: You are a question-and-answer - list. - - Q: What are you? - - A: I am the omniscient "we". - - Where each "Q" and "A" could also be numbered (e.g., "Q1"). - However, a simple enumerated or bulleted list will do just fine - for syntax. A directive could treat the list specially; e.g. the - first paragraph could be treated as a question, the remainder as - the answer (multiple answers could be represented by nested - lists). Without special syntax, this directive becomes low - priority. - - - _`body.example`: Examples; suggested by Simon Hefti. Semantics as - per Docbook's "example"; admonition-style, numbered, reference, - with a caption/title. - - - _`body.index`: Index targets. - - Were I writing a book with an index, I guess I'd need two - different kinds of index targets: inline/implicit and - out-of-line/explicit. For example:: - - In this `paragraph`:index:, several words are being - `marked`:index: inline as implicit `index`:index: - entries. - - .. index:: markup - .. index:: syntax - - The explicit index directives above would refer to - this paragraph. - - The words "paragraph", "marked", and "index" would become index - entries pointing at the words in the first paragraph. The index - entry words appear verbatim in the text. (Don't worry about the - ugly ":index:" part; if indexing is the only/main application of - interpreted text in your documents, it can be implicit and - omitted.) The two directives provide manual indexing, where the - index entry words ("markup" and "syntax") do not appear in the - main text. We could combine the two directives into one:: - - .. index:: markup; syntax - - Semicolons instead of commas because commas could *be* part of the - index target, like:: - - .. index:: van Rossum, Guido - - Another reason for index directives is because other inline markup - wouldn't be possible within inline index targets. - - Sometimes index entries have multiple levels. Given:: - - .. index:: statement syntax: expression statements - - In a hypothetical index, combined with other entries, it might - look like this:: - - statement syntax - expression statements ..... 56 - assignment ................ 57 - simple statements ......... 58 - compound statements ....... 60 - - Inline multi-level index targets could be done too. Perhaps - something like:: - - When dealing with `expression statements <statement syntax:>`, - we must remember ... - - The opposite sense could also be possible:: - - When dealing with `index entries <:multi-level>`, there are - many permutations to consider. - - Also "see / see also" index entries. - - Given:: - - Here's a paragraph. - - .. index:: paragraph - - (The "index" directive above actually targets the *preceding* - object.) The directive should produce something like this XML:: - - <paragraph> - <index_entry text="paragraph"/> - Here's a paragraph. - </paragraph> - - This kind of content model would also allow true inline - index-entries:: - - Here's a `paragraph`:index:. - - If the "index" role were the default for the application, it could be - dropped:: - - Here's a `paragraph`. - - Both of these would result in this XML:: - - <paragraph> - Here's a <index_entry>paragraph</index_entry>. - </paragraph> - - - _`body.literal`: Literal block, possibly "formal" (see `object - numbering and object references`_ above). Possible options: - - - "highlight" a range of lines - - "number" or "line-numbers" - - See docutils-users 2003-03-03. - - - _`body.sidebar`: Add to the already implemented directive. Allow - internal section structure, with adornment styles independent of - the main document. - - - _`colorize.python`: Colorize Python code. Fine for HTML output, - but what about other formats? Revert to a literal block? Do we - need some kind of "alternate" mechanism? Perhaps use a "pending" - transform, which could switch its output based on the "format" in - use. Use a factory function "transformFF()" which returns either - "HTMLTransform()" instance or "GenericTransform" instance? - - If we take a Python-to-HTML pretty-printer and make it output a - Docutils internal doctree (as per nodes.py) instead of HTML, then - each output format's stylesheet (or equivalent) mechanism could - take care of the rest. The pretty-printer code could turn this - doctree fragment:: - - <literal_block xml:space="preserve"> - print 'This is Python code.' - for i in range(10): - print i - </literal_block> - - into something like this ("</>" is end-tag shorthand):: - - <literal_block xml:space="preserve" class="python"> - <keyword>print</> <string>'This is Python code.'</> - <keyword>for</> <identifier>i</> <keyword - >in</> <expression>range(10)</>: - <keyword>print</> <expression>i</> - </literal_block> - - But I'm leaning toward adding a single new general-purpose - element, "phrase", equivalent to HTML's <span>. Here's the - example rewritten using the generic "phrase":: - - <literal_block xml:space="preserve" class="python"> - <phrase class="keyword">print</> <phrase - class="string">'This is Python code.'</> - <phrase class="keyword">for</> <phrase - class="identifier">i</> <phrase class="keyword">in</> <phrase - class="expression">range(10)</>: - <phrase class="keyword">print</> <phrase - class="expression">i</> - </literal_block> - - It's more verbose but more easily extensible and more appropriate - for the case at hand. It allows us to edit style sheets to add - support for new formats, not the Docutils code itself. - - Perhaps a single directive with a format parameter would be - better:: - - .. colorize:: python - - print 'This is Python code.' - for i in range(10): - print i - - But directives can have synonyms for convenience. "format:: - python" was suggested, but "format" seems too generic. - - - _`text.date`: Datestamp. For substitutions. The directive could - be followed by a formatting string, using strftime codes. Default - is "%Y-%m-%d" (ISO 8601 date), but time fields can also be used. - - - Combined with the "include" directive, implement canned macros? - E.g.:: - - .. include:: <macros> - - Today's date is |date|. - - Where "macros" contains ``.. |date| date::``, among others. - - - _`text.time`: Timestamp. For substitutions. Shortcut for - ``.. date:: %H:%M``. Date fields can also be used. - - - _`pysource.usage`: Extract a usage message from the program, - either by running it at the command line with a ``--help`` option - or through an exposed API. [Suggestion for Optik.] - - -Interpreted Text -```````````````` - -Interpreted text is entirely a reStructuredText markup construct, a -way to get around built-in limitations of the medium. Some roles are -intended to introduce new doctree elements, such as "title-reference". -Others are merely convenience features, like "RFC". - -All supported interpreted text roles must be known by the Parser. -Adding a new role often involves adding a new element to the DTD and -may require extensive support, therefore such additions should be well -thought-out. There should be a limited number of roles. - -The only place where no limit is placed on variation is at the start, -at the Reader/Parser interface. Transforms are inserted by the Reader -into the Transformer's queue, where non-standard elements are -converted. Once past the Transformer, no variation from the standard -Docutils doctree is possible. - -An example is the Python Source Reader, which will use interpreted -text extensively. The default role will be "Python identifier", which -will be further interpreted by namespace context into <class>, -<method>, <module>, <attribute>, etc. elements (see -spec/pysource.dtd), which will be transformed into standard hyperlink -references, which will be processed by the various Writers. No Writer -will need to have any knowledge of the Python-Reader origin of these -elements. - -* @@@ Add a test for language mappings of roles. - -* Alan Jaffray suggested (and I agree) that it would be sensible to: - - - have a directive and/or command-line option to specify a default - role for interpreted text - - allow the reST processor to take an argument for the default role - (this will be subsumed by the above via the runtime settings - mechanism) - - issue a warning when processing documents with no default role - which contain interpreted text with no explicitly specified role - (there will always be a default role, so this won't happen) - -* Add a directive establishing a mapping of interpreted text role - aliases? A set of default roles (index, acronym, etc.) could exist, - and the directive could assign abbreviations (i, a, etc.) or other - alternatives. - -* Add explicit interpreted text roles for the rest of the implicit - inline markup constructs: named-reference, anonymous-reference, - footnote-reference, citation-reference, substitution-reference, - target, uri-riference (& synonyms). - -* Add directives for each role as well? This would allow indirect - nested markup:: - - This text contains |nested inline markup|. - - .. |nested inline markup| emphasis:: - - nested ``inline`` markup - -* Add document-local _`role bindings`, associating directives with - roles? :: - - ``She wore ribbons in her hair and it lay with streaks of - grey``:rewrite: - - .. :rewrite: class:: rewrite - - The syntax is similar to that of substitution declarations, and the - directive/role association may resolve implementation issues. The - semantics, ramifications, and implementation details do need to be - worked out though. Syntax idea from Jeffrey C. Jacobs. - - The example above would implement the "rewrite" role as adding a - ``class="rewrite"`` attribute to the interpreted text ("inline" - element). The stylesheet would then pick up on the "class" - attribute to do the actual formatting. - - The same thing could be done with a directive, albeit a bit more - verbosely:: - - .. role:: rewrite - :class: rewrite - - The advantage of the new syntax would be flexibility. Uses other - than "class" may present themselves. - -* Perhaps a "role" directive can modify existing roles with - attributes? :: - - .. :api-ti: role:: api - :base: twisted.internet - - To start the reactor, use the :api-ti:`reactor.run` method. To - stop it, use :api-ti:`reactor.stop`. - -* Implement roles: - - - "acronym" and "abbreviation": Associate the full text with a short - form. Jason Diamond's description: - - I want to translate ```reST`:acronym:`` into ``<acronym - title='reStructuredText'>reST</acronym>``. The value of the - title attribute has to be defined out-of-band since you can't - parameterize interpreted text. Right now I have them in a - separate file but I'm experimenting with creating a directive - that will use some form of reST syntax to let you define them. - - Should Docutils complain about undefined acronyms or - abbreviations? - - What to do if there are multiple definitions? How to - differentiate between CSS (Content Scrambling System) and CSS - (Cascading Style Sheets) in a single document? - - How to define the full text? Possibilities: - - 1. With a directive and a definition list? :: - - .. acronyms:: - - reST - reStructuredText - DPS - Docstring Processing System - - Would this list remain in the document as a glossary, or would - it simply build an internal lookup table? A "glossary" - directive could be used to make the intention clear. - Acronyms/abbreviations and glossaries could work together. - - Then again, a glossary could be formed by gathering individual - definitions from around the document. - - 2. Some kind of `inline parameter syntax`__? :: - - `reST <reStructuredText>`:acronym: is `WYSIWYG <what you - see is what you get>`:acronym: plaintext markup. - - __ rst/alternatives.html#parameterized-interpreted-text - - 3. A combination of 1 & 2? - - The multiple definitions issue could be handled by establishing - rules of priority. For example, directive-based lookup tables - have highest priority, followed by the first inline definition. - Multiple definitions in directive-based lookup tables would - trigger warnings, similar to the rules of `implicit hyperlink - targets`__. - - __ rst/reStructuredText.html#implicit-hyperlink-targets - - - "annotation": The equivalent of the HTML "title" attribute. This - is secondary information that may "pop up" when the pointer hovers - over the main text. A corresponding directive would be required - to associate annotations with the original text (by name, or - positionally as in anonymous targets?). - - - "figure", "table", "listing", "chapter", "page", etc: See `object - numbering and object references`_ above. - - - "term"?: Unfamiliar or specialized terminology. - - - "glossary-term": This would establish a link to a glossary. It - would require an associated "glossary-entry" directive, whose - contents could be a definition list:: - - .. glossary-entry:: - - term1 - definition1 - term2 - definition2 - - This would allow entries to be defined anywhere in the document, - and collected (via a "glossary" directive perhaps) at one point. - - -Unimplemented Transforms ------------------------- - -Footnote & Citation Gathering -````````````````````````````` - -Collect and move footnotes & citations to the end of a document. -(Separate transforms.) - - -Hyperlink Target Gathering -`````````````````````````` - -It probably comes in two phases, because in a Python context we need -to *resolve* them on a per-docstring basis [do we? --DG], but if the -user is trying to do the callout form of presentation, they would -then want to group them all at the end of the document. - - -Reference Merging -````````````````` - -When merging two or more subdocuments (such as docstrings), -conflicting references may need to be resolved. There may be: - -* duplicate reference and/or substitution names that need to be made - unique; and/or -* duplicate footnote numbers that need to be renumbered. - -Should this be done before or after reference-resolving transforms -are applied? What about references from within one subdocument to -inside another? - - -Document Splitting -`````````````````` - -If the processed document is written to multiple files (possibly in a -directory tree), it will need to be split up. Internal references -will have to be adjusted. - -(HTML only? Initially, yes. Eventually, anything should be -splittable.) - -Idea: insert a "split here" attribute into the root element of each -split-out document, containing the path/filename. The Output object -will recognize this attribute and split out the files accordingly. -Must allow for common headers & footers, prev/next, breadcrumbs, etc. - - -Navigation -`````````` - -If a document is split up, each segment will need navigation links: -parent, children (small TOC), previous (preorder), next (preorder). -Part of `Document Splitting`_? - - -List of System Messages -``````````````````````` - -The ``system_message`` elements are inserted into the document tree, -adjacent to the problems themselves where possible. Some (those -generated post-parse) are kept until later, in ``document.messages``, -and added as a special final section, "Docutils System Messages". - -Docutils could be made to generate hyperlinks to all known -system_messages and add them to the document, perhaps to the end of -the "Docutils System Messages" section. - -Fred L. Drake, Jr. wrote: - - I'd like to propose that both parse- and transformation-time - messages are included in the "Docutils System Messages" section. - If there are no objections, I can make the change. - -The advantage of the current way of doing things is that parse-time -system messages don't require a transform; they're already in the -document. This is valuable for testing (unit tests, -tools/quicktest.py). So if we do decide to make a change, I think the -insertion of parse-time system messages ought to remain as-is and the -Messages transform ought to move all parse-time system messages -(remove from their originally inserted positions, insert in System -Messages section). - - -Filtering System Messages -````````````````````````` - -Currently the Writer is responsible for filtering out system messages -that are below the current threshold. Should the filtering be in a -separate transform? It would then happen regardless of the writer -used. Perhaps some writers don't want system messages filtered? - - -Others -`````` - -Index - - -HTML Writer ------------ - -* @@ Construct a _`templating system`, as in ht2html/yaptu, using - directives and substitutions for dynamic stuff. Or a specialized - writer to generate .ht & links.h files for ht2html? - -* Add a setting (or another writer) which produces just the contents - of the <body> element. What about the rest; it should be accessible - somehow, especially the docinfo fields. Part of the ht2html - implementation? Generic component output? - - I think a separate writer which inherits from html4css1.py would be - a good start. An "inline" or body-only HTML writer has to omit some - of the information given by the full HTML writer. Some applications - won't need this information, but others will; they'll want to deal - with it in different ways. I envision such a writer returning a set - of values: body html, and everything else (metadata). Perhaps a - tuple of this form:: - - (body_html, {'title': value, - 'subtitle': value, - 'docinfo': (tuple of (name, value) pairs), - etc.}) - - By having a separate writer, a different return data structure is - possible. We may need to add support to all of docutils to allow - for this variant output. Should the metadata values be simple text - strings, or HTML snippets (they may contain markup), or both? There - may be other issues to be worked out. - -* Add more support for <link> elements, especially for navigation - bars. - -* Make the admonitions more distinctive and varied. - -* Make the "class" attributes optional? Implies no stylesheet? - -* Add a setting to customize the header tag levels, i.e. <h1>. - -* Base list compaction on the spacing of source list? Would require - parser support. (Idea: fantasai, 16 Dec 2002, doc-sig.) - -* Add a tool tip ("title" attribute?) to footnote back-links - identifying them as such. Text in Docutils language module. - -* Add an option to restrict the document title to <head><title> only, - and not include it in the document body. Subtitle? - - -Front-End Tools ---------------- - -* What about if we don't know which Reader and/or Writer we are - going to use? If the Reader/Writer is specified on the - command-line? (Will this ever happen?) - - Perhaps have different types of front ends: - - a) _`Fully qualified`: Reader and Writer are hard-coded into the - front end (e.g. ``pep2html [options]``, ``pysource2pdf - [options]``). - - b) _`Partially qualified`: Reader is hard-coded, and the Writer is - specified a sub-command (e.g. ``pep2 html [options]``, - ``pysource2 pdf [options]``). The Writer is known before option - processing happens, allowing the OptionParser to be built - dynamically. Alternatively, the Writer could be hard-coded and - the Reader specified as a sub-command (e.g. ``htmlfrom pep - [options]``). - - c) _`Unqualified`: Reader and Writer are specified as subcommands - (e.g. ``publish pep html [options]``, ``publish pysource pdf - [options]``). A single front end would be sufficient, but - probably only useful for testing purposes. - - d) _`Dynamic`: Reader and/or Writer are specified by options, with - defaults if unspecified (e.g. ``publish --writer pdf - [options]``). Is this possible? The option parser would have - to be told about new options it needs to handle, on the fly. - Component-specific options would have to be specified *after* - the component-specifying option. - - Allow common options before subcommands, as in CVS? Or group all - options together? In the case of the `fully qualified`_ - front ends, all the options will have to be grouped together - anyway, so there's no advantage (we can't use it to avoid - conflicts) to splitting common and component-specific options - apart. - -* Parameterize help text & defaults somehow? Perhaps a callback? Or - initialize ``settings_spec`` in ``__init__`` or ``init_options``? - -* Disable common options that don't apply? - -* Implement the "sectnum" directive as a command-line option also? - -* @@@ Come up with better names for the most-used tools, and install - them as scripts. - -* Create a single dynamic_ or unqualified_ front end that can be - installed? - - -Project Policies -================ - -A few quotes sum up the policies of the Docutils project. The IETF's -classic credo (by MIT professor Dave Clark) is an ideal we can aspire -to: - - We reject: kings, presidents, and voting. We believe in: rough - consensus and running code. - -As architect, chief cook and bottle-washer, I currently function as -BDFN (Benevolent Dictator For Now), but I would happily abdicate the -throne given a suitable candidate. Any takers? - -Eric S. Raymond, anthropologist of the hacker subculture, writes in -his essay `The Magic Cauldron`_: - - The number of contributors [to] projects is strongly and inversely - correlated with the number of hoops each project makes a user go - through to contribute. - - .. _The Magic Cauldron: - http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/writings/magic-cauldron/ - -Therefore, we will endeavour to keep the barrier to entry as low as -possible. The policies below should not be thought of as barriers, -but merely as a codification of experience to date. These are "best -practices", not absolutes; exceptions are expected, tolerated, and -used as a source of improvement. - -As for control issues, Emmett Plant (CEO of the Xiph.org Foundation, -originators of Ogg Vorbis) put it well when he said: - - Open source dictates that you lose a certain amount of control - over your codebase, and that's okay with us. - - -Python Coding Conventions -------------------------- - -These are the conventions I use in my own code. Contributed code will -not be refused merely because it does not strictly adhere to these -conditions; as long as it's internally consistent, clean, and correct, -it probably will be accepted. But don't be surprised if the -"offending" code gets fiddled over time to conform to these -conventions. - -The Docutils project shall follow the generic coding conventions as -specified in the `Style Guide for Python Code`_ and `Docstring -Conventions`_ PEPs, with the following clarifications (from most to -least important): - -* 4 spaces per indentation level. No tabs. Indent continuation lines - according to the Emacs python-mode standard. - -* Use only ASCII, no 8-bit strings. See `Docutils - Internationalization`_. - -* No one-liner compound statements (i.e., no ``if x: return``: use two - lines & indentation), except for degenerate class or method - definitions (i.e., ``class X: pass`` is O.K.). - -* Lines should be no more than 78 characters long. - -* Use "StudlyCaps" for class names (except for element classes in - docutils.nodes). - -* Use "lowercase" or "lowercase_with_underscores" for function, - method, and variable names. For short names, maximum two words, - joined lowercase may be used (e.g. "tagname"). For long names with - three or more words, or where it's hard to parse the split between - two words, use lowercase_with_underscores (e.g., - "note_explicit_target", "explicit_target"). If in doubt, use - underscores. - -* Use 'single quotes' for string literals, and """triple double - quotes""" for docstrings. - -.. _Style Guide for Python Code: - http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0008.html -.. _Docstring Conventions: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0257.html -.. _Docutils Internationalization: howto/i18n.html#python-code - - -Copyrights and Licensing ------------------------- - -The majority of the Docutils project code and documentation has been -placed in the public domain. Unless clearly and explicitly indicated -otherwise, any patches (modifications to existing files) submitted to -the project for inclusion (via CVS, SourceForge trackers, mailing -lists, or private email) are assumed to be in the public domain as -well. - -Any new files contributed to the project should clearly state their -intentions regarding copyright, in one of the following ways: - -* Public domain (preferred): include the statement "This - module/document has been placed in the public domain." - -* Copyright & open source license: include a copyright notice, along - with either an embedded license statement, a reference to an - accompanying license file, or a license URL. - -One of the goals of the Docutils project, once complete, is to be -incorporated into the Python standard library. At that time copyright -of the Docutils code will be assumed by or transferred to the Python -Software Foundation (PSF), and will be released under Python's -license. If the copyright/license option is chosen for new files, the -license should be compatible with Python's current license, and the -author(s) of the files should be willing to assign copyright to the -PSF. - - -CVS Check-ins -------------- - -Instructions for CVS access can be found at -http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=38414. Anyone can access the CVS -repository anonymously. Only project developers can make changes. - -Unless you really *really* know what you're doing, please limit your -CVS commands to ``cvs checkout``, ``cvs commit/checkin``, and ``cvs -add``. Do **NOT** use ``cvs import`` unless you're absolutely sure -you know what you're doing. Even then, grab a copy of the `nightly -CVS tarball <http://cvs.sf.net/cvstarballs/docutils-cvsroot.tar.gz>`_, -set it up on your own machine, and experiment *there* first. - -The `main source tree`_ ("docutils" CVS module) should always be kept -in a stable state (usable and as problem-free as possible). The -Docutils project shall follow the `Python Check-in Policies`_ (as -applicable), with particular emphasis as follows: - -* Before checking in any changes, run the entire Docutils test suite - to be sure that you haven't broken anything. From a shell:: - - cd docutils/test - alltests.py - -* When adding new functionality (or fixing bugs), be sure to add test - cases to the test suite. Practise test-first programming; it's fun, - it's addictive, and it works! - -* The `sandbox CVS directory`_ is the place to put new, incomplete or - experimental code. See `Additions to Docutils`_ and `The Sandbox`_ - below. - -* For bugs or omissions that have an obvious fix and can't possibly - mess up anything else, go right ahead and check it in directly. - -* For larger changes, use your best judgement. If you're unsure of - the impact, or feel that you require advice or approval, patches or - `the sandbox`_ are the way to go. - -Docutils will pursue an open and trusting policy for as long as -possible, and deal with any abberations if (and hopefully not when) -they happen. I'd rather see a torrent of loose contributions than -just a trickle of perfect-as-they-stand changes. The occasional -mistake is easy to fix. That's what CVS is for. - -.. _main source tree: - http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/docutils/docutils/ -.. _Python Check-in Policies: http://www.python.org/dev/tools.html -.. _sandbox CVS directory: - http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/docutils/sandbox/ - - -Additions to Docutils -````````````````````` - -Additions to the project, such as new components, should be developed -in the `sandbox CVS directory`_ until they're in `good shape`_, -usable_, and `reasonably complete`_. Adding to the `main source -tree`_ or to a `parallel project`_ implies a commitment to the -Docutils user community. - -* Why the sandbox? - - Developers should be able to try out new components while they're - being developed for addition to main source tree. See `The - Sandbox`_ below. - -* _`Good shape` means that the component code is clean, readable, and - free of junk code (unused legacy code; by analogy with "junk DNA"). - -* _`Usable` means that the code does what it claims to do. An "XYZ - Writer" should produce reasonable XYZ. - -* _`Reasonably complete` means that the code must handle all input. - Here "handle" means that no input can cause the code to fail (cause - an exception, or silently and incorrectly produce nothing). - "Reasonably complete" does not mean "finished" (no work left to be - done). For example, a writer must handle every standard element - from the Docutils document model; for unimplemented elements, it - must *at the very least* warn that "Output for element X is not yet - implemented in writer Y". - -If you really want to check code into the main source tree, you can, -but you'll have to be prepared to work on it intensively and complete -it quickly. People will start to use it and they will expect it to -work! If there are any issues with your code, or if you only have -time for gradual development, you should put it in the sandbox first. -It's easy to move code over to the main source tree once it's closer -to completion. - - -Mailing Lists -------------- - -Developers should subscribe to the mailing lists: - -* The `Python Documentation Special Interest Group (Doc-SIG) mailing - list`__ for high-level discussions on syntax, strategy, and design - (email to Doc-SIG@python.org). -* Docutils-develop__, for implementation discussions - (email to docutils-develop@lists.sourceforge.net). -* Docutils-checkins__, to monitor CVS checkin messages (automatically - generated; normally read-only). - -__ http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/doc-sig -__ http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/docutils-develop -__ http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/docutils-checkins - - -The Sandbox ------------ - -The `sandbox CVS directory`_ is a place to play around, to try out and -share ideas. It's a part of the CVS repository but it isn't -distributed as part of Docutils releases. Feel free to check in code -to the CVS sandbox; that way people can try it out but you won't have -to worry about it working 100% error-free, as is the goal of the `main -source tree`_. Each developer who wants to play in the sandbox should -create their own subdirectory (suggested name: SourceForge ID, -nickname, or given name + family initial). It's OK to make a mess! -But please, play nice. - -Please update the `sandbox README`_ file with links and a brief -description of your work. - -In order to minimize the work necessary for others to install and try -out new, experimental components, the following sandbox directory -structure is recommended:: - - sandbox/ - userid/ - component_name/ # A verbose name is best. - README.txt # Please explain requirements, - # purpose/goals, and usage. - docs/ - ... - component.py # The component is a single module. - # *OR* (but *not* both) - component/ # The component is a package. - __init__.py # Contains the Reader/Writer class. - other1.py # Other modules and data files used - data.txt # by this component. - ... - test/ # Test suite. - ... - tools/ # For front ends etc. - ... - setup.py # Use Distutils to install the component - # code and tools/ files into the right - # places in Docutils. - -Some sandbox projects are destined to become Docutils components once -completed. Others, such as add-ons to Docutils or applications of -Docutils, graduate to become `parallel projects`_. - -.. _sandbox README: http://docutils.sf.net/sandbox/README.html - - -.. _parallel project: - -Parallel Projects ------------------ - -Parallel projects contain useful code that is not central to the -functioning of Docutils. Examples are specialized add-ons or -plug-ins, and applications of Docutils. They use Docutils, but -Docutils does not require their presence to function. - -An official parallel project will have its own CVS directory beside -(or parallel to) the main Docutils CVS directory. It can have its own -web page in the docutils.sourceforge.net domain, its own file releases -and downloadable CVS snapshots, and even a mailing list if that proves -useful. However, an official parallel project has implications: it is -expected to be maintained and continue to work with changes to the -core Docutils. - -A parallel project requires a project leader, who must commit to -coordinate and maintain the implementation: - -* Answer questions from users and developers. -* Review suggestions, bug reports, and patches. -* Monitor changes and ensure the quality of the code and - documentation. -* Coordinate with Docutils to ensure interoperability. -* Put together official project releases. - -Of course, related projects may be created independently of Docutils. -The advantage of a parallel project is that the SourceForge -environment and the developer and user communities are already -established. Core Docutils developers are available for consultation -and may contribute to the parallel project. It's easier to keep the -projects in sync when there are changes made to the core Docutils -code. - - -Release Procedure -================= - -1. Edit the version number in the following files: - - * docutils: - - - setup.py - - HISTORY.txt - - docutils/__init__.py - - * web: index.txt - -2. Run the test suite: ``cd test ; alltests.py``. - -3. Isolate from outside influence: - - (a) Remove the old installation from site-packages (including - roman.py, and optparse.py, textwrap.py for pre-2.3 - installations). - - (b) Clear/unset the PYTHONPATH environment variable. - -4. Create the release tarball: - - (a) Create a new empty directory and ``cd`` into it. - - (b) Get a clean snapshot of the CVS files:: - - cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sf.net:/cvsroot/docutils \ - export -rHEAD docutils - - (c) Use Distutils to create the release tarball:: - - cd docutils - python setup.py sdist - -5. Expand and install the release tarball **in isolation** (as per - step 3 above): - - (a) Expand the tarball in a new location, not over any existing - files. - - (b) Install from expanded directory:: - - cd docutils-X.Y - python setup.py install - - The "install" command may require root permissions. - -6. Run the test suite from the expanded archive directory: ``cd test ; - alltests.py``. - -7. Run ``cd tools ; buildhtml.py ..`` to confirm that there are no - unexpected issues with the docs. - -8. Upload the release tarball:: - - $ ftp upload.sourceforge.net - Connected to osdn.dl.sourceforge.net. - ... - Name (upload.sourceforge.net:david): anonymous - 331 Anonymous login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password. - Password: - ... - 230 Anonymous access granted, restrictions apply. - ftp> bin - 200 Type set to I. - ftp> cd /incoming - 250 CWD command successful. - ftp> put filename - -9. Log in to the SourceForge web interface. - -10. Access the file release system on SourceForge (Admin interface). - Fill in the fields: - - :Package ID: docutils - :Release Name: <use release number only, e.g. 0.3> - :Release Date: <today's date> - :Status: Active - :File Name: <select the file just uploaded> - :File Type: Source .gz - :Processor Type: Platform-Independent - :Release Notes: <insert README.txt file here> - :Change Log: <insert summary from announcement> - - Also check the "Preserve my pre-formatted text" box. - -11. Wait up to 30 minutes for the file to become available on - SourceForge. - -12. Download the release tarball and verify its integrity by walking - through an installation, as outlined above (steps 5, 6, & 7). - -13. Add a SourceForge News item, with title "Docutils 0.x released" - and containing the release tarball's download URL. - -14. Send announcement email to: - - * docutils-develop@lists.sourceforge.net - * docutils-users@lists.sourceforge.net - * doc-sig@python.org - * python-list@python.org - * python-announce@python.org - -15. Register - - (a) with PyPI (Fill in details. ``python setup.py register``? - How to log in?) - (b) with Vaults of Parnassus - (c) with FreshMeat? - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/howto/i18n.txt b/docutils/docs/howto/i18n.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 11a8d13bd..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/howto/i18n.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,178 +0,0 @@ -================================ - Docutils_ Internationalization -================================ - -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Date: $Date$ -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -.. contents:: - - -This document describes the internationalization facilities of the -Docutils_ project. `Introduction to i18n`_ by Tomohiro KUBOTA is a -good general reference. "Internationalization" is often abbreviated -as "i18n": "i" + 18 letters + "n". - -.. Note:: - - The i18n facilities of Docutils should be considered a "first - draft". They work so far, but improvements are welcome. - Specifically, standard i18n facilities like "gettext" have yet to - be explored. - -Docutils is designed to work flexibly with text in multiple languages -(one language at a time). Language-specific features are (or should -be [#]_) fully parameterized. To enable a new language, two modules -have to be added to the project: one for Docutils itself (the -`Docutils Language Module`_) and one for the reStructuredText parser -(the `reStructuredText Language Module`_). - -.. [#] If anything in Docutils is insufficiently parameterized, it - should be considered a bug. Please report bugs to the Docutils - project bug tracker on SourceForge at - http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=38414&atid=422030. - -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ -.. _Introduction to i18n: - http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/intro-i18n/ - - -Language Module Names -===================== - -Language modules are named using a case-insensitive language -identifier as defined in `RFC 1766`_. A typical language identifier -consists of a 2-letter language code from `ISO 639`_ (3-letter codes -can be used if no 2-letter code exists; RFC 1766 is currently being -revised to allow 3-letter codes). The language identifier can have an -optional subtag, typically for variations based on country (from `ISO -3166`_ 2-letter country codes). If no language identifier is -specified, the default is "en" for English. Examples of module names -include ``en.py``, ``fr.py``, ``ja.py``, and ``pt-br.py``. - -.. _RFC 1766: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1766.html -.. _ISO 639: http://lcweb.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/englangn.html -.. _ISO 3166: http://www.iso.ch/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/ - 02iso-3166-code-lists/index.html - - -Python Code -=========== - -All Python code in Docutils will be ASCII-only. In language modules, -Unicode-escapes will have to be used for non-ASCII characters. -Although it may be possible for some developers to store non-ASCII -characters directly in strings, it will cause problems for other -developers whose locales are set up differently. - -`PEP 263`_ introduces source code encodings to Python modules, -implemented beginning in Python 2.3. Until PEP 263 is fully -implemented as a well-established convention, proven robust in daily -use, and the tools (editors, CVS, email, etc.) recognize this -convention, Docutils shall remain conservative. - -As mentioned in the note above, developers are invited to explore -"gettext" and other i18n technologies. - -.. _PEP 263: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.html - - -Docutils Language Module -======================== - -Modules in ``docutils/languages`` contain language mappings for -markup-independent language-specific features of Docutils. To make a -new language module, just copy the ``en.py`` file, rename it with the -code for your language (see `Language Module Names`_ above), and -translate the terms as described below. - -Each Docutils language module contains three module attributes: - -``labels`` - This is a mapping of node class names to language-dependent - boilerplate label text. The label text is used by Writer - components when they encounter document tree elements whose class - names are the mapping keys. - - The entry values (*not* the keys) should be translated to the - target language. - -``bibliographic_fields`` - This is a mapping of language-dependent field names (converted to - lower case) to canonical field names (keys of - ``DocInfo.biblio_notes`` in ``docutils.transforms.frontmatter``). - It is used when transforming bibliographic fields. - - The keys should be translated to the target language. - -``author_separators`` - This is a list of strings used to parse the 'Authors' - bibliographic field. They separate individual authors' names, and - are tried in order (i.e., earlier items take priority, and the - first item that matches wins). The English-language module - defines them as ``[';', ',']``; semi-colons can be used to - separate names like "Arthur Pewtie, Esq.". - - Most languages won't have to "translate" this list. - - -reStructuredText Language Module -================================ - -Modules in ``docutils/parsers/rst/languages`` contain language -mappings for language-specific features of the reStructuredText -parser. To make a new language module, just copy the ``en.py`` file, -rename it with the code for your language (see `Language Module -Names`_ above), and translate the terms as described below. - -Each reStructuredText language module contains just one module -attribute: - -``directives`` - This is a mapping from language-dependent directive names to - canonical directive names. The canonical directive names are - registered in ``docutils/parsers/rst/directives/__init__.py``, in - ``_directive_registry``. - - The keys should be translated to the target language. Synonyms - (multiple keys with the same values) are allowed; this is useful - for abbreviations. - -``roles`` - This is a mapping language-dependent role names to canonical role - names for interpreted text. The canonical directive names are - registered in ``docutils/parsers/rst/states.py``, in - ``Inliner._interpreted_roles`` (this may change). - - The keys should be translated to the target language. Synonyms - (multiple keys with the same values) are allowed; this is useful - for abbreviations. - - -Testing the Language Modules -============================ - -Whenever a new language module is added or an existing one modified, -the unit tests should be run. The test modules can be found in the -docutils/test directory from CVS_ or from the `latest CVS snapshot`_. - -The ``test_language.py`` module can be run as a script. With no -arguments, it will test all language modules. With one or more -language codes, it will test just those languages. For example:: - - $ python test_language.py en - .. - ---------------------------------------- - Ran 2 tests in 0.095s - - OK - -Use the "alltests.py" script to run all test modules, exhaustively -testing the parser and other parts of the Docutils system. - -.. _CVS: http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=38414 -.. _latest CVS snapshot: http://docutils.sf.net/docutils-snapshot.tgz diff --git a/docutils/docs/howto/rst-directives.txt b/docutils/docs/howto/rst-directives.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 377ca31ad..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/howto/rst-directives.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,348 +0,0 @@ -====================================== - Creating reStructuredText Directives -====================================== - -:Authors: Dethe Elza, David Goodger -:Contact: delza@enfoldingsystems.com -:Date: $Date$ -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -Directives are the primary extension mechanism of reStructuredText. -This document aims to make the creation of new directives as easy and -understandable as possible. There are only a couple of -reStructuredText-specific features the developer needs to know to -create a basic directive. - -The syntax of directives is detailed in the `reStructuredText Markup -Specification`_, and standard directives are described in -`reStructuredText Directives`_. - -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: - ../rst/reStructuredText.html#directives -.. _reStructuredText Directives: ../rst/directives.html - - -.. contents:: Table of Contents - - -Define the Directive Function -============================= - -The directive function does any processing that the directive -requires. This may require the use of other parts of the -reStructuredText parser. This is where the directive actually *does* -something. - -The directive implementation itself is a callback function whose -signature is as follows:: - - def directive_fn(name, arguments, options, content, lineno, - content_offset, block_text, state, state_machine): - code... - - # Set function attributes: - directive_fn.arguments = ... - directive_fn.options = ... - direcitve_fn.content = ... - -Function attributes are described below (see `Specify Directive -Arguments, Options, and Content`_). The directive function parameters -are as follows: - -- ``name`` is the directive type or name. - -- ``arguments`` is a list of positional arguments, as specified in the - ``arguments`` function attribute. - -- ``options`` is a dictionary mapping option names to values. The - options handled by a directive function are specified in the - ``options`` function attribute. - -- ``content`` is a list of strings, the directive content. Use the - ``content`` function attribute to allow directive content. - -- ``lineno`` is the line number of the first line of the directive. - -- ``content_offset`` is the line offset of the first line of the - content from the beginning of the current input. Used when - initiating a nested parse. - -- ``block_text`` is a string containing the entire directive. Include - it as the content of a literal block in a system message if there is - a problem. - -- ``state`` is the state which called the directive function. - -- ``state_machine`` is the state machine which controls the state - which called the directive function. - -Directive functions return a list of nodes which will be inserted into -the document tree at the point where the directive was encountered. -This can be an empty list if there is nothing to insert. Directives -have no corresponding element; choose the most appropriate elements -from the existing Docutils elements. See `The Docutils Document -Tree`_ and the ``docutils.nodes`` module. - -.. _The Docutils Document Tree: ../doctree.html - - -Specify Directive Arguments, Options, and Content -================================================= - -Function attributes are interpreted by the directive parser (the -``docutils.parsers.rst.states.Body.parse_directive()`` method). If -unspecified, directive function attributes are assumed to have the -value ``None``. Three directive function attributes are recognized: - -- ``arguments``: A 3-tuple specifying the expected positional - arguments, or ``None`` if the directive has no arguments. The 3 - items in the tuple are: - - 1. The number of required arguments. - 2. The number of optional arguments. - 3. A boolean, indicating if the final argument may contain whitespace. - - Arguments are normally single whitespace-separated words. The final - argument may contain whitespace when indicated by the value 1 (True) - for the third item in the argument spec tuple. In this case, the - final argument in the ``arguments`` parameter to the directive - function will contain spaces and/or newlines, preserved from the - input text. - - If the form of the arguments is more complex, specify only one - argument (either required or optional) and indicate that final - whitespace is OK (1/True); the client code must do any - context-sensitive parsing. - -- ``options``: The option specification. ``None`` or an empty dict - implies no options to parse. - - An option specification must be defined detailing the options - available to the directive. An option spec is a mapping of option - name to conversion function; conversion functions are applied to - each option value to check validity and convert them to the expected - type. Python's built-in conversion functions are often usable for - this, such as ``int``, ``float``, and ``bool`` (included in Python - from version 2.2.1). Other useful conversion functions are included - in the ``docutils.parsers.rst.directives`` package (in the - ``__init__.py`` module): - - - ``flag``: For options with no option arguments. Checks for an - argument (raises ``ValueError`` if found), returns ``None`` for - valid flag options. - - - ``unchanged``: Returns the argument, unchanged. Raises - ``ValueError`` if no argument is found. - - - ``path``: Returns the path argument unwrapped (with newlines - removed). Raises ``ValueError`` if no argument is found or if the - path contains internal whitespace. - - - ``nonnegative_int``: Checks for a nonnegative integer argument, - and raises ``ValueError`` if not. - - A further utility function, ``choice``, is supplied to enable - options whose argument must be a member of a finite set of possible - values. A custom conversion function must be written to use it. - For example:: - - from docutils.parsers.rst import directives - - def yesno(argument): - return directives.choice(argument, ('yes', 'no')) - - For example, here is an option spec for a directive which allows two - options, "name" and "value", each with an option argument:: - - directive_fn.options = {'name': unchanged, 'value': int} - -- ``content``: A boolean; true if content is allowed. Directive - functions must handle the case where content is required but not - present in the input text (an empty content list will be supplied). - -The final step of the ``parse_directive()`` method is to call the -directive function itself. - - -Register the Directive -====================== - -Register the new directive in -``docutils/parsers/rst/directives/__init__.py``, in the -``_directive_registry`` dictionary. This allows the reStructuredText -parser to find and use the directive. - -Add an entry to ``docutils/parsers/rst/languages/en.py`` for the -directive, mapping the English name to the canonical name (both -lowercase). Usually the English name and the canonical name are the -same. - -Please check for and update any other language modules for languages -in which you are proficient. - - -Examples -======== - -For the most direct and accurate information, "Use the Source, Luke!". -All standard directives are documented in `reStructuredText -Directives`_, and the source code implementing them is located in the -``docutils/parsers/rst/directives`` package. The ``__init__.py`` -module contains a mapping of directive name to module & function name. -Several representative directives are described below. - - -Admonitions ------------ - -Admonition directives, such as "note" and "caution", are quite simple. -They have no directive arguments or options. Admonition directive -content is interpreted as ordinary reStructuredText. The directive -function simply hands off control to a generic directive function:: - - def note(*args): - return admonition(nodes.note, *args) - - attention.content = 1 - -Note that the only thing distinguishing the various admonition -directives is the element (node class) generated. In the code above, -the node class is passed as the first argument to the generic -directive function, where the actual processing takes place:: - - def admonition(node_class, name, arguments, options, content, lineno, - content_offset, block_text, state, state_machine): - text = '\n'.join(content) - admonition_node = node_class(text) - if text: - state.nested_parse(content, content_offset, admonition_node) - return [admonition_node] - else: - warning = state_machine.reporter.warning( - 'The "%s" admonition is empty; content required.' - % (name), '', - nodes.literal_block(block_text, block_text), line=lineno) - return [warning] - -Three things are noteworthy in the function above: - -1. The ``admonition_node = node_class(text)`` line creates the wrapper - element, using the class passed in from the initial (stub) - directive function. - -2. The call to ``state.nested_parse()`` is what does the actual - processing. It parses the directive content and adds any generated - elements as child elements of ``admonition_node``. - -3. If there was no directive content, a warning is generated and - returned. The call to ``state_machine.reporter.warning()`` - includes a literal block containing the entire directive text - (``block_text``) and the line (``lineno``) of the top of the - directive. - - -"image" -------- - -The "image" directive is used to insert a picture into a document. -This directive has one argument, the path to the image file, and -supports several options. There is no directive content. Here's the -image directive function:: - - def image(name, arguments, options, content, lineno, - content_offset, block_text, state, state_machine): - reference = ''.join(arguments[0].split('\n')) - if reference.find(' ') != -1: - error = state_machine.reporter.error( - 'Image URI contains whitespace.', '', - nodes.literal_block(block_text, block_text), - line=lineno) - return [error] - options['uri'] = reference - image_node = nodes.image(block_text, **options) - return [image_node] - - image.arguments = (1, 0, 1) - image.options = {'alt': directives.unchanged, - 'height': directives.nonnegative_int, - 'width': directives.nonnegative_int, - 'scale': directives.nonnegative_int, - 'align': align} - -Several things are noteworthy in the code above: - -1. The "image" directive requires a single argument, which is allowed - to contain whitespace (see the argument spec above, - ``image.arguments = (1, 0, 1)``). This is to allow for long URLs - which may span multiple lines. The first line of the ``image`` - function joins the URL, discarding any embedded newlines. Then the - result is checked for embedded spaces, which are *not* allowed. - -2. The reference is added to the ``options`` dictionary under the - "uri" key; this becomes an attribute of the ``nodes.image`` element - object. Any other attributes have already been set explicitly in - the source text. - -3. The "align" option depends on the following definitions (which - actually occur earlier in the source code):: - - align_values = ('top', 'middle', 'bottom', 'left', 'center', - 'right') - - def align(argument): - return directives.choice(argument, align_values) - - -"contents" ----------- - -The "contents" directive is used to insert an auto-generated table of -contents (TOC) into a document. It takes one optional argument, a -title for the TOC. If no title is specified, a default title is used -instead. The directive also handles several options. Here's the -code:: - - def contents(name, arguments, options, content, lineno, - content_offset, block_text, state, state_machine): - """Table of contents.""" - if arguments: - title_text = arguments[0] - text_nodes, messages = state.inline_text(title_text, lineno) - title = nodes.title(title_text, '', *text_nodes) - else: - messages = [] - title = None - pending = nodes.pending(parts.Contents, {'title': title}, - block_text) - pending.details.update(options) - state_machine.document.note_pending(pending) - return [pending] + messages - - contents.arguments = (0, 1, 1) - contents.options = {'depth': directives.nonnegative_int, - 'local': directives.flag, - 'backlinks': backlinks} - -Aspects of note include: - -1. The ``contents.arguments = (0, 1, 1)`` function attribute specifies - a single, *optional* argument. If no argument is present, the - ``arguments`` parameter to the directive function will be an empty - list. - -2. If an argument *is* present, its text is passed to - ``state.inline_text()`` for parsing. Titles may contain inline - markup, such as emphasis or inline literals. - -3. The table of contents is not generated right away. Typically, a - TOC is placed near the beginning of a document, and is a summary or - outline of the section structure of the document. The entire - document must already be processed before a summary can be made. - This directive leaves a ``nodes.pending`` placeholder element in - the document tree, marking the position of the TOC and including a - ``details`` internal attribute containing all the directive - options, effectively communicating the options forward. The actual - table of contents processing is performed by a transform, - ``docutils.transforms.parts.Contents``, after the rest of the - document has been parsed. diff --git a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0256.txt b/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0256.txt deleted file mode 100644 index bad386391..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0256.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,299 +0,0 @@ -PEP: 256 -Title: Docstring Processing System Framework -Version: $Revision$ -Last-Modified: $Date$ -Author: David Goodger <goodger@users.sourceforge.net> -Discussions-To: <doc-sig@python.org> -Status: Draft -Type: Standards Track -Content-Type: text/x-rst -Created: 01-Jun-2001 -Post-History: 13-Jun-2001 - - -Abstract -======== - -Python lends itself to inline documentation. With its built-in -docstring syntax, a limited form of `Literate Programming`_ is easy to -do in Python. However, there are no satisfactory standard tools for -extracting and processing Python docstrings. The lack of a standard -toolset is a significant gap in Python's infrastructure; this PEP aims -to fill the gap. - -The issues surrounding docstring processing have been contentious and -difficult to resolve. This PEP proposes a generic Docstring -Processing System (DPS) framework, which separates out the components -(program and conceptual), enabling the resolution of individual issues -either through consensus (one solution) or through divergence (many). -It promotes standard interfaces which will allow a variety of plug-in -components (input context readers, markup parsers, and output format -writers) to be used. - -The concepts of a DPS framework are presented independently of -implementation details. - - -Road Map to the Docstring PEPs -============================== - -There are many aspects to docstring processing. The "Docstring PEPs" -have broken up the issues in order to deal with each of them in -isolation, or as close as possible. The individual aspects and -associated PEPs are as follows: - -* Docstring syntax. PEP 287, "reStructuredText Docstring Format" - [#PEP-287]_, proposes a syntax for Python docstrings, PEPs, and - other uses. - -* Docstring semantics consist of at least two aspects: - - - Conventions: the high-level structure of docstrings. Dealt with - in PEP 257, "Docstring Conventions" [#PEP-257]_. - - - Methodology: rules for the informational content of docstrings. - Not addressed. - -* Processing mechanisms. This PEP (PEP 256) outlines the high-level - issues and specification of an abstract docstring processing system - (DPS). PEP 258, "Docutils Design Specification" [#PEP-258]_, is an - overview of the design and implementation of one DPS under - development. - -* Output styles: developers want the documentation generated from - their source code to look good, and there are many different ideas - about what that means. PEP 258 touches on "Stylist Transforms". - This aspect of docstring processing has yet to be fully explored. - -By separating out the issues, we can form consensus more easily -(smaller fights ;-), and accept divergence more readily. - - -Rationale -========= - -There are standard inline documentation systems for some other -languages. For example, Perl has POD_ ("Plain Old Documentation") and -Java has Javadoc_, but neither of these mesh with the Pythonic way. -POD syntax is very explicit, but takes after Perl in terms of -readability. Javadoc is HTML-centric; except for "``@field``" tags, -raw HTML is used for markup. There are also general tools such as -Autoduck_ and Web_ (Tangle & Weave), useful for multiple languages. - -There have been many attempts to write auto-documentation systems -for Python (not an exhaustive list): - -- Marc-Andre Lemburg's doc.py_ - -- Daniel Larsson's pythondoc_ & gendoc_ - -- Doug Hellmann's HappyDoc_ - -- Laurence Tratt's Crystal_ - -- Ka-Ping Yee's pydoc_ (pydoc.py is now part of the Python standard - library; see below) - -- Tony Ibbs' docutils_ (Tony has donated this name to the `Docutils - project`_) - -- Edward Loper's STminus_ formalization and related efforts - -These systems, each with different goals, have had varying degrees of -success. A problem with many of the above systems was over-ambition -combined with inflexibility. They provided a self-contained set of -components: a docstring extraction system, a markup parser, an -internal processing system and one or more output format writers with -a fixed style. Inevitably, one or more aspects of each system had -serious shortcomings, and they were not easily extended or modified, -preventing them from being adopted as standard tools. - -It has become clear (to this author, at least) that the "all or -nothing" approach cannot succeed, since no monolithic self-contained -system could possibly be agreed upon by all interested parties. A -modular component approach designed for extension, where components -may be multiply implemented, may be the only chance for success. -Standard inter-component APIs will make the DPS components -comprehensible without requiring detailed knowledge of the whole, -lowering the barrier for contributions, and ultimately resulting in a -rich and varied system. - -Each of the components of a docstring processing system should be -developed independently. A "best of breed" system should be chosen, -either merged from existing systems, and/or developed anew. This -system should be included in Python's standard library. - - -PyDoc & Other Existing Systems ------------------------------- - -PyDoc became part of the Python standard library as of release 2.1. -It extracts and displays docstrings from within the Python interactive -interpreter, from the shell command line, and from a GUI window into a -web browser (HTML). Although a very useful tool, PyDoc has several -deficiencies, including: - -- In the case of the GUI/HTML, except for some heuristic hyperlinking - of identifier names, no formatting of the docstrings is done. They - are presented within ``<p><small><tt>`` tags to avoid unwanted line - wrapping. Unfortunately, the result is not attractive. - -- PyDoc extracts docstrings and structural information (class - identifiers, method signatures, etc.) from imported module objects. - There are security issues involved with importing untrusted code. - Also, information from the source is lost when importing, such as - comments, "additional docstrings" (string literals in non-docstring - contexts; see PEP 258 [#PEP-258]_), and the order of definitions. - -The functionality proposed in this PEP could be added to or used by -PyDoc when serving HTML pages. The proposed docstring processing -system's functionality is much more than PyDoc needs in its current -form. Either an independent tool will be developed (which PyDoc may -or may not use), or PyDoc could be expanded to encompass this -functionality and *become* the docstring processing system (or one -such system). That decision is beyond the scope of this PEP. - -Similarly for other existing docstring processing systems, their -authors may or may not choose compatibility with this framework. -However, if this framework is accepted and adopted as the Python -standard, compatibility will become an important consideration in -these systems' future. - - -Specification -============= - -The docstring processing system framework is broken up as follows: - -1. Docstring conventions. Documents issues such as: - - - What should be documented where. - - - First line is a one-line synopsis. - - PEP 257 [#PEP-257]_ documents some of these issues. - -2. Docstring processing system design specification. Documents - issues such as: - - - High-level spec: what a DPS does. - - - Command-line interface for executable script. - - - System Python API. - - - Docstring extraction rules. - - - Readers, which encapsulate the input context. - - - Parsers. - - - Document tree: the intermediate internal data structure. The - output of the Parser and Reader, and the input to the Writer all - share the same data structure. - - - Transforms, which modify the document tree. - - - Writers for output formats. - - - Distributors, which handle output management (one file, many - files, or objects in memory). - - These issues are applicable to any docstring processing system - implementation. PEP 258 [#PEP-258]_ documents these issues. - -3. Docstring processing system implementation. - -4. Input markup specifications: docstring syntax. PEP 287 [#PEP-287]_ - proposes a standard syntax. - -5. Input parser implementations. - -6. Input context readers ("modes": Python source code, PEP, standalone - text file, email, etc.) and implementations. - -7. Stylists: certain input context readers may have associated - stylists which allow for a variety of output document styles. - -8. Output formats (HTML, XML, TeX, DocBook, info, etc.) and writer - implementations. - -Components 1, 2/3/5, and 4 are the subject of individual companion -PEPs. If there is another implementation of the framework or -syntax/parser, additional PEPs may be required. Multiple -implementations of each of components 6 and 7 will be required; the -PEP mechanism may be overkill for these components. - - -Project Web Site -================ - -A SourceForge project has been set up for this work at -http://docutils.sourceforge.net/. - - -References and Footnotes -======================== - -.. [#PEP-287] PEP 287, reStructuredText Docstring Format, Goodger - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0287.html) - -.. [#PEP-257] PEP 257, Docstring Conventions, Goodger, Van Rossum - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0257.html) - -.. [#PEP-258] PEP 258, Docutils Design Specification, Goodger - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0258.html) - -.. _Literate Programming: http://www.literateprogramming.com/ - -.. _POD: http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlpod.html - -.. _Javadoc: http://java.sun.com/j2se/javadoc/ - -.. _Autoduck: - http://www.helpmaster.com/hlp-developmentaids-autoduck.htm - -.. _Web: http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/cweb.html - -.. _doc.py: - http://www.lemburg.com/files/python/SoftwareDescriptions.html#doc.py - -.. _pythondoc: -.. _gendoc: http://starship.python.net/crew/danilo/pythondoc/ - -.. _HappyDoc: http://happydoc.sourceforge.net/ - -.. _Crystal: http://www.btinternet.com/~tratt/comp/python/crystal/ - -.. _pydoc: http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-pydoc.html - -.. _docutils: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/tibsnjoan/docutils/ - -.. _Docutils project: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - -.. _STMinus: http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~edloper/pydoc/ - -.. _Python Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/ - - -Copyright -========= - -This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -Acknowledgements -================ - -This document borrows ideas from the archives of the `Python -Doc-SIG`_. Thanks to all members past & present. - - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0257.txt b/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0257.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 23094c56a..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0257.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,328 +0,0 @@ -PEP: 257 -Title: Docstring Conventions -Version: $Revision$ -Last-Modified: $Date$ -Author: David Goodger <goodger@users.sourceforge.net>, - Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> -Discussions-To: doc-sig@python.org -Status: Active -Type: Informational -Content-Type: text/x-rst -Created: 29-May-2001 -Post-History: 13-Jun-2001 - - -Abstract -======== - -This PEP documents the semantics and conventions associated with -Python docstrings. - - -Rationale -========= - -The aim of this PEP is to standardize the high-level structure of -docstrings: what they should contain, and how to say it (without -touching on any markup syntax within docstrings). The PEP contains -conventions, not laws or syntax. - - "A universal convention supplies all of maintainability, clarity, - consistency, and a foundation for good programming habits too. - What it doesn't do is insist that you follow it against your will. - That's Python!" - - -- Tim Peters on comp.lang.python, 2001-06-16 - -If you violate these conventions, the worst you'll get is some dirty -looks. But some software (such as the Docutils_ docstring processing -system [1]_ [2]_) will be aware of the conventions, so following them -will get you the best results. - - -Specification -============= - -What is a Docstring? --------------------- - -A docstring is a string literal that occurs as the first statement in -a module, function, class, or method definition. Such a docstring -becomes the ``__doc__`` special attribute of that object. - -All modules should normally have docstrings, and all functions and -classes exported by a module should also have docstrings. Public -methods (including the ``__init__`` constructor) should also have -docstrings. A package may be documented in the module docstring of -the ``__init__.py`` file in the package directory. - -String literals occurring elsewhere in Python code may also act as -documentation. They are not recognized by the Python bytecode -compiler and are not accessible as runtime object attributes (i.e. not -assigned to ``__doc__``), but two types of extra docstrings may be -extracted by software tools: - -1. String literals occurring immediately after a simple assignment at - the top level of a module, class, or ``__init__`` method are called - "attribute docstrings". - -2. String literals occurring immediately after another docstring are - called "additional docstrings". - -Please see PEP 258, "Docutils Design Specification" [2]_, for a -detailed description of attribute and additional docstrings. - -XXX Mention docstrings of 2.2 properties. - -For consistency, always use ``"""triple double quotes"""`` around -docstrings. Use ``r"""raw triple double quotes"""`` if you use any -backslashes in your docstrings. For Unicode docstrings, use -``u"""Unicode triple-quoted strings"""``. - -There are two forms of docstrings: one-liners and multi-line -docstrings. - - -One-line Docstrings --------------------- - -One-liners are for really obvious cases. They should really fit on -one line. For example:: - - def kos_root(): - """Return the pathname of the KOS root directory.""" - global _kos_root - if _kos_root: return _kos_root - ... - -Notes: - -- Triple quotes are used even though the string fits on one line. - This makes it easy to later expand it. - -- The closing quotes are on the same line as the opening quotes. This - looks better for one-liners. - -- There's no blank line either before or after the docstring. - -- The docstring is a phrase ending in a period. It prescribes the - function or method's effect as a command ("Do this", "Return that"), - not as a description; e.g. don't write "Returns the pathname ...". - -- The one-line docstring should NOT be a "signature" reiterating the - function/method parameters (which can be obtained by introspection). - Don't do:: - - def function(a, b): - """function(a, b) -> list""" - - This type of docstring is only appropriate for C functions (such as - built-ins), where introspection is not possible. However, the - nature of the *return value* cannot be determined by introspection, - so it should be mentioned. The preferred form for such a docstring - would be something like:: - - def function(a, b): - """Do X and return a list.""" - - (Of course "Do X" should be replaced by a useful description!) - - -Multi-line Docstrings ----------------------- - -Multi-line docstrings consist of a summary line just like a one-line -docstring, followed by a blank line, followed by a more elaborate -description. The summary line may be used by automatic indexing -tools; it is important that it fits on one line and is separated from -the rest of the docstring by a blank line. The summary line may be on -the same line as the opening quotes or on the next line. The entire -docstring is indented the same as the quotes at its first line (see -example below). - -Insert a blank line before and after all docstrings (one-line or -multi-line) that document a class -- generally speaking, the class's -methods are separated from each other by a single blank line, and the -docstring needs to be offset from the first method by a blank line; -for symmetry, put a blank line between the class header and the -docstring. Docstrings documenting functions or methods generally -don't have this requirement, unless the function or method's body is -written as a number of blank-line separated sections -- in this case, -treat the docstring as another section, and precede it with a blank -line. - -The docstring of a script (a stand-alone program) should be usable as -its "usage" message, printed when the script is invoked with incorrect -or missing arguments (or perhaps with a "-h" option, for "help"). -Such a docstring should document the script's function and command -line syntax, environment variables, and files. Usage messages can be -fairly elaborate (several screens full) and should be sufficient for a -new user to use the command properly, as well as a complete quick -reference to all options and arguments for the sophisticated user. - -The docstring for a module should generally list the classes, -exceptions and functions (and any other objects) that are exported by -the module, with a one-line summary of each. (These summaries -generally give less detail than the summary line in the object's -docstring.) The docstring for a package (i.e., the docstring of the -package's ``__init__.py`` module) should also list the modules and -subpackages exported by the package. - -The docstring for a function or method should summarize its behavior -and document its arguments, return value(s), side effects, exceptions -raised, and restrictions on when it can be called (all if applicable). -Optional arguments should be indicated. It should be documented -whether keyword arguments are part of the interface. - -The docstring for a class should summarize its behavior and list the -public methods and instance variables. If the class is intended to be -subclassed, and has an additional interface for subclasses, this -interface should be listed separately (in the docstring). The class -constructor should be documented in the docstring for its ``__init__`` -method. Individual methods should be documented by their own -docstring. - -If a class subclasses another class and its behavior is mostly -inherited from that class, its docstring should mention this and -summarize the differences. Use the verb "override" to indicate that a -subclass method replaces a superclass method and does not call the -superclass method; use the verb "extend" to indicate that a subclass -method calls the superclass method (in addition to its own behavior). - -*Do not* use the Emacs convention of mentioning the arguments of -functions or methods in upper case in running text. Python is case -sensitive and the argument names can be used for keyword arguments, so -the docstring should document the correct argument names. It is best -to list each argument on a separate line. For example:: - - def complex(real=0.0, imag=0.0): - """Form a complex number. - - Keyword arguments: - real -- the real part (default 0.0) - imag -- the imaginary part (default 0.0) - - """ - if imag == 0.0 and real == 0.0: return complex_zero - ... - -The BDFL [3]_ recommends inserting a blank line between the last -paragraph in a multi-line docstring and its closing quotes, placing -the closing quotes on a line by themselves. This way, Emacs' -``fill-paragraph`` command can be used on it. - - -Handling Docstring Indentation ------------------------------- - -Docstring processing tools will strip a uniform amount of indentation -from the second and further lines of the docstring, equal to the -minimum indentation of all non-blank lines after the first line. Any -indentation in the first line of the docstring (i.e., up to the first -newline) is insignificant and removed. Relative indentation of later -lines in the docstring is retained. Blank lines should be removed -from the beginning and end of the docstring. - -Since code is much more precise than words, here is an implementation -of the algorithm:: - - def trim(docstring): - if not docstring: - return '' - # Convert tabs to spaces (following the normal Python rules) - # and split into a list of lines: - lines = docstring.expandtabs().splitlines() - # Determine minimum indentation (first line doesn't count): - indent = sys.maxint - for line in lines[1:]: - stripped = line.lstrip() - if stripped: - indent = min(indent, len(line) - len(stripped)) - # Remove indentation (first line is special): - trimmed = [lines[0].strip()] - if indent < sys.maxint: - for line in lines[1:]: - trimmed.append(line[indent:].rstrip()) - # Strip off trailing and leading blank lines: - while trimmed and not trimmed[-1]: - trimmed.pop() - while trimmed and not trimmed[0]: - trimmed.pop(0) - # Return a single string: - return '\n'.join(trimmed) - -The docstring in this example contains two newline characters and is -therefore 3 lines long. The first and last lines are blank:: - - def foo(): - """ - This is the second line of the docstring. - """ - -To illustrate:: - - >>> print repr(foo.__doc__) - '\n This is the second line of the docstring.\n ' - >>> foo.__doc__.splitlines() - ['', ' This is the second line of the docstring.', ' '] - >>> trim(foo.__doc__) - 'This is the second line of the docstring.' - -Once trimmed, these docstrings are equivalent:: - - def foo(): - """A multi-line - docstring. - """ - - def bar(): - """ - A multi-line - docstring. - """ - - -References and Footnotes -======================== - -.. [1] PEP 256, Docstring Processing System Framework, Goodger - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0256.html) - -.. [2] PEP 258, Docutils Design Specification, Goodger - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0258.html) - -.. [3] Guido van Rossum, Python's creator and Benevolent Dictator For - Life. - -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - -.. _Python Style Guide: - http://www.python.org/doc/essays/styleguide.html - -.. _Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/ - - -Copyright -========= - -This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -Acknowledgements -================ - -The "Specification" text comes mostly verbatim from the `Python Style -Guide`_ essay by Guido van Rossum. - -This document borrows ideas from the archives of the Python Doc-SIG_. -Thanks to all members past and present. - - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - fill-column: 70 - sentence-end-double-space: t - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0258.txt b/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0258.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 09bec5d88..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0258.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,999 +0,0 @@ -PEP: 258 -Title: Docutils Design Specification -Version: $Revision$ -Last-Modified: $Date$ -Author: David Goodger <goodger@users.sourceforge.net> -Discussions-To: <doc-sig@python.org> -Status: Draft -Type: Standards Track -Content-Type: text/x-rst -Requires: 256, 257 -Created: 31-May-2001 -Post-History: 13-Jun-2001 - - -========== - Abstract -========== - -This PEP documents design issues and implementation details for -Docutils, a Python Docstring Processing System (DPS). The rationale -and high-level concepts of a DPS are documented in PEP 256, "Docstring -Processing System Framework" [#PEP-256]_. Also see PEP 256 for a -"Road Map to the Docstring PEPs". - -Docutils is being designed modularly so that any of its components can -be replaced easily. In addition, Docutils is not limited to the -processing of Python docstrings; it processes standalone documents as -well, in several contexts. - -No changes to the core Python language are required by this PEP. Its -deliverables consist of a package for the standard library and its -documentation. - - -=============== - Specification -=============== - -Docutils Project Model -====================== - -Project components and data flow:: - - +---------------------------+ - | Docutils: | - | docutils.core.Publisher, | - | docutils.core.publish_*() | - +---------------------------+ - / | \ - / | \ - 1,3,5 / 6 | \ 7 - +--------+ +-------------+ +--------+ - | READER | ----> | TRANSFORMER | ====> | WRITER | - +--------+ +-------------+ +--------+ - / \\ | - / \\ | - 2 / 4 \\ 8 | - +-------+ +--------+ +--------+ - | INPUT | | PARSER | | OUTPUT | - +-------+ +--------+ +--------+ - -The numbers above each component indicate the path a document's data -takes. Double-width lines between Reader & Parser and between -Transformer & Writer indicate that data sent along these paths should -be standard (pure & unextended) Docutils doc trees. Single-width -lines signify that internal tree extensions or completely unrelated -representations are possible, but they must be supported at both ends. - - -Publisher ---------- - -The ``docutils.core`` module contains a "Publisher" facade class and -several convenience functions: "publish_cmdline()" (for command-line -front ends), "publish_file()" (for programmatic use with file-like -I/O), and "publish_string()" (for programmatic use with string I/O). -The Publisher class encapsulates the high-level logic of a Docutils -system. The Publisher class has overall responsibility for -processing, controlled by the ``Publisher.publish()`` method: - -1. Set up internal settings (may include config files & command-line - options) and I/O objects. - -2. Call the Reader object to read data from the source Input object - and parse the data with the Parser object. A document object is - returned. - -3. Set up and apply transforms via the Transformer object attached to - the document. - -4. Call the Writer object which translates the document to the final - output format and writes the formatted data to the destination - Output object. Depending on the Output object, the output may be - returned from the Writer, and then from the ``publish()`` method. - -Calling the "publish" function (or instantiating a "Publisher" object) -with component names will result in default behavior. For custom -behavior (customizing component settings), create custom component -objects first, and pass *them* to the Publisher or ``publish_*`` -convenience functions. - - -Readers -------- - -Readers understand the input context (where the data is coming from), -send the whole input or discrete "chunks" to the parser, and provide -the context to bind the chunks together back into a cohesive whole. - -Each reader is a module or package exporting a "Reader" class with a -"read" method. The base "Reader" class can be found in the -``docutils/readers/__init__.py`` module. - -Most Readers will have to be told what parser to use. So far (see the -list of examples below), only the Python Source Reader ("PySource"; -still incomplete) will be able to determine the parser on its own. - -Responsibilities: - -* Get input text from the source I/O. - -* Pass the input text to the parser, along with a fresh `document - tree`_ root. - -Examples: - -* Standalone (Raw/Plain): Just read a text file and process it. - The reader needs to be told which parser to use. - - The "Standalone Reader" has been implemented in module - ``docutils.readers.standalone``. - -* Python Source: See `Python Source Reader`_ below. This Reader is - currently in development in the Docutils sandbox. - -* Email: RFC-822 headers, quoted excerpts, signatures, MIME parts. - -* PEP: RFC-822 headers, "PEP xxxx" and "RFC xxxx" conversion to URIs. - The "PEP Reader" has been implemented in module - ``docutils.readers.pep``; see PEP 287 and PEP 12. - -* Wiki: Global reference lookups of "wiki links" incorporated into - transforms. (CamelCase only or unrestricted?) Lazy - indentation? - -* Web Page: As standalone, but recognize meta fields as meta tags. - Support for templates of some sort? (After ``<body>``, before - ``</body>``?) - -* FAQ: Structured "question & answer(s)" constructs. - -* Compound document: Merge chapters into a book. Master manifest - file? - - -Parsers -------- - -Parsers analyze their input and produce a Docutils `document tree`_. -They don't know or care anything about the source or destination of -the data. - -Each input parser is a module or package exporting a "Parser" class -with a "parse" method. The base "Parser" class can be found in the -``docutils/parsers/__init__.py`` module. - -Responsibilities: Given raw input text and a doctree root node, -populate the doctree by parsing the input text. - -Example: The only parser implemented so far is for the -reStructuredText markup. It is implemented in the -``docutils/parsers/rst/`` package. - -The development and integration of other parsers is possible and -encouraged. - - -.. _transforms: - -Transformer ------------ - -The Transformer class, in ``docutils/transforms/__init__.py``, stores -transforms and applies them to documents. A transformer object is -attached to every new document tree. The Publisher_ calls -``Transformer.apply_transforms()`` to apply all stored transforms to -the document tree. Transforms change the document tree from one form -to another, add to the tree, or prune it. Transforms resolve -references and footnote numbers, process interpreted text, and do -other context-sensitive processing. - -Some transforms are specific to components (Readers, Parser, Writers, -Input, Output). Standard component-specific transforms are specified -in the ``default_transforms`` attribute of component classes. After -the Reader has finished processing, the Publisher_ calls -``Transformer.populate_from_components()`` with a list of components -and all default transforms are stored. - -Each transform is a class in a module in the ``docutils/transforms/`` -package, a subclass of ``docutils.tranforms.Transform``. Transform -classes each have a ``default_priority`` attribute which is used by -the Transformer to apply transforms in order (low to high). The -default priority can be overridden when adding transforms to the -Transformer object. - -Transformer responsibilities: - -* Apply transforms to the document tree, in priority order. - -* Store a mapping of component type name ('reader', 'writer', etc.) to - component objects. These are used by certain transforms (such as - "components.Filter") to determine suitability. - -Transform responsibilities: - -* Modify a doctree in-place, either purely transforming one structure - into another, or adding new structures based on the doctree and/or - external data. - -Examples of transforms (in the ``docutils/transforms/`` package): - -* frontmatter.DocInfo: Conversion of document metadata (bibliographic - information). - -* references.AnonymousHyperlinks: Resolution of anonymous references - to corresponding targets. - -* parts.Contents: Generates a table of contents for a document. - -* document.Merger: Combining multiple populated doctrees into one. - (Not yet implemented or fully understood.) - -* document.Splitter: Splits a document into a tree-structure of - subdocuments, perhaps by section. It will have to transform - references appropriately. (Neither implemented not remotely - understood.) - -* components.Filter: Includes or excludes elements which depend on a - specific Docutils component. - - -Writers -------- - -Writers produce the final output (HTML, XML, TeX, etc.). Writers -translate the internal `document tree`_ structure into the final data -format, possibly running Writer-specific transforms_ first. - -By the time the document gets to the Writer, it should be in final -form. The Writer's job is simply (and only) to translate from the -Docutils doctree structure to the target format. Some small -transforms may be required, but they should be local and -format-specific. - -Each writer is a module or package exporting a "Writer" class with a -"write" method. The base "Writer" class can be found in the -``docutils/writers/__init__.py`` module. - -Responsibilities: - -* Translate doctree(s) into specific output formats. - - - Transform references into format-native forms. - -* Write the translated output to the destination I/O. - -Examples: - -* XML: Various forms, such as: - - - Docutils XML (an expression of the internal document tree, - implemented as ``docutils.writers.docutils_xml``). - - - DocBook (being implemented in the Docutils sandbox). - -* HTML (XHTML implemented as ``docutils.writers.html4css1``). - -* PDF (a ReportLabs interface is being developed in the Docutils - sandbox). - -* TeX (a LaTeX Writer is being implemented in the sandbox). - -* Docutils-native pseudo-XML (implemented as - ``docutils.writers.pseudoxml``, used for testing). - -* Plain text - -* reStructuredText? - - -Input/Output ------------- - -I/O classes provide a uniform API for low-level input and output. -Subclasses will exist for a variety of input/output mechanisms. -However, they can be considered an implementation detail. Most -applications should be satisfied using one of the convenience -functions associated with the Publisher_. - -I/O classes are currently in the preliminary stages; there's a lot of -work yet to be done. Issues: - -* How to represent multi-file input (files & directories) in the API? - -* How to represent multi-file output? Perhaps "Writer" variants, one - for each output distribution type? Or Output objects with - associated transforms? - -Responsibilities: - -* Read data from the input source (Input objects) or write data to the - output destination (Output objects). - -Examples of input sources: - -* A single file on disk or a stream (implemented as - ``docutils.io.FileInput``). - -* Multiple files on disk (``MultiFileInput``?). - -* Python source files: modules and packages. - -* Python strings, as received from a client application - (implemented as ``docutils.io.StringInput``). - -Examples of output destinations: - -* A single file on disk or a stream (implemented as - ``docutils.io.FileOutput``). - -* A tree of directories and files on disk. - -* A Python string, returned to a client application (implemented as - ``docutils.io.StringOutput``). - -* No output; useful for programmatic applications where only a portion - of the normal output is to be used (implemented as - ``docutils.io.NullOutput``). - -* A single tree-shaped data structure in memory. - -* Some other set of data structures in memory. - - -Docutils Package Structure -========================== - -* Package "docutils". - - - Module "__init__.py" contains: class "Component", a base class for - Docutils components; class "SettingsSpec", a base class for - specifying runtime settings (used by docutils.frontend); and class - "TransformSpec", a base class for specifying transforms. - - - Module "docutils.core" contains facade class "Publisher" and - convenience functions. See `Publisher`_ above. - - - Module "docutils.frontend" provides runtime settings support, for - programmatic use and front-end tools (including configuration file - support, and command-line argument and option processing). - - - Module "docutils.io" provides a uniform API for low-level input - and output. See `Input/Output`_ above. - - - Module "docutils.nodes" contains the Docutils document tree - element class library plus tree-traversal Visitor pattern base - classes. See `Document Tree`_ below. - - - Module "docutils.statemachine" contains a finite state machine - specialized for regular-expression-based text filters and parsers. - The reStructuredText parser implementation is based on this - module. - - - Module "docutils.urischemes" contains a mapping of known URI - schemes ("http", "ftp", "mail", etc.). - - - Module "docutils.utils" contains utility functions and classes, - including a logger class ("Reporter"; see `Error Handling`_ - below). - - - Package "docutils.parsers": markup parsers_. - - - Function "get_parser_class(parser_name)" returns a parser module - by name. Class "Parser" is the base class of specific parsers. - (``docutils/parsers/__init__.py``) - - - Package "docutils.parsers.rst": the reStructuredText parser. - - - Alternate markup parsers may be added. - - See `Parsers`_ above. - - - Package "docutils.readers": context-aware input readers. - - - Function "get_reader_class(reader_name)" returns a reader module - by name or alias. Class "Reader" is the base class of specific - readers. (``docutils/readers/__init__.py``) - - - Module "docutils.readers.standalone" reads independent document - files. - - - Module "docutils.readers.pep" reads PEPs (Python Enhancement - Proposals). - - - Readers to be added for: Python source code (structure & - docstrings), email, FAQ, and perhaps Wiki and others. - - See `Readers`_ above. - - - Package "docutils.writers": output format writers. - - - Function "get_writer_class(writer_name)" returns a writer module - by name. Class "Writer" is the base class of specific writers. - (``docutils/writers/__init__.py``) - - - Module "docutils.writers.html4css1" is a simple HyperText Markup - Language document tree writer for HTML 4.01 and CSS1. - - - Module "docutils.writers.docutils_xml" writes the internal - document tree in XML form. - - - Module "docutils.writers.pseudoxml" is a simple internal - document tree writer; it writes indented pseudo-XML. - - - Writers to be added: HTML 3.2 or 4.01-loose, XML (various forms, - such as DocBook), PDF, TeX, plaintext, reStructuredText, and - perhaps others. - - See `Writers`_ above. - - - Package "docutils.transforms": tree transform classes. - - - Class "Transformer" stores transforms and applies them to - document trees. (``docutils/transforms/__init__.py``) - - - Class "Transform" is the base class of specific transforms. - (``docutils/transforms/__init__.py``) - - - Each module contains related transform classes. - - See `Transforms`_ above. - - - Package "docutils.languages": Language modules contain - language-dependent strings and mappings. They are named for their - language identifier (as defined in `Choice of Docstring Format`_ - below), converting dashes to underscores. - - - Function "get_language(language_code)", returns matching - language module. (``docutils/languages/__init__.py``) - - - Modules: en.py (English), de.py (German), fr.py (French), it.py - (Italian), sk.py (Slovak), sv.py (Swedish). - - - Other languages to be added. - -* Third-party modules: "extras" directory. These modules are - installed only if they're not already present in the Python - installation. - - - ``extras/optparse.py`` and ``extras/textwrap.py`` provide - option parsing and command-line help; from Greg Ward's - http://optik.sf.net/ project, included for convenience. - - - ``extras/roman.py`` contains Roman numeral conversion routines. - - -Front-End Tools -=============== - -The ``tools/`` directory contains several front ends for common -Docutils processing. See `Docutils Front-End Tools`_ for details. - -.. _Docutils Front-End Tools: http://docutils.sf.net/docs/tools.html - - -Document Tree -============= - -A single intermediate data structure is used internally by Docutils, -in the interfaces between components; it is defined in the -``docutils.nodes`` module. It is not required that this data -structure be used *internally* by any of the components, just -*between* components as outlined in the diagram in the `Docutils -Project Model`_ above. - -Custom node types are allowed, provided that either (a) a transform -converts them to standard Docutils nodes before they reach the Writer -proper, or (b) the custom node is explicitly supported by certain -Writers, and is wrapped in a filtered "pending" node. An example of -condition (a) is the `Python Source Reader`_ (see below), where a -"stylist" transform converts custom nodes. The HTML ``<meta>`` tag is -an example of condition (b); it is supported by the HTML Writer but -not by others. The reStructuredText "meta" directive creates a -"pending" node, which contains knowledge that the embedded "meta" node -can only be handled by HTML-compatible writers. The "pending" node is -resolved by the ``docutils.transforms.components.Filter`` transform, -which checks that the calling writer supports HTML; if it doesn't, the -"pending" node (and enclosed "meta" node) is removed from the -document. - -The document tree data structure is similar to a DOM tree, but with -specific node names (classes) instead of DOM's generic nodes. The -schema is documented in an XML DTD (eXtensible Markup Language -Document Type Definition), which comes in two parts: - -* the Docutils Generic DTD, docutils.dtd_, and - -* the OASIS Exchange Table Model, soextbl.dtd_. - -The DTD defines a rich set of elements, suitable for many input and -output formats. The DTD retains all information necessary to -reconstruct the original input text, or a reasonable facsimile -thereof. - -See `The Docutils Document Tree`_ for details (incomplete). - - -Error Handling -============== - -When the parser encounters an error in markup, it inserts a system -message (DTD element "system_message"). There are five levels of -system messages: - -* Level-0, "DEBUG": an internal reporting issue. There is no effect - on the processing. Level-0 system messages are handled separately - from the others. - -* Level-1, "INFO": a minor issue that can be ignored. There is little - or no effect on the processing. Typically level-1 system messages - are not reported. - -* Level-2, "WARNING": an issue that should be addressed. If ignored, - there may be minor problems with the output. Typically level-2 - system messages are reported but do not halt processing - -* Level-3, "ERROR": a major issue that should be addressed. If - ignored, the output will contain unpredictable errors. Typically - level-3 system messages are reported but do not halt processing - -* Level-4, "SEVERE": a critical error that must be addressed. - Typically level-4 system messages are turned into exceptions which - halt processing. If ignored, the output will contain severe errors. - -Although the initial message levels were devised independently, they -have a strong correspondence to `VMS error condition severity -levels`_; the names in quotes for levels 1 through 4 were borrowed -from VMS. Error handling has since been influenced by the `log4j -project`_. - - -Python Source Reader -==================== - -The Python Source Reader ("PySource") is the Docutils component that -reads Python source files, extracts docstrings in context, then -parses, links, and assembles the docstrings into a cohesive whole. It -is a major and non-trivial component, currently under experimental -development in the Docutils sandbox. High-level design issues are -presented here. - - -Processing Model ----------------- - -This model will evolve over time, incorporating experience and -discoveries. - -1. The PySource Reader uses an Input class to read in Python packages - and modules, into a tree of strings. - -2. The Python modules are parsed, converting the tree of strings into - a tree of abstract syntax trees with docstring nodes. - -3. The abstract syntax trees are converted into an internal - representation of the packages/modules. Docstrings are extracted, - as well as code structure details. See `AST Mining`_ below. - Namespaces are constructed for lookup in step 6. - -4. One at a time, the docstrings are parsed, producing standard - Docutils doctrees. - -5. PySource assembles all the individual docstrings' doctrees into a - Python-specific custom Docutils tree paralleling the - package/module/class structure; this is a custom Reader-specific - internal representation (see the `Docutils Python Source DTD`_). - Namespaces must be merged: Python identifiers, hyperlink targets. - -6. Cross-references from docstrings (interpreted text) to Python - identifiers are resolved according to the Python namespace lookup - rules. See `Identifier Cross-References`_ below. - -7. A "Stylist" transform is applied to the custom doctree (by the - Transformer_), custom nodes are rendered using standard nodes as - primitives, and a standard document tree is emitted. See `Stylist - Transforms`_ below. - -8. Other transforms are applied to the standard doctree by the - Transformer_. - -9. The standard doctree is sent to a Writer, which translates the - document into a concrete format (HTML, PDF, etc.). - -10. The Writer uses an Output class to write the resulting data to its - destination (disk file, directories and files, etc.). - - -AST Mining ----------- - -Abstract Syntax Tree mining code will be written (or adapted) that -scans a parsed Python module, and returns an ordered tree containing -the names, docstrings (including attribute and additional docstrings; -see below), and additional info (in parentheses below) of all of the -following objects: - -* packages -* modules -* module attributes (+ initial values) -* classes (+ inheritance) -* class attributes (+ initial values) -* instance attributes (+ initial values) -* methods (+ parameters & defaults) -* functions (+ parameters & defaults) - -(Extract comments too? For example, comments at the start of a module -would be a good place for bibliographic field lists.) - -In order to evaluate interpreted text cross-references, namespaces for -each of the above will also be required. - -See the python-dev/docstring-develop thread "AST mining", started on -2001-08-14. - - -Docstring Extraction Rules --------------------------- - -1. What to examine: - - a) If the "``__all__``" variable is present in the module being - documented, only identifiers listed in "``__all__``" are - examined for docstrings. - - b) In the absence of "``__all__``", all identifiers are examined, - except those whose names are private (names begin with "_" but - don't begin and end with "__"). - - c) 1a and 1b can be overridden by runtime settings. - -2. Where: - - Docstrings are string literal expressions, and are recognized in - the following places within Python modules: - - a) At the beginning of a module, function definition, class - definition, or method definition, after any comments. This is - the standard for Python ``__doc__`` attributes. - - b) Immediately following a simple assignment at the top level of a - module, class definition, or ``__init__`` method definition, - after any comments. See `Attribute Docstrings`_ below. - - c) Additional string literals found immediately after the - docstrings in (a) and (b) will be recognized, extracted, and - concatenated. See `Additional Docstrings`_ below. - - d) @@@ 2.2-style "properties" with attribute docstrings? Wait for - syntax? - -3. How: - - Whenever possible, Python modules should be parsed by Docutils, not - imported. There are several reasons: - - - Importing untrusted code is inherently insecure. - - - Information from the source is lost when using introspection to - examine an imported module, such as comments and the order of - definitions. - - - Docstrings are to be recognized in places where the byte-code - compiler ignores string literal expressions (2b and 2c above), - meaning importing the module will lose these docstrings. - - Of course, standard Python parsing tools such as the "parser" - library module should be used. - - When the Python source code for a module is not available - (i.e. only the ``.pyc`` file exists) or for C extension modules, to - access docstrings the module can only be imported, and any - limitations must be lived with. - -Since attribute docstrings and additional docstrings are ignored by -the Python byte-code compiler, no namespace pollution or runtime bloat -will result from their use. They are not assigned to ``__doc__`` or -to any other attribute. The initial parsing of a module may take a -slight performance hit. - - -Attribute Docstrings -'''''''''''''''''''' - -(This is a simplified version of PEP 224 [#PEP-224]_.) - -A string literal immediately following an assignment statement is -interpreted by the docstring extraction machinery as the docstring of -the target of the assignment statement, under the following -conditions: - -1. The assignment must be in one of the following contexts: - - a) At the top level of a module (i.e., not nested inside a compound - statement such as a loop or conditional): a module attribute. - - b) At the top level of a class definition: a class attribute. - - c) At the top level of the "``__init__``" method definition of a - class: an instance attribute. Instance attributes assigned in - other methods are assumed to be implementation details. (@@@ - ``__new__`` methods?) - - d) A function attribute assignment at the top level of a module or - class definition. - - Since each of the above contexts are at the top level (i.e., in the - outermost suite of a definition), it may be necessary to place - dummy assignments for attributes assigned conditionally or in a - loop. - -2. The assignment must be to a single target, not to a list or a tuple - of targets. - -3. The form of the target: - - a) For contexts 1a and 1b above, the target must be a simple - identifier (not a dotted identifier, a subscripted expression, - or a sliced expression). - - b) For context 1c above, the target must be of the form - "``self.attrib``", where "``self``" matches the "``__init__``" - method's first parameter (the instance parameter) and "attrib" - is a simple identifier as in 3a. - - c) For context 1d above, the target must be of the form - "``name.attrib``", where "``name``" matches an already-defined - function or method name and "attrib" is a simple identifier as - in 3a. - -Blank lines may be used after attribute docstrings to emphasize the -connection between the assignment and the docstring. - -Examples:: - - g = 'module attribute (module-global variable)' - """This is g's docstring.""" - - class AClass: - - c = 'class attribute' - """This is AClass.c's docstring.""" - - def __init__(self): - """Method __init__'s docstring.""" - - self.i = 'instance attribute' - """This is self.i's docstring.""" - - def f(x): - """Function f's docstring.""" - return x**2 - - f.a = 1 - """Function attribute f.a's docstring.""" - - -Additional Docstrings -''''''''''''''''''''' - -(This idea was adapted from PEP 216 [#PEP-216]_.) - -Many programmers would like to make extensive use of docstrings for -API documentation. However, docstrings do take up space in the -running program, so some programmers are reluctant to "bloat up" their -code. Also, not all API documentation is applicable to interactive -environments, where ``__doc__`` would be displayed. - -Docutils' docstring extraction tools will concatenate all string -literal expressions which appear at the beginning of a definition or -after a simple assignment. Only the first strings in definitions will -be available as ``__doc__``, and can be used for brief usage text -suitable for interactive sessions; subsequent string literals and all -attribute docstrings are ignored by the Python byte-code compiler and -may contain more extensive API information. - -Example:: - - def function(arg): - """This is __doc__, function's docstring.""" - """ - This is an additional docstring, ignored by the byte-code - compiler, but extracted by Docutils. - """ - pass - -.. topic:: Issue: ``from __future__ import`` - - This would break "``from __future__ import``" statements introduced - in Python 2.1 for multiple module docstrings (main docstring plus - additional docstring(s)). The Python Reference Manual specifies: - - A future statement must appear near the top of the module. The - only lines that can appear before a future statement are: - - * the module docstring (if any), - * comments, - * blank lines, and - * other future statements. - - Resolution? - - 1. Should we search for docstrings after a ``__future__`` - statement? Very ugly. - - 2. Redefine ``__future__`` statements to allow multiple preceding - string literals? - - 3. Or should we not even worry about this? There probably - shouldn't be ``__future__`` statements in production code, after - all. Perhaps modules with ``__future__`` statements will simply - have to put up with the single-docstring limitation. - - -Choice of Docstring Format --------------------------- - -Rather than force everyone to use a single docstring format, multiple -input formats are allowed by the processing system. A special -variable, ``__docformat__``, may appear at the top level of a module -before any function or class definitions. Over time or through -decree, a standard format or set of formats should emerge. - -The ``__docformat__`` variable is a string containing the name of the -format being used, a case-insensitive string matching the input -parser's module or package name (i.e., the same name as required to -"import" the module or package), or a registered alias. If no -``__docformat__`` is specified, the default format is "plaintext" for -now; this may be changed to the standard format if one is ever -established. - -The ``__docformat__`` string may contain an optional second field, -separated from the format name (first field) by a single space: a -case-insensitive language identifier as defined in RFC 1766. A -typical language identifier consists of a 2-letter language code from -`ISO 639`_ (3-letter codes used only if no 2-letter code exists; RFC -1766 is currently being revised to allow 3-letter codes). If no -language identifier is specified, the default is "en" for English. -The language identifier is passed to the parser and can be used for -language-dependent markup features. - - -Identifier Cross-References ---------------------------- - -In Python docstrings, interpreted text is used to classify and mark up -program identifiers, such as the names of variables, functions, -classes, and modules. If the identifier alone is given, its role is -inferred implicitly according to the Python namespace lookup rules. -For functions and methods (even when dynamically assigned), -parentheses ('()') may be included:: - - This function uses `another()` to do its work. - -For class, instance and module attributes, dotted identifiers are used -when necessary. For example (using reStructuredText markup):: - - class Keeper(Storer): - - """ - Extend `Storer`. Class attribute `instances` keeps track - of the number of `Keeper` objects instantiated. - """ - - instances = 0 - """How many `Keeper` objects are there?""" - - def __init__(self): - """ - Extend `Storer.__init__()` to keep track of instances. - - Keep count in `Keeper.instances`, data in `self.data`. - """ - Storer.__init__(self) - Keeper.instances += 1 - - self.data = [] - """Store data in a list, most recent last.""" - - def store_data(self, data): - """ - Extend `Storer.store_data()`; append new `data` to a - list (in `self.data`). - """ - self.data = data - -Each of the identifiers quoted with backquotes ("`") will become -references to the definitions of the identifiers themselves. - - -Stylist Transforms ------------------- - -Stylist transforms are specialized transforms specific to the PySource -Reader. The PySource Reader doesn't have to make any decisions as to -style; it just produces a logically constructed document tree, parsed -and linked, including custom node types. Stylist transforms -understand the custom nodes created by the Reader and convert them -into standard Docutils nodes. - -Multiple Stylist transforms may be implemented and one can be chosen -at runtime (through a "--style" or "--stylist" command-line option). -Each Stylist transform implements a different layout or style; thus -the name. They decouple the context-understanding part of the Reader -from the layout-generating part of processing, resulting in a more -flexible and robust system. This also serves to "separate style from -content", the SGML/XML ideal. - -By keeping the piece of code that does the styling small and modular, -it becomes much easier for people to roll their own styles. The -"barrier to entry" is too high with existing tools; extracting the -stylist code will lower the barrier considerably. - - -========================== - References and Footnotes -========================== - -.. [#PEP-256] PEP 256, Docstring Processing System Framework, Goodger - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0256.html) - -.. [#PEP-224] PEP 224, Attribute Docstrings, Lemburg - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0224.html) - -.. [#PEP-216] PEP 216, Docstring Format, Zadka - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0216.html) - -.. _docutils.dtd: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/docutils.dtd - -.. _soextbl.dtd: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/soextblx.dtd - -.. _The Docutils Document Tree: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/doctree.html - -.. _VMS error condition severity levels: - http://www.openvms.compaq.com:8000/73final/5841/841pro_027.html - #error_cond_severity - -.. _log4j project: http://jakarta.apache.org/log4j/ - -.. _Docutils Python Source DTD: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pysource.dtd - -.. _ISO 639: http://lcweb.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/englangn.html - -.. _Python Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/ - - - -================== - Project Web Site -================== - -A SourceForge project has been set up for this work at -http://docutils.sourceforge.net/. - - -=========== - Copyright -=========== - -This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -================== - Acknowledgements -================== - -This document borrows ideas from the archives of the `Python -Doc-SIG`_. Thanks to all members past & present. - - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0287.txt b/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0287.txt deleted file mode 100644 index c6e48901b..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/peps/pep-0287.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,815 +0,0 @@ -PEP: 287 -Title: reStructuredText Docstring Format -Version: $Revision$ -Last-Modified: $Date$ -Author: David Goodger <goodger@users.sourceforge.net> -Discussions-To: <doc-sig@python.org> -Status: Draft -Type: Informational -Content-Type: text/x-rst -Created: 25-Mar-2002 -Post-History: 02-Apr-2002 -Replaces: 216 - - -Abstract -======== - -When plaintext hasn't been expressive enough for inline documentation, -Python programmers have sought out a format for docstrings. This PEP -proposes that the `reStructuredText markup`_ be adopted as a standard -markup format for structured plaintext documentation in Python -docstrings, and for PEPs and ancillary documents as well. -reStructuredText is a rich and extensible yet easy-to-read, -what-you-see-is-what-you-get plaintext markup syntax. - -Only the low-level syntax of docstrings is addressed here. This PEP -is not concerned with docstring semantics or processing at all (see -PEP 256 for a "Road Map to the Docstring PEPs"). Nor is it an attempt -to deprecate pure plaintext docstrings, which are always going to be -legitimate. The reStructuredText markup is an alternative for those -who want more expressive docstrings. - - -Benefits -======== - -Programmers are by nature a lazy breed. We reuse code with functions, -classes, modules, and subsystems. Through its docstring syntax, -Python allows us to document our code from within. The "holy grail" -of the Python Documentation Special Interest Group (Doc-SIG_) has been -a markup syntax and toolset to allow auto-documentation, where the -docstrings of Python systems can be extracted in context and processed -into useful, high-quality documentation for multiple purposes. - -Document markup languages have three groups of customers: the authors -who write the documents, the software systems that process the data, -and the readers, who are the final consumers and the most important -group. Most markups are designed for the authors and software -systems; readers are only meant to see the processed form, either on -paper or via browser software. ReStructuredText is different: it is -intended to be easily readable in source form, without prior knowledge -of the markup. ReStructuredText is entirely readable in plaintext -format, and many of the markup forms match common usage (e.g., -``*emphasis*``), so it reads quite naturally. Yet it is rich enough -to produce complex documents, and extensible so that there are few -limits. Of course, to write reStructuredText documents some prior -knowledge is required. - -The markup offers functionality and expressivity, while maintaining -easy readability in the source text. The processed form (HTML etc.) -makes it all accessible to readers: inline live hyperlinks; live links -to and from footnotes; automatic tables of contents (with live -links!); tables; images for diagrams etc.; pleasant, readable styled -text. - -The reStructuredText parser is available now, part of the Docutils_ -project. Standalone reStructuredText documents and PEPs can be -converted to HTML; other output format writers are being worked on and -will become available over time. Work is progressing on a Python -source "Reader" which will implement auto-documentation from -docstrings. Authors of existing auto-documentation tools are -encouraged to integrate the reStructuredText parser into their -projects, or better yet, to join forces to produce a world-class -toolset for the Python standard library. - -Tools will become available in the near future, which will allow -programmers to generate HTML for online help, XML for multiple -purposes, and eventually PDF, DocBook, and LaTeX for printed -documentation, essentially "for free" from the existing docstrings. -The adoption of a standard will, at the very least, benefit docstring -processing tools by preventing further "reinventing the wheel". - -Eventually PyDoc, the one existing standard auto-documentation tool, -could have reStructuredText support added. In the interim it will -have no problem with reStructuredText markup, since it treats all -docstrings as preformatted plaintext. - - -Goals -===== - -These are the generally accepted goals for a docstring format, as -discussed in the Doc-SIG: - -1. It must be readable in source form by the casual observer. - -2. It must be easy to type with any standard text editor. - -3. It must not need to contain information which can be deduced from - parsing the module. - -4. It must contain sufficient information (structure) so it can be - converted to any reasonable markup format. - -5. It must be possible to write a module's entire documentation in - docstrings, without feeling hampered by the markup language. - -reStructuredText meets and exceeds all of these goals, and sets its -own goals as well, even more stringent. See `Docstring-Significant -Features`_ below. - -The goals of this PEP are as follows: - -1. To establish reStructuredText as a standard structured plaintext - format for docstrings (inline documentation of Python modules and - packages), PEPs, README-type files and other standalone documents. - "Accepted" status will be sought through Python community consensus - and eventual BDFL pronouncement. - - Please note that reStructuredText is being proposed as *a* - standard, not *the only* standard. Its use will be entirely - optional. Those who don't want to use it need not. - -2. To solicit and address any related concerns raised by the Python - community. - -3. To encourage community support. As long as multiple competing - markups are out there, the development community remains fractured. - Once a standard exists, people will start to use it, and momentum - will inevitably gather. - -4. To consolidate efforts from related auto-documentation projects. - It is hoped that interested developers will join forces and work on - a joint/merged/common implementation. - -Once reStructuredText is a Python standard, effort can be focused on -tools instead of arguing for a standard. Python needs a standard set -of documentation tools. - -With regard to PEPs, one or both of the following strategies may be -applied: - -a) Keep the existing PEP section structure constructs (one-line - section headers, indented body text). Subsections can either be - forbidden, or supported with reStructuredText-style underlined - headers in the indented body text. - -b) Replace the PEP section structure constructs with the - reStructuredText syntax. Section headers will require underlines, - subsections will be supported out of the box, and body text need - not be indented (except for block quotes). - -Strategy (b) is recommended, and its implementation is complete. - -Support for RFC 2822 headers has been added to the reStructuredText -parser for PEPs (unambiguous given a specific context: the first -contiguous block of the document). It may be desired to concretely -specify what over/underline styles are allowed for PEP section -headers, for uniformity. - - -Rationale -========= - -The lack of a standard syntax for docstrings has hampered the -development of standard tools for extracting and converting docstrings -into documentation in standard formats (e.g., HTML, DocBook, TeX). -There have been a number of proposed markup formats and variations, -and many tools tied to these proposals, but without a standard -docstring format they have failed to gain a strong following and/or -floundered half-finished. - -Throughout the existence of the Doc-SIG, consensus on a single -standard docstring format has never been reached. A lightweight, -implicit markup has been sought, for the following reasons (among -others): - -1. Docstrings written within Python code are available from within the - interactive interpreter, and can be "print"ed. Thus the use of - plaintext for easy readability. - -2. Programmers want to add structure to their docstrings, without - sacrificing raw docstring readability. Unadorned plaintext cannot - be transformed ("up-translated") into useful structured formats. - -3. Explicit markup (like XML or TeX) is widely considered unreadable - by the uninitiated. - -4. Implicit markup is aesthetically compatible with the clean and - minimalist Python syntax. - -Many alternative markups for docstrings have been proposed on the -Doc-SIG over the years; a representative sample is listed below. Each -is briefly analyzed in terms of the goals stated above. Please note -that this is *not* intended to be an exclusive list of all existing -markup systems; there are many other markups (Texinfo, Doxygen, TIM, -YODL, AFT, ...) which are not mentioned. - -- XML_, SGML_, DocBook_, HTML_, XHTML_ - - XML and SGML are explicit, well-formed meta-languages suitable for - all kinds of documentation. XML is a variant of SGML. They are - best used behind the scenes, because to untrained eyes they are - verbose, difficult to type, and too cluttered to read comfortably as - source. DocBook, HTML, and XHTML are all applications of SGML - and/or XML, and all share the same basic syntax and the same - shortcomings. - -- TeX_ - - TeX is similar to XML/SGML in that it's explicit, but not very easy - to write, and not easy for the uninitiated to read. - -- `Perl POD`_ - - Most Perl modules are documented in a format called POD (Plain Old - Documentation). This is an easy-to-type, very low level format with - strong integration with the Perl parser. Many tools exist to turn - POD documentation into other formats: info, HTML and man pages, - among others. However, the POD syntax takes after Perl itself in - terms of readability. - -- JavaDoc_ - - Special comments before Java classes and functions serve to document - the code. A program to extract these, and turn them into HTML - documentation is called javadoc, and is part of the standard Java - distribution. However, JavaDoc has a very intimate relationship - with HTML, using HTML tags for most markup. Thus it shares the - readability problems of HTML. - -- Setext_, StructuredText_ - - Early on, variants of Setext (Structure Enhanced Text), including - Zope Corp's StructuredText, were proposed for Python docstring - formatting. Hereafter these variants will collectively be called - "STexts". STexts have the advantage of being easy to read without - special knowledge, and relatively easy to write. - - Although used by some (including in most existing Python - auto-documentation tools), until now STexts have failed to become - standard because: - - - STexts have been incomplete. Lacking "essential" constructs that - people want to use in their docstrings, STexts are rendered less - than ideal. Note that these "essential" constructs are not - universal; everyone has their own requirements. - - - STexts have been sometimes surprising. Bits of text are - unexpectedly interpreted as being marked up, leading to user - frustration. - - - SText implementations have been buggy. - - - Most STexts have have had no formal specification except for the - implementation itself. A buggy implementation meant a buggy spec, - and vice-versa. - - - There has been no mechanism to get around the SText markup rules - when a markup character is used in a non-markup context. In other - words, no way to escape markup. - -Proponents of implicit STexts have vigorously opposed proposals for -explicit markup (XML, HTML, TeX, POD, etc.), and the debates have -continued off and on since 1996 or earlier. - -reStructuredText is a complete revision and reinterpretation of the -SText idea, addressing all of the problems listed above. - - -Specification -============= - -The specification and user documentaton for reStructuredText is -quite extensive. Rather than repeating or summarizing it all -here, links to the originals are provided. - -Please first take a look at `A ReStructuredText Primer`_, a short and -gentle introduction. The `Quick reStructuredText`_ user reference -quickly summarizes all of the markup constructs. For complete and -extensive details, please refer to the following documents: - -- `An Introduction to reStructuredText`_ - -- `reStructuredText Markup Specification`_ - -- `reStructuredText Directives`_ - -In addition, `Problems With StructuredText`_ explains many markup -decisions made with regards to StructuredText, and `A Record of -reStructuredText Syntax Alternatives`_ records markup decisions made -independently. - - -Docstring-Significant Features -============================== - -- A markup escaping mechanism. - - Backslashes (``\``) are used to escape markup characters when needed - for non-markup purposes. However, the inline markup recognition - rules have been constructed in order to minimize the need for - backslash-escapes. For example, although asterisks are used for - *emphasis*, in non-markup contexts such as "*" or "(*)" or "x * y", - the asterisks are not interpreted as markup and are left unchanged. - For many non-markup uses of backslashes (e.g., describing regular - expressions), inline literals or literal blocks are applicable; see - the next item. - -- Markup to include Python source code and Python interactive - sessions: inline literals, literal blocks, and doctest blocks. - - Inline literals use ``double-backquotes`` to indicate program I/O or - code snippets. No markup interpretation (including backslash-escape - [``\``] interpretation) is done within inline literals. - - Literal blocks (block-level literal text, such as code excerpts or - ASCII graphics) are indented, and indicated with a double-colon - ("::") at the end of the preceding paragraph (right here -->):: - - if literal_block: - text = 'is left as-is' - spaces_and_linebreaks = 'are preserved' - markup_processing = None - - Doctest blocks begin with ">>> " and end with a blank line. Neither - indentation nor literal block double-colons are required. For - example:: - - Here's a doctest block: - - >>> print 'Python-specific usage examples; begun with ">>>"' - Python-specific usage examples; begun with ">>>" - >>> print '(cut and pasted from interactive sessions)' - (cut and pasted from interactive sessions) - -- Markup that isolates a Python identifier: interpreted text. - - Text enclosed in single backquotes is recognized as "interpreted - text", whose interpretation is application-dependent. In the - context of a Python docstring, the default interpretation of - interpreted text is as Python identifiers. The text will be marked - up with a hyperlink connected to the documentation for the - identifier given. Lookup rules are the same as in Python itself: - LGB namespace lookups (local, global, builtin). The "role" of the - interpreted text (identifying a class, module, function, etc.) is - determined implicitly from the namespace lookup. For example:: - - class Keeper(Storer): - - """ - Keep data fresher longer. - - Extend `Storer`. Class attribute `instances` keeps track - of the number of `Keeper` objects instantiated. - """ - - instances = 0 - """How many `Keeper` objects are there?""" - - def __init__(self): - """ - Extend `Storer.__init__()` to keep track of - instances. Keep count in `self.instances` and data - in `self.data`. - """ - Storer.__init__(self) - self.instances += 1 - - self.data = [] - """Store data in a list, most recent last.""" - - def storedata(self, data): - """ - Extend `Storer.storedata()`; append new `data` to a - list (in `self.data`). - """ - self.data = data - - Each piece of interpreted text is looked up according to the local - namespace of the block containing its docstring. - -- Markup that isolates a Python identifier and specifies its type: - interpreted text with roles. - - Although the Python source context reader is designed not to require - explicit roles, they may be used. To classify identifiers - explicitly, the role is given along with the identifier in either - prefix or suffix form:: - - Use :method:`Keeper.storedata` to store the object's data in - `Keeper.data`:instance_attribute:. - - The syntax chosen for roles is verbose, but necessarily so (if - anyone has a better alternative, please post it to the Doc-SIG_). - The intention of the markup is that there should be little need to - use explicit roles; their use is to be kept to an absolute minimum. - -- Markup for "tagged lists" or "label lists": field lists. - - Field lists represent a mapping from field name to field body. - These are mostly used for extension syntax, such as "bibliographic - field lists" (representing document metadata such as author, date, - and version) and extension attributes for directives (see below). - They may be used to implement methodologies (docstring semantics), - such as identifying parameters, exceptions raised, etc.; such usage - is beyond the scope of this PEP. - - A modified RFC 2822 syntax is used, with a colon *before* as well as - *after* the field name. Field bodies are more versatile as well; - they may contain multiple field bodies (even nested field lists). - For example:: - - :Date: 2002-03-22 - :Version: 1 - :Authors: - - Me - - Myself - - I - - Standard RFC 2822 header syntax cannot be used for this construct - because it is ambiguous. A word followed by a colon at the - beginning of a line is common in written text. - -- Markup extensibility: directives and substitutions. - - Directives are used as an extension mechanism for reStructuredText, - a way of adding support for new block-level constructs without - adding new syntax. Directives for images, admonitions (note, - caution, etc.), and tables of contents generation (among others) - have been implemented. For example, here's how to place an image:: - - .. image:: mylogo.png - - Substitution definitions allow the power and flexibility of - block-level directives to be shared by inline text. For example:: - - The |biohazard| symbol must be used on containers used to - dispose of medical waste. - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - -- Section structure markup. - - Section headers in reStructuredText use adornment via underlines - (and possibly overlines) rather than indentation. For example:: - - This is a Section Title - ======================= - - This is a Subsection Title - -------------------------- - - This paragraph is in the subsection. - - This is Another Section Title - ============================= - - This paragraph is in the second section. - - -Questions & Answers -=================== - -1. Is reStructuredText rich enough? - - Yes, it is for most people. If it lacks some construct that is - required for a specific application, it can be added via the - directive mechanism. If a useful and common construct has been - overlooked and a suitably readable syntax can be found, it can be - added to the specification and parser. - -2. Is reStructuredText *too* rich? - - For specific applications or individuals, perhaps. In general, no. - - Since the very beginning, whenever a docstring markup syntax has - been proposed on the Doc-SIG_, someone has complained about the - lack of support for some construct or other. The reply was often - something like, "These are docstrings we're talking about, and - docstrings shouldn't have complex markup." The problem is that a - construct that seems superfluous to one person may be absolutely - essential to another. - - reStructuredText takes the opposite approach: it provides a rich - set of implicit markup constructs (plus a generic extension - mechanism for explicit markup), allowing for all kinds of - documents. If the set of constructs is too rich for a particular - application, the unused constructs can either be removed from the - parser (via application-specific overrides) or simply omitted by - convention. - -3. Why not use indentation for section structure, like StructuredText - does? Isn't it more "Pythonic"? - - Guido van Rossum wrote the following in a 2001-06-13 Doc-SIG post: - - I still think that using indentation to indicate sectioning is - wrong. If you look at how real books and other print - publications are laid out, you'll notice that indentation is - used frequently, but mostly at the intra-section level. - Indentation can be used to offset lists, tables, quotations, - examples, and the like. (The argument that docstrings are - different because they are input for a text formatter is wrong: - the whole point is that they are also readable without - processing.) - - I reject the argument that using indentation is Pythonic: text - is not code, and different traditions and conventions hold. - People have been presenting text for readability for over 30 - centuries. Let's not innovate needlessly. - - See `Section Structure via Indentation`__ in `Problems With - StructuredText`_ for further elaboration. - - __ http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/problems.html - #section-structure-via-indentation - -4. Why use reStructuredText for PEPs? What's wrong with the existing - standard? - - The existing standard for PEPs is very limited in terms of general - expressibility, and referencing is especially lacking for such a - reference-rich document type. PEPs are currently converted into - HTML, but the results (mostly monospaced text) are less than - attractive, and most of the value-added potential of HTML - (especially inline hyperlinks) is untapped. - - Making reStructuredText a standard markup for PEPs will enable much - richer expression, including support for section structure, inline - markup, graphics, and tables. In several PEPs there are ASCII - graphics diagrams, which are all that plaintext documents can - support. Since PEPs are made available in HTML form, the ability - to include proper diagrams would be immediately useful. - - Current PEP practices allow for reference markers in the form "[1]" - in the text, and the footnotes/references themselves are listed in - a section toward the end of the document. There is currently no - hyperlinking between the reference marker and the - footnote/reference itself (it would be possible to add this to - pep2html.py, but the "markup" as it stands is ambiguous and - mistakes would be inevitable). A PEP with many references (such as - this one ;-) requires a lot of flipping back and forth. When - revising a PEP, often new references are added or unused references - deleted. It is painful to renumber the references, since it has to - be done in two places and can have a cascading effect (insert a - single new reference 1, and every other reference has to be - renumbered; always adding new references to the end is suboptimal). - It is easy for references to go out of sync. - - PEPs use references for two purposes: simple URL references and - footnotes. reStructuredText differentiates between the two. A PEP - might contain references like this:: - - Abstract - - This PEP proposes adding frungible doodads [1] to the core. - It extends PEP 9876 [2] via the BCA [3] mechanism. - - ... - - References and Footnotes - - [1] http://www.example.org/ - - [2] PEP 9876, Let's Hope We Never Get Here - http://www.python.org/peps/pep-9876.html - - [3] "Bogus Complexity Addition" - - Reference 1 is a simple URL reference. Reference 2 is a footnote - containing text and a URL. Reference 3 is a footnote containing - text only. Rewritten using reStructuredText, this PEP could look - like this:: - - Abstract - ======== - - This PEP proposes adding `frungible doodads`_ to the core. It - extends PEP 9876 [#pep9876]_ via the BCA [#]_ mechanism. - - ... - - References & Footnotes - ====================== - - .. _frungible doodads: http://www.example.org/ - - .. [#pep9876] PEP 9876, Let's Hope We Never Get Here - - .. [#] "Bogus Complexity Addition" - - URLs and footnotes can be defined close to their references if - desired, making them easier to read in the source text, and making - the PEPs easier to revise. The "References and Footnotes" section - can be auto-generated with a document tree transform. Footnotes - from throughout the PEP would be gathered and displayed under a - standard header. If URL references should likewise be written out - explicitly (in citation form), another tree transform could be - used. - - URL references can be named ("frungible doodads"), and can be - referenced from multiple places in the document without additional - definitions. When converted to HTML, references will be replaced - with inline hyperlinks (HTML <a> tags). The two footnotes are - automatically numbered, so they will always stay in sync. The - first footnote also contains an internal reference name, "pep9876", - so it's easier to see the connection between reference and footnote - in the source text. Named footnotes can be referenced multiple - times, maintaining consistent numbering. - - The "#pep9876" footnote could also be written in the form of a - citation:: - - It extends PEP 9876 [PEP9876]_ ... - - .. [PEP9876] PEP 9876, Let's Hope We Never Get Here - - Footnotes are numbered, whereas citations use text for their - references. - -5. Wouldn't it be better to keep the docstring and PEP proposals - separate? - - The PEP markup proposal may be removed if it is deemed that there - is no need for PEP markup, or it could be made into a separate PEP. - If accepted, PEP 1, PEP Purpose and Guidelines [#PEP-1]_, and PEP - 9, Sample PEP Template [#PEP-9]_ will be updated. - - It seems natural to adopt a single consistent markup standard for - all uses of structured plaintext in Python, and to propose it all - in one place. - -6. The existing pep2html.py script converts the existing PEP format to - HTML. How will the new-format PEPs be converted to HTML? - - A new version of pep2html.py with integrated reStructuredText - parsing has been completed. The Docutils project supports PEPs - with a "PEP Reader" component, including all functionality - currently in pep2html.py (auto-recognition of PEP & RFC references, - email masking, etc.). - -7. Who's going to convert the existing PEPs to reStructuredText? - - PEP authors or volunteers may convert existing PEPs if they like, - but there is no requirement to do so. The reStructuredText-based - PEPs will coexist with the old PEP standard. The pep2html.py - mentioned in answer 6 processes both old and new standards. - -8. Why use reStructuredText for README and other ancillary files? - - The reasoning given for PEPs in answer 4 above also applies to - README and other ancillary files. By adopting a standard markup, - these files can be converted to attractive cross-referenced HTML - and put up on python.org. Developers of other projects can also - take advantage of this facility for their own documentation. - -9. Won't the superficial similarity to existing markup conventions - cause problems, and result in people writing invalid markup (and - not noticing, because the plaintext looks natural)? How forgiving - is reStructuredText of "not quite right" markup? - - There will be some mis-steps, as there would be when moving from - one programming language to another. As with any language, - proficiency grows with experience. Luckily, reStructuredText is a - very little language indeed. - - As with any syntax, there is the possibility of syntax errors. It - is expected that a user will run the processing system over their - input and check the output for correctness. - - In a strict sense, the reStructuredText parser is very unforgiving - (as it should be; "In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation - to guess" [#Zen]_ applies to parsing markup as well as computer - languages). Here's design goal 3 from `An Introduction to - reStructuredText`_: - - Unambiguous. The rules for markup must not be open for - interpretation. For any given input, there should be one and - only one possible output (including error output). - - While unforgiving, at the same time the parser does try to be - helpful by producing useful diagnostic output ("system messages"). - The parser reports problems, indicating their level of severity - (from least to most: debug, info, warning, error, severe). The - user or the client software can decide on reporting thresholds; - they can ignore low-level problems or cause high-level problems to - bring processing to an immediate halt. Problems are reported - during the parse as well as included in the output, often with - two-way links between the source of the problem and the system - message explaining it. - -10. Will the docstrings in the Python standard library modules be - converted to reStructuredText? - - No. Python's library reference documentation is maintained - separately from the source. Docstrings in the Python standard - library should not try to duplicate the library reference - documentation. The current policy for docstrings in the Python - standard library is that they should be no more than concise - hints, simple and markup-free (although many *do* contain ad-hoc - implicit markup). - -11. I want to write all my strings in Unicode. Will anything - break? - - The parser fully supports Unicode. Docutils supports arbitrary - input and output encodings. - -12. Why does the community need a new structured text design? - - The existing structured text designs are deficient, for the - reasons given in "Rationale" above. reStructuredText aims to be a - complete markup syntax, within the limitations of the "readable - plaintext" medium. - -13. What is wrong with existing documentation methodologies? - - What existing methodologies? For Python docstrings, there is - **no** official standard markup format, let alone a documentation - methodology akin to JavaDoc. The question of methodology is at a - much higher level than syntax (which this PEP addresses). It is - potentially much more controversial and difficult to resolve, and - is intentionally left out of this discussion. - - -References & Footnotes -====================== - -.. [#PEP-1] PEP 1, PEP Guidelines, Warsaw, Hylton - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0001.html) - -.. [#PEP-9] PEP 9, Sample PEP Template, Warsaw - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0009.html) - -.. [#Zen] From `The Zen of Python (by Tim Peters)`__ (or just - "``import this``" in Python) - -__ http://www.python.org/doc/Humor.html#zen - -.. [#PEP-216] PEP 216, Docstring Format, Zadka - (http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0216.html) - -.. _reStructuredText markup: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst.html - -.. _Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/ - -.. _XML: http://www.w3.org/XML/ - -.. _SGML: http://www.oasis-open.org/cover/general.html - -.. _DocBook: http://docbook.org/tdg/en/html/docbook.html - -.. _HTML: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/ - -.. _XHTML: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/#xhtml1 - -.. _TeX: http://www.tug.org/interest.html - -.. _Perl POD: http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlpod.html - -.. _JavaDoc: http://java.sun.com/j2se/javadoc/ - -.. _Setext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/mirror/setext.html - -.. _StructuredText: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/FrontPage - -.. _A ReStructuredText Primer: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickstart.html - -.. _Quick reStructuredText: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickref.html - -.. _An Introduction to reStructuredText: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/introduction.html - -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/reStructuredText.html - -.. _reStructuredText Directives: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/directives.html - -.. _Problems with StructuredText: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/problems.html - -.. _A Record of reStructuredText Syntax Alternatives: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/alternatives.html - -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - - -Copyright -========= - -This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -Acknowledgements -================ - -Some text is borrowed from PEP 216, Docstring Format [#PEP-216]_, by -Moshe Zadka. - -Special thanks to all members past & present of the Python Doc-SIG_. - - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/doctree.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/doctree.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 7f0c6cd6d..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/doctree.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,4840 +0,0 @@ -============================ - The Docutils Document Tree -============================ - -A Guide to the Docutils DTD -*************************** - -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -.. contents:: :depth: 1 - - -This document describes the XML data structure of Docutils_ documents: -the relationships and semantics of elements and attributes. The -Docutils document structure is formally defined by the `Docutils -Generic DTD`_ XML document type definition, docutils.dtd_, which is -the definitive source for details of element structural relationships. - -This document does not discuss implementation details. Those can be -found in internal documentation (docstrings) for the -``docutils.nodes`` module, where the document tree data structure is -implemented in a class library. - -The reader is assumed to have some familiarity with XML or SGML, and -an understanding of the data structure meaning of "tree". For a list -of introductory articles, see `Introducing the Extensible Markup -Language (XML)`_. - -The reStructuredText_ markup is used for illustrative examples -throughout this document. For a gentle introduction, see `A -ReStructuredText Primer`_. For complete technical details, see the -`reStructuredText Markup Specification`_. - - -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ -.. _Docutils Generic DTD: -.. _Docutils DTD: -.. _docutils.dtd: docutils.dtd -.. _Introducing the Extensible Markup Language (XML): - http://xml.coverpages.org/xmlIntro.html -.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html -.. _A ReStructuredText Primer: ../docs/rst/quickstart.html -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: rst/reStructuredText.html - - -------------------- - Element Hierarchy -------------------- - -.. contents:: :local: - -Below is a simplified diagram of the hierarchy of elements in the -Docutils document tree structure. An element may contain any other -elements immediately below it in the diagram. Notes are written in -square brackets. Element types in parentheses indicate recursive or -one-to-many relationships; sections may contain (sub)sections, tables -contain further body elements, etc. :: - - +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ - | document [may begin with a title, subtitle, docinfo, decoration] | - | +--------------------------------------+ - | | sections [each begins with a title] | - +-----------------------------+-------------------------+------------+ - | [body elements:] | (sections) | - | | - literal | - lists | | - hyperlink +------------+ - | | blocks | - tables | | targets | - | para- | - doctest | - block | foot- | - sub. defs | - | graphs | blocks | quotes | notes | - comments | - +---------+-----------+----------+-------+--------------+ - | [text]+ | [text] | (body elements) | [text] | - | (inline +-----------+------------------+--------------+ - | markup) | - +---------+ - -The Docutils document model uses a simple, recursive model for section -structure. A document_ node may contain body elements and section_ -elements. Sections in turn may contain body elements and sections. -The level (depth) of a section element is determined from its physical -nesting level; unlike other document models (``<h1>`` in HTML_, -``<sect1>`` in DocBook_, ``<div1>`` in XMLSpec_) the level is not -incorporated into the element name. - -The Docutils document model uses strict element content models. Every -element has a unique structure and semantics, but elements may be -classified into general categories (below). Only elements which are -meant to directly contain text data have a mixed content model, where -text data and inline elements may be intermixed. This is unlike the -much looser HTML_ document model, where paragraphs and text data may -occur at the same level. - - -Structural Elements -=================== - -Structural elements may only contain child elements; they do not -directly contain text data. Structural elements may contain body -elements or further structural elements. Structural elements can only -be child elements of other structural elements. - -Category members: document_, section_, topic_, sidebar_ - - -Structural Subelements ----------------------- - -Structural subelements are child elements of structural elements. - -Category members: title_, subtitle_, docinfo_, decoration_, -transition_ - - -Bibliographic Elements -`````````````````````` - -The docinfo_ element is an optional child of document_. It groups -bibliographic elements together. - -Category members: address_, author_, authors_, contact_, copyright_, -date_, field_, organization_, revision_, status_, version_ - - -Decorative Elements -``````````````````` - -The decoration_ element is also an optional child of document_. It -groups together elements used to generate page headers and footers. - -Category members: footer_, header_ - - -Body Elements -============= - -Body elements are contained within structural elements and compound -body elements. There are two subcategories of body elements: simple -and compound. - -Category members: admonition_, attention_, block_quote_, bullet_list_, -caution_, citation_, comment_, danger_, definition_list_, -doctest_block_, enumerated_list_, error_, field_list_, figure_, -footnote_, hint_, image_, important_, line_block_, literal_block_, -note_, option_list_, paragraph_, pending_, raw_, rubric_, -substitution_definition_, system_message_, table_, target_, tip_, -warning_ - - -Simple Body Elements --------------------- - -Simple body elements directly are empty or contain text data. Those -that contain text data may also contain inline elements. Such -elements therefore have a "mixed content model". - -Category members: comment_, doctest_block_, image_, line_block_, -literal_block_, paragraph_, pending_, raw_, rubric_, -substitution_definition_, target_ - - -Compound Body Elements ----------------------- - -Compound body elements contain local substructure (body subelements) -and further body elements. They do not directly contain text data. - -Category members: admonition_, attention_, block_quote_, bullet_list_, -caution_, citation_, danger_, definition_list_, enumerated_list_, -error_, field_list_, figure_, footnote_, hint_, important_, note_, -option_list_, system_message_, table_, tip_, warning_ - - -Body Subelements -```````````````` - -Compound body elements contain specific subelements (e.g. bullet_list_ -contains list_item_). Subelements may themselves be compound elements -(containing further child elements, like field_) or simple data -elements (containing text data, like field_name_). These subelements -always occur within specific parent elements, never at the body -element level (beside paragraphs, etc.). - -Category members (simple): attribution_, caption_, classifier_, -colspec_, field_name_, label_, option_argument_, option_string_, term_ - -Category members (compound): definition_, definition_list_item_, -description_, entry_, field_, field_body_, legend_, list_item_, -option_, option_group_, option_list_item_, row_, tbody_, tgroup_, -thead_ - - -Inline Elements -=============== - -Inline elements directly contain text data, and may also contain -further inline elements. Inline elements are contained within simple -body elements. Most inline elements have a "mixed content model". - -Category members: abbreviation_, acronym_, citation_reference_, -emphasis_, footnote_reference_, generated_, image_, inline_, literal_, -problematic_, reference_, strong_, subscript_, -substitution_reference_, superscript_, target_, title_reference_, raw_ - - -.. _HTML: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/ -.. _DocBook: http://docbook.org/tdg/en/html/docbook.html -.. _XMLSpec: http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/06/xmlspec-report.htm - - -------------------- - Element Reference -------------------- - -.. contents:: :local: - :depth: 1 - -Each element in the DTD (document type definition) is described in its -own section below. Each section contains an introduction plus the -following subsections: - -* Details (of element relationships and semantics): - - - Category: One or more references to the element categories in - `Element Hierarchy`_ above. Some elements belong to more than one - category. - - - Parents: A list of elements which may contain the element. - - - Children: A list of elements which may occur within the element. - - - Analogues: Describes analogous elements in well-known document - models such as HTML_ or DocBook_. Lists similarities and - differences. - - - Processing: Lists formatting or rendering recommendations for the - element. - -* Content Model: - - The formal XML content model from the `Docutils DTD`_, followed by: - - - Attributes: Describes (or refers to descriptions of) the possible - values and semantics of each attribute. - - - Parameter Entities: Lists the parameter entities which directly or - indirectly include the element. - -* Examples: reStructuredText_ examples are shown along with - fragments of the document trees resulting from parsing. - _`Pseudo-XML` is used for the results of parsing and processing. - Pseudo-XML is a representation of XML where nesting is indicated by - indentation and end-tags are not shown. Some of the precision of - real XML is given up in exchange for easier readability. For - example, the following are equivalent: - - - Real XML:: - - <document> - <section id="a-title" name="a title"> - <title>A Title</title> - <paragraph>A paragraph.</paragraph> - </section> - </document> - - - Pseudo-XML:: - - <document> - <section id="a-title" name="a title"> - <title> - A Title - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - --------------------- - -Many of the element reference sections below are marked "_`to be -completed`". Please help complete this document by contributing to -its writing. - - -``abbreviation`` -================ - -`To be completed`_. - - -``acronym`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``address`` -=========== - -The ``address`` element holds the surface mailing address information -for the author (individual or group) of the document, or a third-party -contact address. Its structure is identical to that of the -line_block_ element: whitespace is significant, especially newlines. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``address``: docinfo_, authors_ - -:Children: - ``address`` elements contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``address`` is analogous to the DocBook "address" element. - -:Processing: - As with the line_block_ element, newlines and other whitespace is - significant and must be preserved. However, a monospaced typeface - need not be used. - - See also docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``address`` element contains the `common attributes`_ (id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus `xml:space`_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``address``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Address: 123 Example Ave. - Example, EX - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <address> - 123 Example Ave. - Example, EX - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``admonition`` -============== - -This element is a generic, titled admonition. Also see the specific -admonition elements Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): caution_, -danger_, error_, hint_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``admonition``. - -:Children: - ``admonition`` elements begin with a title_ and may contain one or - more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``admonition`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives and type effects. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (title_, (`%body.elements;`_)+) - -:Attributes: - The ``admonition`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``admonition``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``admonition``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. admonition:: And, by the way... - - You can make up your own admonition too. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <admonition class="admonition-and-by-the-way"> - <title> - And, by the way... - <paragraph> - You can make up your own admonition too. - - -``attention`` -============= - -The ``attention`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): caution_, danger_, error_, -hint_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``attention``. - -:Children: - ``attention`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``attention`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives and type effects. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Attention!" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``attention`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``attention``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``attention``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Attention:: All your base are belong to us. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <attention> - <paragraph> - All your base are belong to us. - - -``attribution`` -=============== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``author`` -========== - -The ``author`` element holds the name of the author of the document. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``author``: docinfo_, authors_ - -:Children: - ``author`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``author`` is analogous to the DocBook "author" element. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``author`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``author``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Author: J. Random Hacker - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <author> - J. Random Hacker - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``authors`` -=========== - -The ``authors`` element is a container for author information for -documents with multiple authors. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``authors``. - -:Children: - ``authors`` elements may contain the following elements: author_, - organization_, address_, contact_ - -:Analogues: - ``authors`` is analogous to the DocBook "authors" element. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - ((author_, organization_?, address_?, contact_?)+) - -:Attributes: - The ``authors`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``authors``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Authors: J. Random Hacker; Jane Doe - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <authors> - <author> - J. Random Hacker - <author> - Jane Doe - -In reStructuredText, multiple author's names are separated with -semicolons (";") or commas (","); semicolons take precedence. There -is currently no way to represent the author's organization, address, -or contact in a reStructuredText "Authors" field. - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``block_quote`` -=============== - -The ``block_quote`` element is used for quotations set off from the -main text (standalone). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``block_quote``. - -:Children: - ``block_quote`` elements contain `body elements`_ followed by an - optional attribution_ element. - -:Analogues: - ``block_quote`` is analogous to the "blockquote" element in both - HTML and DocBook. - -:Processing: - ``block_quote`` elements serve to set their contents off from the - main text, typically with indentation and/or other decoration. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - ((`%body.elements;`_)+, attribution_?) - -:Attributes: - The ``block_quote`` element contains only the `common - attributes`_: id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``block_quote``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``block_quote``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - As a great paleontologist once said, - - This theory, that is mine, is mine. - - -- Anne Elk (Miss) - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <paragraph> - As a great paleontologist once said, - <block_quote> - <paragraph> - This theory, that is mine, is mine. - <attribution> - Anne Elk (Miss) - - -``bullet_list`` -=============== - -The ``bullet_list`` element contains list_item_ elements which are -uniformly marked with bullets. Bullets are typically simple dingbats -(symbols) such as circles and squares. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``bullet_list``. - -:Children: - ``bullet_list`` elements contain one or more list_item_ elements. - -:Analogues: - ``bullet_list`` is analogous to the HTML "ul" element and to the - DocBook "itemizedlist" element. HTML's "ul" is short for - "unordered list", which we consider to be a misnomer. "Unordered" - implies that the list items may be randomly rearranged without - affecting the meaning of the list. Bullet lists *are* often - ordered; the ordering is simply left implicit. - -:Processing: - Each list item should begin a new vertical block, prefaced by a - bullet/dingbat. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (list_item_ +) - -:Attributes: - The ``bullet_list`` element contains the `common attributes`_ - (id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus bullet_. - - ``bullet`` is used to record the style of bullet from the input - data. In documents processed from reStructuredText_, it contains - one of "-", "+", or "*". It may be ignored in processing. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``bullet_list``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``bullet_list``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - - Item 1, paragraph 1. - - Item 1, paragraph 2. - - - Item 2. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <bullet_list bullet="-"> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item 1, paragraph 1. - <paragraph> - Item 1, paragraph 2. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item 2. - -See list_item_ for another example. - - -``caption`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``caution`` -=========== - -The ``caution`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, danger_, error_, -hint_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``caution``. - -:Children: - ``caution`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``caution`` is analogous to the DocBook "caution" element. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Caution" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``caution`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``caution``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``caution``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Caution:: Don't take any wooden nickels. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <caution> - <paragraph> - Don't take any wooden nickels. - - -``citation`` -============ - -`To be completed`_. - - -``citation_reference`` -====================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``classifier`` -============== - -The ``classifier`` element contains the classification or type of the -term_ being defined in a definition_list_. For example, it can be -used to indicate the type of a variable. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ (simple) - -:Parents: - Only the definition_list_item_ element contains ``classifier``. - -:Children: - ``classifier`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``classifier`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives or type effects. - -:Processing: - See definition_list_item_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``classifier`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -Here is a hypothetical data dictionary. reStructuredText_ source:: - - name : string - Customer name. - i : int - Temporary index variable. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <definition_list> - <definition_list_item> - <term> - name - <classifier> - string - <definition> - <paragraph> - Customer name. - <definition_list_item> - <term> - i - <classifier> - int - <definition> - <paragraph> - Temporary index variable. - - -``colspec`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``comment`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``contact`` -=========== - -The ``contact`` element holds contact information for the author -(individual or group) of the document, or a third-party contact. It -is typically used for an email or web address. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``contact``: docinfo_, authors_ - -:Children: - ``contact`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``contact`` is analogous to the DocBook "email" element. The HTML - "address" element serves a similar purpose. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``contact`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``contact``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Contact: jrh@example.com - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <contact> - <reference refuri="mailto:jrh@example.com"> - jrh@example.com - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``copyright`` -============= - -The ``copyright`` element contains the document's copyright statement. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``copyright``. - -:Children: - ``copyright`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``copyright`` is analogous to the DocBook "copyright" element. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``copyright`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``copyright``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <copyright> - This document has been placed in the public domain. - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``danger`` -========== - -The ``danger`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, error_, -hint_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``danger``. - -:Children: - ``danger`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``danger`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives and type effects. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "!DANGER!" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``danger`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``danger``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``danger``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. DANGER:: Mad scientist at work! - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <danger> - <paragraph> - Mad scientist at work! - - -``date`` -======== - -The ``date`` element contains the date of publication, release, or -last modification of the document. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``date``. - -:Children: - ``date`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``date`` is analogous to the DocBook "date" element. - -:Processing: - Often used with the RCS/CVS keyword "Date". See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``date`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``date``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Date: 2002-08-20 - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <date> - 2002-08-20 - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``decoration`` -============== - -The ``decoration`` element is a container for header_ and footer_ -elements and potential future extensions. These elements are used for -page navigation, notes, time/datestamp, etc. Currently only the -footer_ element is implemented, populated with processing information -(datestamp, a link to Docutils_, etc.). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the document_ element contains ``decoration``. - -:Children: - ``decoration`` elements may contain `decorative elements`_. - -:Analogues: - There are no direct analogies to ``decoration`` in HTML or in - DocBook. Equivalents are typically constructed from primitives - and/or generated by the processing system. - -:Processing: - See the individual `decorative elements`_. - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (header_?, footer_?) - -Although the content model doesn't specifically require contents, no -empty ``decoration`` elements are ever created. - -:Attributes: - The ``decoration`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - A paragraph. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms, -assuming that the datestamp command-line option or configuration -setting has been supplied:: - - <document> - <decoration> - <footer> - <paragraph> - Generated on: 2002-08-20. - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - - -``definition`` -============== - -The ``definition`` element is a container for the body elements used -to define a term_ in a definition_list_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ (compound) - -:Parents: - Only definition_list_item_ elements contain ``definition``. - -:Children: - ``definition`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``definition`` is analogous to the HTML "dd" element and to the - DocBook "listitem" element (inside a "variablelistentry" element). - -:Processing: - See definition_list_item_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``definition`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the definition_list_, definition_list_item_, and -classifier_ elements. - - -``definition_list`` -=================== - -The ``definition_list`` element contains a list of terms and their -definitions. It can be used for glossaries or dictionaries, to -describe or classify things, for dialogues, or to itemize subtopics -(such as in this reference). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``definition_list``. - -:Children: - ``definition_list`` elements contain one or more - definition_list_item_ elements. - -:Analogues: - ``definition_list`` is analogous to the HTML "dl" element and to - the DocBook "variablelist" element. - -:Processing: - See definition_list_item_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (definition_list_item_ +) - -:Attributes: - The ``definition_list`` element contains only the `common - attributes`_: id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``definition_list``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``definition_list``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Term - Definition. - - Term : classifier - The ' : ' indicates a classifier in - definition list item terms only. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <definition_list> - <definition_list_item> - <term> - Term - <definition> - <paragraph> - Definition. - <definition_list_item> - <term> - Term - <classifier> - classifier - <definition> - <paragraph> - The ' : ' indicates a classifier in - definition list item terms only. - -See definition_list_item_ and classifier_ for further examples. - - -``definition_list_item`` -======================== - -The ``definition_list_item`` element contains a single -term_/definition_ pair (with optional classifier_). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ (compound) - -:Parents: - Only the definition_list_ element contains - ``definition_list_item``. - -:Children: - ``definition_list_item`` elements each contain a single term_, - an optional classifier_, and a definition_. - -:Analogues: - ``definition_list_item`` is analogous to the DocBook - "variablelistentry" element. - -:Processing: - The optional classifier_ can be rendered differently from the - term_. They should be separated visually, typically by spaces - plus a colon or dash. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (term_, classifier_?, definition_) - -:Attributes: - The ``definition_list_item`` element contains only the `common - attributes`_: id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Tyrannosaurus Rex : carnivore - Big and scary; the "Tyrant King". - - Brontosaurus : herbivore - All brontosauruses are thin at one end, - much much thicker in the middle - and then thin again at the far end. - - -- Anne Elk (Miss) - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <definition_list> - <definition_list_item> - <term> - Tyrannosaurus Rex - <classifier> - carnivore - <definition> - <paragraph> - Big and scary; the "Tyrant King". - <definition_list_item> - <term> - Brontosaurus - <classifier> - herbivore - <definition> - <paragraph> - All brontosauruses are thin at one end, - much much thicker in the middle - and then thin again at the far end. - <paragraph> - -- Anne Elk (Miss) - -See definition_list_ and classifier_ for further examples. - - -``description`` -=============== - -The ``description`` element contains body elements, describing the -purpose or effect of a command-line option or group of options. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_list_item_ element contains ``description``. - -:Children: - ``description`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``description`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See option_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``description`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``docinfo`` -=========== - -The ``docinfo`` element is a container for document bibliographic -data, or meta-data (data about the document). It corresponds to the -front matter of a book, such as the title page and copyright page. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the document_ element contains ``docinfo``. - -:Children: - ``docinfo`` elements contain `bibliographic elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``docinfo`` is analogous to DocBook "info" elements ("bookinfo" - etc.). There are no directly analogous HTML elements; the "meta" - element carries some of the same information, albeit invisibly. - -:Processing: - The ``docinfo`` element may be rendered as a two-column table or - in other styles. It may even be invisible or omitted from the - processed output. Meta-data may be extracted from ``docinfo`` - children; for example, HTML ``<meta>`` tags may be constructed. - - When Docutils_ transforms a reStructuredText_ field_list_ into a - ``docinfo`` element (see the examples below), RCS/CVS keywords are - normally stripped from simple (one paragraph) field bodies. For - complete details, please see `RCS Keywords`_ in the - `reStructuredText Markup Specification`_. - - .. _RCS Keywords: rst/reStructuredText.html#rcs-keywords - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%bibliographic.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``docinfo`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -Docinfo is represented in reStructuredText_ by a field_list_ in a -bibliographic context: the first non-comment element of a document_, -after any document title_/subtitle_. The field list is transformed -into a ``docinfo`` element and its children by a transform. Source:: - - Docinfo Example - =============== - - :Author: J. Random Hacker - :Contact: jrh@example.com - :Date: 2002-08-18 - :Status: Work In Progress - :Version: 1 - :Filename: $RCSfile$ - :Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="docinfo-example" name="docinfo example"> - <title> - Docinfo Example - <docinfo> - <author> - J. Random Hacker - <contact> - <reference refuri="mailto:jrh@example.com"> - jrh@example.com - <date> - 2002-08-18 - <status> - Work In Progress - <version> - 1 - <field> - <field_name> - Filename - <field_body> - <paragraph> - doctree.txt - <copyright> - This document has been placed in the public domain. - -Note that "Filename" is a non-standard ``docinfo`` field, so becomes a -generic ``field`` element. Also note that the "RCSfile" keyword -syntax has been stripped from the "Filename" data. - -See field_list_ for an example in a non-bibliographic context. Also -see the individual examples for the various `bibliographic elements`_. - - -``doctest_block`` -================= - -The ``doctest_block`` element is a Python-specific variant of -literal_block_. It is a block of text where line breaks and -whitespace are significant and must be preserved. ``doctest_block`` -elements are used for interactive Python interpreter sessions, which -are distinguished by their input prompt: ``>>>``. They are meant to -illustrate usage by example, and provide an elegant and powerful -testing environment via the `doctest module`_ in the Python standard -library. - -.. _doctest module: - http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-doctest.html - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Simple Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``doctest_block``. - -:Children: - ``doctest_block`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``doctest_block`` is analogous to the HTML "pre" element and to - the DocBook "programlisting" and "screen" elements. - -:Processing: - As with literal_block_, ``doctest_block`` elements are typically - rendered in a monospaced typeface. It is crucial that all - whitespace and line breaks are preserved in the rendered form. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``doctest_block`` element contains the `common attributes`_ - (id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus `xml:space`_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``doctest_block``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``doctest_block``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - This is an ordinary paragraph. - - >>> print 'this is a Doctest block' - this is a Doctest block - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <paragraph> - This is an ordinary paragraph. - <doctest_block xml:space="preserve"> - >>> print 'this is a Doctest block' - this is a Doctest block - - -``document`` -============ - -The ``document`` element is the root (topmost) element of the Docutils -document tree. ``document`` is the direct or indirect ancestor of -every other element in the tree. It encloses the entire document -tree. It is the starting point for a document. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The ``document`` element has no parents. - -:Children: - ``document`` elements may contain `structural subelements`_, - `structural elements`_, and `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``document`` is analogous to the HTML "html" element and to - several DocBook elements such as "book". - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - ((title_, - subtitle_?)?, - docinfo_?, - decoration_?, - `%structure.model;`_) - -Depending on the source of the data and the stage of processing, the -"document" may not initially contain a "title". A document title is -not directly representable in reStructuredText_. Instead, a lone -top-level section may have its title promoted to become the document -title_, and similarly for a lone second-level (sub)section's title to -become the document subtitle_. The "docinfo_" may be transformed from -an initial field_list_, and "decoration_" is usually constructed -programmatically. - -See the `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity for details of the body -of a ``document``. - -:Attributes: - The ``document`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - A Title - ======= - - A paragraph. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result from simple parsing:: - - <document> - <section id="a-title" name="a title"> - <title> - A Title - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - -After applying transforms, the section title is promoted to become the -document title:: - - <document id="a-title" name="a title"> - <title> - A Title - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - - -``emphasis`` -============ - -`To be completed`_. - - -``entry`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``enumerated_list`` -=================== - -The ``enumerated_list`` element contains list_item_ elements which are -uniformly marked with enumerator labels. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``enumerated_list``. - -:Children: - ``enumerated_list`` elements contain one or more list_item_ - elements. - -:Analogues: - ``enumerated_list`` is analogous to the HTML "ol" element and to - the DocBook "orderedlist" element. - -:Processing: - Each list item should begin a new vertical block, prefaced by a - enumeration marker (such as "1."). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (list_item_ +) - -:Attributes: - The ``enumerated_list`` element contains the `common attributes`_ - (id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus enumtype_, - prefix_, suffix_, and start_. - - ``enumtype`` is used to record the intended enumeration sequence, - one of "arabic" (1, 2, 3, ...), "loweralpha" (a, b, c, ..., z), - "upperalpha" (A, B, C, ..., Z), "lowerroman" (i, ii, iii, iv, ..., - mmmmcmxcix [4999]), or "upperroman" (I, II, III, IV, ..., - MMMMCMXCIX [4999]). - - ``prefix`` stores the formatting characters used before the - enumerator. In documents originating from reStructuredText_ data, - it will contain either "" (empty string) or "(" (left - parenthesis). It may or may not affect processing. - - ``suffix`` stores the formatting characters used after the - enumerator. In documents originating from reStructuredText_ data, - it will contain either "." (period) or ")" (right parenthesis). - Depending on the capabilities of the output format, this attribute - may or may not affect processing. - - ``start`` contains the ordinal value of the first item in the - list, in decimal. For lists beginning at value 1 ("1", "a", "A", - "i", or "I"), this attribute may be omitted. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``enumerated_list``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``enumerated_list``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - 1. Item 1. - - (A) Item A. - (B) Item B. - (C) Item C. - - 2. Item 2. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <enumerated_list enumtype="arabic" prefix="" suffix="."> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item 1. - <enumerated_list enumtype="upperalpha" prefix="(" suffix=")"> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item A. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item B. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item C. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Item 2. - -See list_item_ for another example. - - -``error`` -========= - -The ``error`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, -danger_, hint_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic -admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``error``. - -:Children: - ``error`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``error`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives and type effects. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Error" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``error`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``error``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly - includes ``error``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Error:: Does not compute. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <error> - <paragraph> - Does not compute. - - -``field`` -========= - -The ``field`` element contains a pair of field_name_ and field_body_ -elements. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``field``: docinfo_, - field_list_ - -:Children: - Each ``field`` element contains one field_name_ and one - field_body_ element. - -:Analogues: - ``field`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See field_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (field_name_, field_body_) - -:Attributes: - The ``field`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``field``. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the field_list_ and docinfo_ elements. - - -``field_body`` -============== - -The ``field_body`` element contains body elements. It is analogous to -a database field's data. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the field_ element contains ``field_body``. - -:Children: - ``field_body`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``field_body`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See field_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)* - -:Attributes: - The ``field_body`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the field_list_ and docinfo_ elements. - - -``field_list`` -============== - -The ``field_list`` element contains two-column table-like structures -resembling database records (label & data pairs). Field lists are -often meant for further processing. In reStructuredText_, field lists -are used to represent bibliographic fields (contents of the docinfo_ -element) and directive options. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``field_list``. - -:Children: - ``field_list`` elements contain one or more field_ elements. - -:Analogues: - ``field_list`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives such as tables. - -:Processing: - A ``field_list`` is typically rendered as a two-column list, where - the first column contains "labels" (usually with a colon suffix). - However, field lists are often used for extension syntax or - special processing. Such structures do not survive as field lists - to be rendered. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (field_ +) - -:Attributes: - The ``field_list`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``field_list``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``field_list``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - :Author: Me - :Version: 1 - :Date: 2001-08-11 - :Parameter i: integer - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <field_list> - <field> - <field_name> - Author - <field_body> - <paragraph> - Me - <field> - <field_name> - Version - <field_body> - <paragraph> - 1 - <field> - <field_name> - Date - <field_body> - <paragraph> - 2001-08-11 - <field> - <field_name> - Parameter i - <field_body> - <paragraph> - integer - - -``field_name`` -============== - -The ``field_name`` element contains text data only. It is analogous -to a database field's name. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the field_ element contains ``field_name``. - -:Children: - ``field_name`` elements have no children. They may contain text - data only. - -:Analogues: - ``field_name`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See field_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (#PCDATA) - -:Attributes: - The ``field_name`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the field_list_ and docinfo_ elements. - - -``figure`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``footer`` -========== - -The ``footer`` element is a container element whose contents are meant -to appear at the bottom of a web page, or repeated at the bottom of -every printed page. Currently the ``footer`` element may contain -processing information (datestamp, a link to Docutils_, etc.). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Decorative Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the decoration_ element contains ``footer``. - -:Children: - ``footer`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - There are no direct analogies to ``footer`` in HTML or DocBook. - Equivalents are typically constructed from primitives and/or - generated by the processing system. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``footer`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - A paragraph. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms, -assuming that the datestamp command-line option or configuration -setting has been supplied:: - - <document> - <decoration> - <footer> - <paragraph> - Generated on: 2002-08-20. - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - - -``footnote`` -============ - -`To be completed`_. - - -``footnote_reference`` -====================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``generated`` -============= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``header`` -========== - -The ``header`` element is a container element whose contents are meant -to appear at the top of a web page, or at the top of every printed -page. Docutils does not yet make use of the ``header`` element. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Decorative Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the decoration_ element contains ``header``. - -:Children: - ``header`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - There are no direct analogies to ``header`` in HTML or DocBook. - Equivalents are typically constructed from primitives and/or - generated by the processing system. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``header`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -None. - - -``hint`` -======== - -The ``hint`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, -danger_, error_, important_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic -admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``hint``. - -:Children: - ``hint`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``hint`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives and type effects. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Hint" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``hint`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``hint``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly - includes ``hint``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Hint:: It's bigger than a bread box. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <hint> - <paragraph> - It's bigger than a bread box. - - -``image`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``important`` -============= - -The ``important`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, -danger_, error_, hint_, note_, tip_, warning_, and the generic -admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``important``. - -:Children: - ``important`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``important`` is analogous to the DocBook "important" element. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Important" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``important`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``important``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``important``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Important:: - - * Wash behind your ears. - * Clean up your room. - * Back up your data. - * Call your mother. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <important> - <bullet_list> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Wash behind your ears. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Clean up your room. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Back up your data. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Call your mother. - - -``inline`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``label`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``legend`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``line_block`` -============== - -The ``line_block`` element contains a block of text where line breaks -and whitespace are significant and must be preserved. ``line_block`` -elements are commonly used for verse and addresses. See `line_block`_ -for an alternative useful for program listings and interactive -computer sessions. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Simple Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``line_block``. - -:Children: - ``line_block`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``line_block`` is analogous to the DocBook "literallayout" element - and to the HTML "pre" element (with modifications to typeface - styles). - -:Processing: - Unline ``literal_block``, ``line_block`` elements are typically - rendered in an ordinary text typeface. It is crucial that all - whitespace and line breaks are preserved in the rendered form. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``line_block`` element contains the `common attributes`_ (id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus `xml:space`_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``line_block``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``line_block``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText uses a directive to indicate a ``line_block``. -Example source:: - - Take it away, Eric the Orchestra Leader! - - .. line-block:: - - A one, two, a one two three four - - Half a bee, philosophically, - must, *ipso facto*, half not be. - But half the bee has got to be, - *vis a vis* its entity. D'you see? - - But can a bee be said to be - or not to be an entire bee, - when half the bee is not a bee, - due to some ancient injury? - - Singing... - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <paragraph> - Take it away, Eric the Orchestra Leader! - <line_block xml:space="preserve"> - A one, two, a one two three four - - Half a bee, philosophically, - must, <emphasis>ipso facto</emphasis>, half not be. - But half the bee has got to be, - <emphasis>vis a vis</emphasis>its entity. D'you see? - - But can a bee be said to be - or not to be an entire bee, - when half the bee is not a bee, - due to some ancient injury? - - Singing... - - -``list_item`` -============= - -The ``list_item`` element is a container for the elements of a list -item. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ (compound) - -:Parents: - The bullet_list_ and enumerated_list_ elements contain - ``list_item``. - -:Children: - ``list_item`` elements may contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``list_item`` is analogous to the HTML "li" element and to the - DocBook "listitem" element. - -:Processing: - See bullet_list_ or enumerated_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``list_item`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - 1. Outer list, item 1. - - * Inner list, item 1. - * Inner list, item 2. - - 2. Outer list, item 2. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <enumerated_list enumtype="arabic" prefix="" suffix="."> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Outer list, item 1. - <bullet_list bullet="*"> - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Inner list, item 1. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Inner list, item 2. - <list_item> - <paragraph> - Outer list, item 2. - -See bullet_list_ or enumerated_list_ for further examples. - - -``literal`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``literal_block`` -================= - -The ``literal_block`` element contains a block of text where line -breaks and whitespace are significant and must be preserved. -``literal_block`` elements are commonly used for program listings and -interactive computer sessions. See `line_block`_ for an alternative -useful for verse and addresses. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Simple Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``literal_block``. - -:Children: - ``literal_block`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``literal_block`` is analogous to the HTML "pre" element and to - the DocBook "programlisting" and "screen" elements. - -:Processing: - ``literal_block`` elements are typically rendered in a monospaced - typeface. It is crucial that all whitespace and line breaks are - preserved in the rendered form. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``literal_block`` element contains the `common attributes`_ - (id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus `xml:space`_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``literal_block``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``literal_block``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - Here is a literal block:: - - if literal_block: - text = 'is left as-is' - spaces_and_linebreaks = 'are preserved' - markup_processing = None - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <paragraph> - Here is a literal block: - <literal_block xml:space="preserve"> - if literal_block: - text = 'is left as-is' - spaces_and_linebreaks = 'are preserved' - markup_processing = None - - -``note`` -======== - -The ``note`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, -danger_, error_, hint_, important_, tip_, warning_, and the generic -admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``note``. - -:Children: - ``note`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``note`` is analogous to the DocBook "note" element. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Note" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``note`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``note``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly - includes ``note``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Note:: Admonitions can be handy to break up a - long boring technical document. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <note> - <paragraph> - Admonitions can be handy to break up a - long boring technical document. - -``option`` -========== - -The ``option`` element groups an option string together with zero or -more option argument placeholders. Note that reStructuredText_ -currently supports only one argument per option. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_group_ element contains ``option``. - -:Children: - Each ``option`` element contains one option_string_ and zero or - more option_argument_ elements. - -:Analogues: - ``option`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See option_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (option_string_, option_argument_ \*) - -:Attributes: - The ``option`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``option_argument`` -=================== - -The ``option_argument`` element contains placeholder text for option -arguments. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_ element contains ``option_argument``. - -:Children: - ``option_argument`` elements contain text data only. - -:Analogues: - ``option_argument`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - The value of the "delimiter" attribute is prefixed to the - ``option_argument``, separating it from its option_string_ or a - preceding ``option_argument``. The ``option_argument`` text is - typically rendered in a monospaced typeface, possibly italicized - or otherwise altered to indicate its placeholder nature. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (#PCDATA) - -:Attributes: - The ``option_argument`` element contains the `common attributes`_ (id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus delimiter_. - - ``delimiter`` contains the text preceding the ``option_argument``: - either the text separating it from the option_string_ (typically - either "=" or " ") or the text between option arguments (typically - either "," or " "). - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``option_group`` -================ - -The ``option_group`` element groups together one or more option_ -elements, all synonyms. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_list_item_ element contains ``option_group``. - -:Children: - ``option_group`` elements contain one or more option_ elements. - - ``option_group`` is an empty element and has no children. - - Each ``option_group`` element contains one _ and - one _ element. - -:Analogues: - ``option_group`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - Typically option_ elements within an ``option_group`` are joined - together in a comma-separated list. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (option_group_, description_) - -:Attributes: - The ``option_group`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``option_list`` -=============== - -Each ``option_list`` element contains a two-column list of -command-line options and descriptions, documenting a program's -options. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``option_list``. - -:Children: - ``option_list`` elements contain one or more option_list_item_ - elements. - -:Analogues: - ``option_list`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. It can be - emulated with primitives such as tables. - -:Processing: - An ``option_list`` is typically rendered as a two-column list, - where the first column contains option strings and arguments, and - the second column contains descriptions. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (option_list_item_ +) - -:Attributes: - The ``option_list`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``option_list``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``option_list``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - -a command-line option "a" - -1 file, --one=file, --two file - Multiple options with arguments. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <option_list> - <option_list_item> - <option_group> - <option> - <option_string> - -a - <description> - <paragraph> - command-line option "a" - <option_list_item> - <option_group> - <option> - <option_string> - -1 - <option_argument delimiter=" "> - file - <option> - <option_string> - --one - <option_argument delimiter="="> - file - <option> - <option_string> - --two - <option_argument delimiter=" "> - file - <description> - <paragraph> - Multiple options with arguments. - - -``option_list_item`` -==================== - -The ``option_list_item`` element is a container for a pair of -option_group_ and description_ elements. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_list_ element contains ``option_list_item``. - -:Children: - Each ``option_list_item`` element contains one option_group_ and - one description_ element. - -:Analogues: - ``option_list_item`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - See option_list_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (option_group_, description_) - -:Attributes: - The ``option_list_item`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``option_string`` -================= - -The ``option_string`` element contains the text of a command-line -option. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the option_ element contains ``option_string``. - -:Children: - ``option_string`` elements contain text data only. - -:Analogues: - ``option_string`` has no direct analogues in common DTDs. - -:Processing: - The ``option_string`` text is typically rendered in a monospaced - typeface. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (#PCDATA) - -:Attributes: - The ``option_string`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the option_list_ element. - - -``organization`` -================ - -The ``organization`` element contains the name of document author's -organization, or the organization responsible for the document. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``organization``. - -:Children: - ``organization`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``organization`` is analogous to the DocBook "orgname", - "corpname", or "publishername" elements. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``organization`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``organization``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Organization: Humankind - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <organization> - Humankind - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``paragraph`` -============= - -The ``paragraph`` element contains the text and inline elements of a -single paragraph, a fundamental building block of documents. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Simple Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``paragraph``. - -:Children: - ``paragraph`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``paragraph`` is analogous to the HTML "p" element and to the - DocBook "para" elements. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``paragraph`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``paragraph``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity - indirectly includes ``paragraph``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - A paragraph. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - - -``pending`` -=========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``problematic`` -=============== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``raw`` -======= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``reference`` -============= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``revision`` -============ - -The ``revision`` element contains the revision number of the document. -It can be used alone or in conjunction with version_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``revision``. - -:Children: - ``revision`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``revision`` is analogous to but simpler than the DocBook - "revision" element. It closely matches the DocBook "revnumber" - element, but in a simpler context. - -:Processing: - Often used with the RCS/CVS keyword "Revision". See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``revision`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``revision``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Version: 1 - :Revision: b - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <version> - 1 - <revision> - b - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``row`` -======= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``rubric`` -========== - - rubric n. 1. a title, heading, or the like, in a manuscript, - book, statute, etc., written or printed in red or otherwise - distinguished from the rest of the text. ... - - -- Random House Webster's College Dictionary, 1991 - -A rubric is like an informal heading that doesn't correspond to the -document's structure. - -`To be completed`_. - - -``section`` -=========== - -The ``section`` element is the main unit of hierarchy for Docutils -documents. Docutils ``section`` elements are a recursive structure; a -``section`` may contain other ``section`` elements, without limit. -Paragraphs and other body elements may occur before a ``section``, but -not after it. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``section``: document_, - section_ - -:Children: - ``section`` elements begin with a title_, and may contain `body - elements`_ as well as transition_, topic_, and sidebar_ elements. - -:Analogues: - ``section`` is analogous to DocBook recursive "section" elements, - and to HTML "div" elements combined with "h1" etc. title elements. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (title_, - `%structure.model;`_) - -See the `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity for details of the body -of a ``section``. - -:Attributes: - The ``section`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%section.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``section``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly - includes ``section``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Title 1 - ======= - Paragraph 1. - - Title 2 - ------- - Paragraph 2. - - Title 3 - ======= - Paragraph 3. - - Title 4 - ------- - Paragraph 4. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing:: - - <document> - <section id="title-1" name="title 1"> - <title> - Title 1 - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1. - <section id="title-2" name="title 2"> - <title> - Title 2 - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2. - <section id="title-3" name="title 3"> - <title> - Title 3 - <paragraph> - Paragraph 3. - <section id="title-4" name="title 4"> - <title> - Title 4 - <paragraph> - Paragraph 4. - - -``sidebar`` -=========== - -Sidebars are like miniature, parallel documents that occur inside -other documents, providing related or reference material. A -``sidebar`` is typically offset by a border and "floats" to the side -of the page; the document's main text may flow around it. Sidebars -can also be likened to super-footnotes; their content is outside of -the flow of the document's main text. - -The ``sidebar`` element is a nonrecursive section_-like construct -which may occur at the top level of a section_ wherever a body element -(list, table, etc.) is allowed. In other words, ``sidebar`` elements -cannot nest inside body elements, so you can't have a ``sidebar`` -inside a ``table`` or a ``list``, or inside another ``sidebar`` (or -topic_). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``sidebar``: document_, - section_ - -:Children: - ``sidebar`` elements begin with a title_ and an optional subtitle_ - and contain `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``sidebar`` is analogous to the DocBook "sidebar" element. - -:Processing: - A ``sidebar`` element should be set off from the rest of the - document somehow, typically with a border. Sidebars typically - "float" to the side of the page and the document's main text flows - around them. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (title_, subtitle_?, - (`%body.elements;`_)+) - -:Attributes: - The ``sidebar`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``sidebar``. - - -Examples --------- - -The `"sidebar" directive`_ is used to create a ``sidebar`` element. -reStructuredText_ source:: - - .. sidebar:: Title - :subtitle: If Desired - - Body. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <sidebar> - <title> - Title - <subtitle> - If Desired - <paragraph> - Body. - -.. _"sidebar" directive: rst/directives.html#sidebar - - -``status`` -========== - -The ``status`` element contains a status statement for the document, -such as "Draft", "Final", "Work In Progress", etc. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``status``. - -:Children: - ``status`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``status`` is analogous to the DocBook "status" element. - -:Processing: - See docinfo_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``status`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``status``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Status: Work In Progress - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <status> - Work In Progress - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``strong`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``subscript`` -============= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``substitution_definition`` -=========================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``substitution_reference`` -========================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``subtitle`` -============ - -The ``subtitle`` element stores the subtitle of a document_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - The document_ and sidebar_ elements may contain ``subtitle``. - -:Children: - ``subtitle`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``subtitle`` is analogous to HTML header elements ("h2" etc.) and - to the DocBook "subtitle" element. - -:Processing: - A document's subtitle is usually rendered smaller than its title_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``subtitle`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - ======= - Title - ======= - ---------- - Subtitle - ---------- - - A paragraph. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="title" name="title"> - <title> - Title - <subtitle id="subtitle" name="subtitle"> - Subtitle - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - -Note how two section levels have collapsed, promoting their titles to -become the document's title and subtitle. Since there is only one -structural element (document), the subsection's ``id`` and ``name`` -attributes are stored in the ``subtitle`` element. - - -``superscript`` -=============== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``system_message`` -================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``table`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``target`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``tbody`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``term`` -======== - -The ``term`` element contains a word or phrase being defined in a -definition_list_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Body Subelements`_ (simple) - -:Parents: - Only the definition_list_item_ element contains ``term``. - -:Children: - ``term`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``term`` is analogous to the HTML "dt" element and to the DocBook - "term" element. - -:Processing: - See definition_list_item_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``term`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - - -Examples --------- - -See the examples for the definition_list_, definition_list_item_, and -classifier_ elements. - - -``tgroup`` -========== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``thead`` -========= - -`To be completed`_. - - -``tip`` -======= - -The ``tip`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and self-contained -notice. Also see the other admonition elements Docutils offers (in -alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, danger_, error_, hint_, -important_, note_, warning_, and the generic admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``tip``. - -:Children: - ``tip`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``tip`` is analogous to the DocBook "tip" element. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Tip" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``tip`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes ``tip``. - The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly includes - ``tip``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. Tip:: 15% if the service is good. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <tip> - <paragraph> - 15% if the service is good. - - -``title`` -========= - -The ``title`` element stores the title of a document_, section_, -topic_, sidebar_, or generic admonition_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``title``: document_, section_, - topic_, sidebar_, admonition_ - -:Children: - ``title`` elements may contain text data plus `inline elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``title`` is analogous to HTML "title" and header ("h1" etc.) - elements, and to the DocBook "title" element. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``title`` element contains the `common attributes`_ (id_, - name_, dupname_, source_, and class_), plus refid_ and auto_. - - ``refid`` is used as a backlink to a table of contents entry. - - ``auto`` is used to indicate (with value "1") that the ``title`` - has been numbered automatically. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - A Title - ======= - - A paragraph. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <section id="a-title" name="a title"> - <title> - A Title - <paragraph> - A paragraph. - - -``title_reference`` -=================== - -`To be completed`_. - - -``topic`` -========= - -The ``topic`` element is a nonrecursive section_-like construct which -may occur at the top level of a section_ wherever a body element -(list, table, etc.) is allowed. In other words, ``topic`` elements -cannot nest inside body elements, so you can't have a ``topic`` inside -a ``table`` or a ``list``, or inside another ``topic`` (or sidebar_). - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Elements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``topic``: document_, section_ - -:Children: - ``topic`` elements begin with a title_ and may contain `body - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``topic`` is analogous to the DocBook "simplesect" element. - -:Processing: - A ``topic`` element should be set off from the rest of the - document somehow, such as with indentation or a border. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (title_?, - (`%body.elements;`_)+) - -:Attributes: - The ``topic`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``topic``. - - -Examples --------- - -The `"topic" directive`_ is used to create a ``topic`` element. -reStructuredText_ source:: - - .. topic:: Title - - Body. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <topic> - <title> - Title - <paragraph> - Body. - -.. _"topic" directive: rst/directives.html#topic - - -``transition`` -============== - -The ``transition`` element is commonly seen in novels and short -fiction, as a gap spanning one or more lines, with or without a type -ornament such as a row of asterisks. Transitions separate other body -elements, dividing a section into untitled divisions. A transition -may not begin or end a section or document, nor may two transitions be -immediately adjacent. - -See `Doctree Representation of Transitions`__ in `A Record of -reStructuredText Syntax Alternatives`__. - -__ rst/alternatives.txt#doctree-representation-of-transitions -__ rst/alternatives.txt - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Structural Subelements`_ - -:Parents: - The following elements may contain ``transition``: document_, - section_ - -:Children: - ``transition`` is an empty element and has no children. - -:Analogues: - ``transition`` is analogous to the HTML "hr" element. - -:Processing: - The ``transition`` element is typically rendered as vertical - whitespace (more than that separating paragraphs), with or without - a horizontal line or row of asterisks. In novels, transitions are - often represented as a row of three well-spaced asterisks with - vertical space above and below. - - -Content Model -------------- - -:: - - EMPTY - -The ``transition`` element has no content; it is a "point element". - -:Attributes: - The ``transition`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``transition``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Paragraph 1. - - -------- - - Paragraph 2. - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing:: - - <document> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 1. - <transition> - <paragraph> - Paragraph 2. - - -``version`` -=========== - -The ``version`` element contains the version number of the document. -It can be used alone or in conjunction with revision_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Bibliographic Elements`_ - -:Parents: - Only the docinfo_ element contains ``version``. - -:Children: - ``version`` elements may contain text data plus `inline - elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``version`` may be considered analogous to the DocBook "revision", - "revnumber", or "biblioid" elements. - -:Processing: - Sometimes used with the RCS/CVS keyword "Revision". See docinfo_ - and revision_. - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%text.model;`_ - -:Attributes: - The ``version`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%bibliographic.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``version``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText_ source:: - - Document Title - ============== - - :Version: 1.1 - -Complete pseudo-XML_ result after parsing and applying transforms:: - - <document id="document-title" name="document title"> - <title> - Document Title - <docinfo> - <version> - 1.1 - -See docinfo_ for a more complete example, including processing -context. - - -``warning`` -=========== - -The ``warning`` element is an admonition, a distinctive and -self-contained notice. Also see the other admonition elements -Docutils offers (in alphabetical order): attention_, caution_, -danger_, error_, hint_, important_, note_, tip_. - - -Details -------- - -:Category: - `Compound Body Elements`_ - -:Parents: - All elements employing the `%body.elements;`_ or - `%structure.model;`_ parameter entities in their content models - may contain ``warning``. - -:Children: - ``warning`` elements contain one or more `body elements`_. - -:Analogues: - ``warning`` is analogous to the DocBook "warning" element. - -:Processing: - Rendered distinctly (inset and/or in a box, etc.), with the - generated title "Warning" (or similar). - - -Content Model -------------- - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (`%body.elements;`_)+ - -:Attributes: - The ``warning`` element contains only the `common attributes`_: - id_, name_, dupname_, source_, and class_. - -:Parameter Entities: - The `%body.elements;`_ parameter entity directly includes - ``warning``. The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity indirectly - includes ``warning``. - - -Examples --------- - -reStructuredText source:: - - .. WARNING:: Reader discretion is strongly advised. - -Pseudo-XML_ fragment from simple parsing:: - - <warning> - <paragraph> - Reader discretion is strongly advised. - - ---------------------- - Attribute Reference ---------------------- - -.. contents:: :local: - :depth: 1 - -_`Common Attributes`: Through the `%basic.atts;`_ parameter entity, -all elements contain the following attributes: id_, name_, dupname_, -source_, and class_. - -.. _attribute type: - -Attribute types: - -``CDATA`` - Character data. ``CDATA`` attributes may contain arbitrary text. - -``ID`` - Like a ``NMTOKEN``, but it must begin with a letter (a "name - production"). Identical ``ID`` values must not appear more than - once in a document; i.e., ID values must uniquely identify their - elements. - -``IDREF`` - A reference to an ``ID`` value (a name production) of another - element. - -``IDREFS`` - One or more space-separated ``ID`` references (name productions). - -``NMTOKEN`` - A "name token". One or more of letters, digits, ".", "-", and - "_". - -``NMTOKENS`` - One or more space-separated ``NMTOKEN`` names. - -``%yesorno;`` - No if zero ("0"), yes if any other value. This is a parameter - entity which resolves to a ``NMTOKEN`` attribute type. - -``%number;`` - This emphasizes that the attribute value must be a number. This - is a parameter entity which resolves to a ``NMTOKEN`` attribute - type. - -enumeration - The attribute value may be one of a specified list of values. - - -``anonymous`` -============= - -`Attribute type`_: ``%yesorno;``. Default value: none (implies no). - -The ``anonymous`` attribute is used for unnamed hyperlinks in the -target_ and reference_ elements (via the `%anonymous.att;`_ parameter -entity). - - -``auto`` -======== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``auto`` attribute is used to indicate automatically-numbered -footnote_, footnote_reference_ and title_ elements (via the -`%auto.att;`_ parameter entity). - - -``backrefs`` -============ - -`Attribute type`_: ``IDREFS``. Default value: none. - -The ``backrefs`` attribute contains a space-separated list of id_ -references, used for backlinks from footnote_, citation_, and -system_message_ elements (via the `%backrefs.att;`_ parameter entity). - - -``bullet`` -========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``bullet`` attribute is used in the bullet_list_ element. - - -``class`` -========= - -`Attribute type`_: ``NMTOKENS``. Default value: none. - -The ``class`` attribute contains one or more names used to classify an -element. The purpose of the attribute is to indicate an "is-a" -variant relationship, to allow an extensible way of defining -sub-classes of existing elements. It can be used to carry context -forward between a Docutils Reader and Writer, when a custom structure -is reduced to a standardized document tree. One common use is in -conjunction with stylesheets, to add selection criteria. It should -not be used to carry formatting instructions or arbitrary content. - -The ``class`` attribute's contents should be ignorable. Writers that -are not familiar with the variant expressed should be able to ignore -the attribute. - -``class`` is one of the `common attributes`_, shared by all Docutils -elements. - - -``delimiter`` -============= - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``delimiter`` attribute is used in the option_argument_ element. - - -``dupname`` -=========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``NMTOKENS``. Default value: none. - -The ``dupname`` attribute contains the name of an element when there -has been a naming conflict. The contents of the ``dupname`` attribute -would have been transferred from the `name`_ attribute. An element -may have at most one of the ``name`` or ``dupname`` attributes, but -not both. ``dupname`` is one of the `common attributes`_, shared by -all Docutils elements. - - -``enumtype`` -============ - -`Attribute type`_: enumeration, one of "arabic", "loweralpha", -"upperalpha", "lowerroman", or "upperroman". Default value: none. - -The ``enumtype`` attribute is used in the enumerated_list_ element. - - -``id`` -====== - -`Attribute type`_: ``ID``. Default value: none. - -The ``id`` attribute contains a unique identifier key. ``id`` is one -of the `common attributes`_, shared by all Docutils elements. - - -``name`` -======== - -`Attribute type`_: ``NMTOKENS``. Default value: none. - -The ``name`` attribute contains the name of an element, typically -originating from the element's title or content. ``name`` must be -unique; if there are name conflicts (two or more elements want to the -same name), the contents will be transferred to the `dupname`_ -attribute on the duplicate elements. An element may have at most one -of the ``name`` or ``dupname`` attributes, but not both. ``name`` is -one of the `common attributes`_, shared by all Docutils elements. - - -``prefix`` -========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``prefix`` attribute is used in the enumerated_list_ element. - - -``refid`` -========= - -`Attribute type`_: ``IDREF``. Default value: none. - -The ``refid`` attribute contains references to `id`_ attributes in -other elements. It is used by the target_, reference_, -footnote_reference_, citation_reference_, title_ and problematic_ -elements (via the `%refid.att;`_ and `%reference.atts;`_ parameter -entities). - - -``refname`` -=========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``NMTOKENS``. Default value: none. - -The ``refname`` attribute contains an internal reference to the -`name`_ attribute of another element. On a `target`_ element, -``refname`` indicates an indirect target which may resolve to either -an internal or external reference. ``refname`` is used by the -target_, reference_, footnote_reference_, citation_reference_, and -substitution_reference_ elements (via the `%refname.att;`_ and -`%reference.atts;`_ parameter entities). - - -``refuri`` -========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``refuri`` attribute contains an external reference to a URI/URL. -It is used by the target_, reference_, footnote_reference_, and -citation_reference_ elements (via the `%reference.atts;`_ parameter -entity). - - -``source`` -========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``source`` attribute is used to store the path or URL to the -source text that was used to produce the document tree. It is one of -the `common attributes`_, shared by all Docutils elements. - - -``start`` -========= - -`Attribute type`_: ``%number;``. Default value: none. - -The ``start`` attribute is used in the enumerated_list_ element. - - -``suffix`` -========== - -`Attribute type`_: ``CDATA``. Default value: none. - -The ``suffix`` attribute is used in the enumerated_list_ element. - - -``xml:space`` -============= - -`Attribute type`_: one of "default" or "preserve". Default value: -"preserve" (fixed). - -The ``xml:space`` attribute is a standard XML attribute for -whitespace-preserving elements. It is used by the literal_block_, -line_block_, doctest_block_, comment_, and raw_ elements (via the -`%fixedspace.att;`_ parameter entity). It is a fixed attribute, meant -to communicate to an XML parser that the element contains significant -whitespace. The attribute value should not be set in a document -instance. - - ----------------------------- - Parameter Entity Reference ----------------------------- - -.. contents:: :local: - :depth: 1 - -Parameter entities are used to simplify the DTD (to share definitions -and reduce duplication) and to allow the DTD to be customized by -wrapper DTDs (external client DTDs that use or import the Docutils -DTD). Parameter entities may be overridden by wrapper DTDs, replacing -the definitions below with custom definitions. Parameter entities -whose names begin with "additional" are meant to allow easy extension -by wrapper DTDs. - - -``%anonymous.att;`` -=================== - -The ``%anonymous.att;`` parameter entity contains the anonymous_ -attribute, used for unnamed hyperlinks. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - anonymous_ %yesorno; #IMPLIED - -The reference_ and target_ elements directly employ the -``%anonymous.att;`` parameter entity in their attribute lists. - - -``%auto.att;`` -============== - -The ``%auto.att;`` parameter entity contains the auto_ attribute, used -to indicate an automatically-numbered footnote or title. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - auto_ CDATA #IMPLIED - -The footnote_, footnote_reference_, and title_ elements directly -employ the ``%auto.att;`` parameter entity in their attribute lists. - - -``%backrefs.att;`` -================== - -The ``%backrefs.att;`` parameter entity contains the backrefs_ -attribute, a space-separated list of id references, for backlinks. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - backrefs_ IDREFS #IMPLIED - -The citation_, footnote_, and system_message_ elements directly employ -the ``%backrefs.att;`` parameter entity in their attribute lists. - - -``%basic.atts;`` -================ - -The ``%basic.atts;`` parameter entity lists attributes common to all -Docutils elements. See `Common Attributes`_. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - id_ ID #IMPLIED - name_ NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - dupname_ NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - source_ CDATA #IMPLIED - class_ NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - %additional.basic.atts; - -The ``%additional.basic.atts;`` parameter entity can be used by -wrapper DTDs to extend ``%basic.atts;``. - - -``%bibliographic.elements;`` -============================ - -The ``%bibliographic.elements;`` parameter entity contains an OR-list of all -`bibliographic elements`_. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - author_ | authors_ | organization_ | contact_ | address_ - | version_ | revision_ | status_ | date_ | copyright_ - | field_ - %additional.bibliographic.elements; - -The ``%additional.bibliographic.elements;`` parameter entity can be used by -wrapper DTDs to extend ``%bibliographic.elements;``. - -Only the docinfo_ element directly employs the -``%bibliographic.elements;`` parameter entity in its content model. - - -``%body.elements;`` -=================== - -The ``%body.elements;`` parameter entity contains an OR-list of all -`body elements`_. ``%body.elements;`` is itself contained within the -`%structure.model;`_ parameter entity. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - paragraph_ | literal_block_ | doctest_block_ | line_block_ - | block_quote_ | table_ | figure_ | image_ | footnote_ | citation_ - | rubric_ - | bullet_list_ | enumerated_list_ | definition_list_ | field_list_ - | option_list_ - | attention_ | caution_ | danger_ | error_ | hint_ | important_ - | note_ | tip_ | warning_ | admonition_ - | target_ | substitution_definition_ | comment_ | pending_ - | system_message_ | raw_ - %additional.body.elements; - -The ``%additional.body.elements;`` parameter entity can be used by -wrapper DTDs to extend ``%body.elements;``. - -The ``%body.elements;`` parameter entity is directly employed in the -content models of the following elements: admonition_, attention_, -block_quote_, caution_, citation_, danger_, definition_, description_, -entry_, error_, field_body_, footer_, footnote_, header_, hint_, -important_, legend_, list_item_, note_, sidebar_, system_message_, -tip_, topic_, warning_ - -Via `%structure.model;`_, the ``%body.elements;`` parameter entity is -indirectly employed in the content models of the document_ and -section_ elements. - - -``%fixedspace.att;`` -==================== - -The ``%fixedspace.att;`` parameter entity contains the `xml:space`_ -attribute, a standard XML attribute for whitespace-preserving -elements. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `xml:space`_ (default | preserve) #FIXED 'preserve' - -The ``%fixedspace.att;`` parameter entity is directly employed in the -attribute lists of the following elements: address_, comment_, -doctest_block_, line_block_, literal_block_, raw_ - - -``%inline.elements;`` -===================== - -The ``%inline.elements;`` parameter entity contains an OR-list of all -`inline elements`_. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - emphasis_ | strong_ | literal_ - | reference_ | footnote_reference_ | citation_reference_ - | substitution_reference_ | title_reference_ - | abbreviation_ | acronym_ | subscript_ | superscript_ - | inline_ | problematic_ | generated_ - | target_ | image_ | raw_ - %additional.inline.elements; - -The ``%additional.inline.elements;`` parameter entity can be used by -wrapper DTDs to extend ``%inline.elements;``. - -Via `%text.model;`_, the ``%inline.elements;`` parameter entity is -indirectly employed in the content models of the following elements: -abbreviation_, acronym_, address_, attribution_, author_, caption_, -classifier_, contact_, copyright_, date_, doctest_block_, emphasis_, -generated_, inline_, line_block_, literal_block_, organization_, -paragraph_, problematic_, raw_, reference_, revision_, rubric_, -status_, strong_, subscript_, substitution_definition_, -substitution_reference_, subtitle_, superscript_, target_, term_, -title_, title_reference_, version_ - - -``%reference.atts;`` -==================== - -The ``%reference.atts;`` parameter entity groups together the refuri_, -refid_, and refname_ attributes. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - `%refuri.att;`_ - `%refid.att;`_ - `%refname.att;`_ - %additional.reference.atts; - -The ``%additional.reference.atts;`` parameter entity can be used by -wrapper DTDs to extend ``%additional.reference.atts;``. - -The citation_reference_, footnote_reference_, reference_, and target_ -elements directly employ the ``%reference.att;`` parameter entity in -their attribute lists. - - -``%refid.att;`` -================ - -The ``%refid.att;`` parameter entity contains the refid_ attribute, an -internal reference to the `id`_ attribute of another element. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - refid_ CDATA #IMPLIED - -The title_ and problematic_ elements directly employ the -``%refid.att;`` parameter entity in their attribute lists. - -Via `%reference.atts;`_, the ``%refid.att;`` parameter entity is -indirectly employed in the attribute lists of the citation_reference_, -footnote_reference_, reference_, and target_ elements. - - -``%refname.att;`` -================= - -The ``%refname.att;`` parameter entity contains the refname_ -attribute, an internal reference to the `name`_ attribute of another -element. On a `target`_ element, ``refname`` indicates an indirect -target which may resolve to either an internal or external -reference. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - refname_ NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - -The substitution_reference_ element directly employs the -``%refname.att;`` parameter entity in its attribute list. - -Via `%reference.atts;`_, the ``%refname.att;`` parameter entity is -indirectly employed in the attribute lists of the citation_reference_, -footnote_reference_, reference_, and target_ elements. - - -``%refuri.att;`` -================ - -The ``%refuri.att;`` parameter entity contains the refuri_ attribute, -an external reference to a URI/URL. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - refuri_ CDATA #IMPLIED - -Via `%reference.atts;`_, the ``%refuri.att;`` parameter entity is -indirectly employed in the attribute lists of the citation_reference_, -footnote_reference_, reference_, and target_ elements. - - -``%section.elements;`` -====================== - -The ``%section.elements;`` parameter entity contains an OR-list of all -section_-equivalent elements. ``%section.elements;`` is itself -contained within the `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - section_ - %additional.section.elements; - -The ``%additional.section.elements;`` parameter entity can be used -by wrapper DTDs to extend ``%section.elements;``. - -Via `%structure.model;`_, the ``%section.elements;`` parameter entity -is indirectly employed in the content models of the document_ and -section_ elements. - - -``%structure.model;`` -===================== - -The ``%structure.model;`` parameter entity encapsulates the -hierarchical structure of a document and of its constituent parts. -See the discussion of the `element hierarchy`_ above. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - ( ( (`%body.elements;`_ | topic_ | sidebar_)+, - (transition_, (`%body.elements;`_ | topic_ | sidebar_)+ )*, - (`%section.elements;`_)* ) - | (`%section.elements;`_)+ ) - -Each document_ or section_ contains either: - -- multiple body elements, topics, and/or sidebars, optionally - interspersed with transitions (but transitions cannot occur at the - beginning or end, nor may there be two transitions in a row), - followed by zero or more sections; or - -- one or more sections (whose contents are recursively the same as this - model). - -The `%structure.model;`_ parameter entity is directly employed in the -content models of the document_ and section_ elements. - - -``%text.model;`` -================ - -The ``%text.model;`` parameter entity is used by many elements to -represent text data mixed with `inline elements`_. - -Entity definition: - -.. parsed-literal:: - - (#PCDATA | `%inline.elements;`_)* - -The ``%text.model;`` parameter entity is directly employed in the -content models of the following elements: abbreviation_, acronym_, -address_, author_, caption_, classifier_, contact_, copyright_, date_, -doctest_block_, emphasis_, generated_, line_block_, literal_block_, -organization_, paragraph_, problematic_, raw_, reference_, revision_, -status_, strong_, substitution_definition_, substitution_reference_, -subtitle_, target_, term_, title_, version_ - - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/docutils.dtd b/docutils/docs/ref/docutils.dtd deleted file mode 100644 index 06fe4bf55..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/docutils.dtd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,571 +0,0 @@ -<!-- -====================================================================== - Docutils Generic DTD -====================================================================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This DTD has been placed in the public domain. -:Filename: docutils.dtd - -More information about this DTD (document type definition) and the -Docutils project can be found at http://docutils.sourceforge.net/. -The latest version of this DTD is available from -http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/docutils.dtd. - -The formal public identifier for this DTD is:: - - +//IDN docutils.sourceforge.net//DTD Docutils Generic//EN//XML ---> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Parameter Entities -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Parameter entities are used to simplify the DTD (reduce duplication) -and to allow the DTD to be customized by wrapper DTDs. Parameter -entities beginning with "additional" are meant to allow easy extension -by wrapper DTDs. ---> - -<!-- Attributes -================================================================== --> - -<!-- Boolean: no if zero(s), yes if any other value. --> -<!ENTITY % yesorno "NMTOKEN"> - -<!-- Emphasize that the attribute value must be a number. --> -<!ENTITY % number "NMTOKEN"> - -<!ENTITY % additional.basic.atts ""> -<!-- -Attributes shared by all elements in this DTD: - -- `id` is a unique identifier, typically assigned by the system. -- `name` is an identifier assigned in the markup. -- `dupname` is the same as `name`, used when it's a duplicate. -- `source` is the name of the source of this document or fragment. -- `class` is used to transmit individuality information forward. ---> -<!ENTITY % basic.atts - " id ID #IMPLIED - name NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - dupname NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - source CDATA #IMPLIED - class NMTOKENS #IMPLIED - %additional.basic.atts; "> - -<!-- External reference to a URI/URL. --> -<!ENTITY % refuri.att - " refuri CDATA #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- Internal reference to the `id` attribute of an element. --> -<!ENTITY % refid.att - " refid IDREF #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- Space-separated list of id references, for backlinks. --> -<!ENTITY % backrefs.att - " backrefs IDREFS #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- -Internal reference to the `name` attribute of an element. On a -'target' element, 'refname' indicates an indirect target which may -resolve to either an internal or external reference. ---> -<!ENTITY % refname.att - " refname NMTOKENS #IMPLIED "> - -<!ENTITY % additional.reference.atts ""> -<!-- Collected hyperlink reference attributes. --> -<!ENTITY % reference.atts - " %refuri.att; - %refid.att; - %refname.att; - %additional.reference.atts; "> - -<!-- Unnamed hyperlink. --> -<!ENTITY % anonymous.att - " anonymous %yesorno; #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- Auto-numbered footnote or title. --> -<!ENTITY % auto.att - " auto CDATA #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- XML standard attribute for whitespace-preserving elements. --> -<!ENTITY % fixedspace.att - " xml:space (default | preserve) #FIXED 'preserve' "> - - -<!-- Element OR-Lists -============================================================= --> - -<!ENTITY % additional.bibliographic.elements ""> -<!ENTITY % bibliographic.elements - " author | authors | organization | address | contact - | version | revision | status | date | copyright - | field - %additional.bibliographic.elements; "> - -<!ENTITY % additional.section.elements ""> -<!ENTITY % section.elements - " section - %additional.section.elements; "> - -<!ENTITY % additional.body.elements ""> -<!ENTITY % body.elements - " paragraph | literal_block | doctest_block | line_block | block_quote - | table | figure | image | footnote | citation | rubric - | bullet_list | enumerated_list | definition_list | field_list - | option_list - | attention | caution | danger | error | hint | important | note - | tip | warning | admonition - | target | substitution_definition | comment | pending - | system_message | raw - %additional.body.elements; "> - -<!ENTITY % additional.inline.elements ""> -<!ENTITY % inline.elements - " emphasis | strong | literal - | reference | footnote_reference | citation_reference - | substitution_reference | title_reference - | abbreviation | acronym | subscript | superscript - | inline | problematic | generated - | target | image | raw - %additional.inline.elements; "> - - -<!-- Element Content Models -================================================================== --> - -<!ENTITY % structure.model - " ( ( (%body.elements; | topic | sidebar)+, - (transition, (%body.elements; | topic | sidebar)+ )*, - (%section.elements;)* ) - | (%section.elements;)+ ) "> - -<!ENTITY % text.model - " (#PCDATA | %inline.elements;)* "> - - -<!-- Table Model -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -This DTD uses the Exchange subset of the CALS-table model (OASIS -Technical Memorandum 9901:1999 "XML Exchange Table Model DTD", -http://www.oasis-open.org/html/tm9901.htm). ---> - -<!ENTITY % calstblx PUBLIC - "-//OASIS//DTD XML Exchange Table Model 19990315//EN" - "soextblx.dtd"> - -<!-- These parameter entities customize the table model DTD. --> -<!ENTITY % bodyatt " %basic.atts; "> <!-- table elt --> -<!ENTITY % tbl.tgroup.att " %basic.atts; "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.thead.att " %basic.atts; "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.tbody.att " %basic.atts; "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.colspec.att " %basic.atts; "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.row.att " %basic.atts; "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.entry.mdl " (%body.elements;)* "> -<!ENTITY % tbl.entry.att - " %basic.atts; - morecols %number; #IMPLIED "> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Root Element -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!-- Optional elements may be generated by internal processing. --> -<!ELEMENT document - ((title, subtitle?)?, docinfo?, decoration?, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST document %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Title Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT title %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST title - %basic.atts; - %refid.att; - %auto.att;> - -<!ELEMENT subtitle %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST subtitle %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Bibliographic Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!-- Container for bibliographic elements. May not be empty. --> -<!ELEMENT docinfo (%bibliographic.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST docinfo %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT author %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST author %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT authors ((author, organization?, address?, contact?)+)> -<!ATTLIST authors %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT organization %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST organization %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT address %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST address - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att;> - -<!ELEMENT contact %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST contact %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT version %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST version %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT revision %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST revision %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT status %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST status %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT date %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST date %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT copyright %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST copyright %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Decoration Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT decoration (header?, footer?)> -<!ATTLIST decoration %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT header (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST header %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT footer (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST footer %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Structural Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT section (title, %structure.model;)> -<!ATTLIST section %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT topic (title?, (%body.elements;)+)> -<!ATTLIST topic %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT sidebar (title, subtitle?, (%body.elements;)+)> -<!ATTLIST sidebar %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT transition EMPTY> -<!ATTLIST transition %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Body Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---> - -<!ELEMENT paragraph %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST paragraph %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT bullet_list (list_item+)> -<!ATTLIST bullet_list - %basic.atts; - bullet CDATA #IMPLIED> - -<!ELEMENT enumerated_list (list_item+)> -<!ATTLIST enumerated_list - %basic.atts; - enumtype (arabic | loweralpha | upperalpha - | lowerroman | upperroman) - #IMPLIED - prefix CDATA #IMPLIED - suffix CDATA #IMPLIED - start %number; #IMPLIED> - -<!ELEMENT list_item (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST list_item %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT definition_list (definition_list_item+)> -<!ATTLIST definition_list %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT definition_list_item (term, classifier?, definition)> -<!ATTLIST definition_list_item %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT term %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST term %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT classifier %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST classifier %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT definition (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST definition %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT field_list (field+)> -<!ATTLIST field_list %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT field (field_name, field_body)> -<!ATTLIST field %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT field_name (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST field_name %basic.atts;> - -<!-- May be empty. --> -<!ELEMENT field_body (%body.elements;)*> -<!ATTLIST field_body %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT option_list (option_list_item+)> -<!ATTLIST option_list %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT option_list_item (option_group, description)> -<!ATTLIST option_list_item %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT option_group (option+)> -<!ATTLIST option_group %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT option (option_string, option_argument*)> -<!ATTLIST option %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT option_string (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST option_string %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -`delimiter` contains the text preceding the `option_argument`: either -the text separating it from the `option_string` (typically either "=" -or " ") or the text between option arguments (typically either "," or -" "). ---> -<!ELEMENT option_argument (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST option_argument - %basic.atts; - delimiter CDATA #IMPLIED> - -<!ELEMENT description (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST description %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT literal_block %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST literal_block - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att;> - -<!ELEMENT line_block %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST line_block - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att;> - -<!ELEMENT block_quote ((%body.elements;)+, attribution?)> -<!ATTLIST block_quote %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT attribution %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST attribution %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT doctest_block %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST doctest_block - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att;> - -<!ELEMENT attention (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST attention %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT caution (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST caution %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT danger (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST danger %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT error (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST error %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT hint (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST hint %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT important (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST important %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT note (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST note %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT tip (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST tip %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT warning (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST warning %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT admonition (title, (%body.elements;)+)> -<!ATTLIST admonition %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT footnote (label?, (%body.elements;)+)> -<!ATTLIST footnote - %basic.atts; - %backrefs.att; - %auto.att;> - -<!ELEMENT citation (label, (%body.elements;)+)> -<!ATTLIST citation - %basic.atts; - %backrefs.att;> - -<!ELEMENT label (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST label %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT rubric %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST rubric %basic.atts;> - -<!-- Empty except when used as an inline element. --> -<!ELEMENT target %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST target - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts; - %anonymous.att;> - -<!ELEMENT substitution_definition %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST substitution_definition %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT comment (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST comment - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att;> - -<!ELEMENT pending EMPTY> -<!ATTLIST pending %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT figure (image, ((caption, legend?) | legend)) > -<!ATTLIST figure - %basic.atts; - width %number; #IMPLIED> - -<!-- Also an inline element. --> -<!ELEMENT image EMPTY> -<!ATTLIST image - %basic.atts; - uri CDATA #REQUIRED - alt CDATA #IMPLIED - height %number; #IMPLIED - width %number; #IMPLIED - scale %number; #IMPLIED> - -<!ELEMENT caption %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST caption %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT legend (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST legend %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -Table elements: table, tgroup, colspec, thead, tbody, row, entry. ---> -%calstblx; - -<!-- Used to record processing information. --> -<!ELEMENT system_message (%body.elements;)+> -<!ATTLIST system_message - %basic.atts; - %backrefs.att; - level %number; #IMPLIED - line %number; #IMPLIED - type NMTOKEN #IMPLIED> - -<!-- Used to pass raw data through the system. Also inline. --> -<!ELEMENT raw %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST raw - %basic.atts; - %fixedspace.att; - format NMTOKEN #IMPLIED> - -<!-- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Inline Elements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Inline elements occur within the text contents of body elements. Some -nesting of inline elements is allowed by these definitions, with the -following caveats: - -- An inline element may not contain a nested element of the same type - (e.g. <strong> may not contain another <strong>). -- Nested inline elements may or may not be supported by individual - applications using this DTD. -- The inline elements <footnote_reference>, <citation_reference>, - <literal>, and <image> do not support nesting. ---> - -<!ELEMENT emphasis %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST emphasis %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT strong %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST strong %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT literal (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST literal %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT reference %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST reference - %basic.atts; - %reference.atts; - %anonymous.att;> - -<!ELEMENT footnote_reference (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST footnote_reference - %basic.atts; - %refid.att; - %refname.att; - %auto.att;> - -<!ELEMENT citation_reference (#PCDATA)> -<!ATTLIST citation_reference - %basic.atts; - %refid.att; - %refname.att;> - -<!ELEMENT substitution_reference %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST substitution_reference - %basic.atts; - %refname.att;> - -<!ELEMENT title_reference %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST title_reference %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT abbreviation %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST abbreviation %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT acronym %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST acronym %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT superscript %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST superscript %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT subscript %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST subscript %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT inline %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST inline %basic.atts;> - -<!ELEMENT problematic %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST problematic - %basic.atts; - %refid.att;> - -<!ELEMENT generated %text.model;> -<!ATTLIST generated %basic.atts;> - -<!-- -Local Variables: -mode: sgml -indent-tabs-mode: nil -fill-column: 70 -End: ---> diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/directives.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/rst/directives.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 5fc316a99..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/directives.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,979 +0,0 @@ -============================= - reStructuredText Directives -============================= -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. contents:: - -This document describes the directives implemented in the reference -reStructuredText parser. - -Directives have the following syntax:: - - +-------+-------------------------------+ - | ".. " | directive type "::" directive | - +-------+ block | - | | - +-------------------------------+ - -Directives begin with an explicit markup start (two periods and a -space), followed by the directive type and two colons (collectively, -the "directive marker"). The directive block begins immediately after -the directive marker, and includes all subsequent indented lines. The -directive block is divided into arguments, options (a field list), and -content (in that order), any of which may appear. See the Directives_ -section in the `reStructuredText Markup Specification`_ for syntax -details. - -Descriptions below list "doctree elements" (document tree element -names; XML DTD generic identifiers) corresponding to individual -directives. For details on the hierarchy of elements, please see `The -Docutils Document Tree`_ and the `Docutils Generic DTD`_ XML document -type definition. - -.. _Directives: ./reStructuredText.html#directives -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: ./reStructuredText.html -.. _The Docutils Document Tree: ../doctree.html -.. _Docutils Generic DTD: ../gpdi.dtd - - -------------- - Admonitions -------------- - -.. _attention: -.. _caution: -.. _danger: -.. _error: -.. _hint: -.. _important: -.. _note: -.. _tip: -.. _warning: - -Specific Admonitions -==================== - -:Directive Types: "attention", "caution", "danger", "error", "hint", - "important", "note", "tip", "warning", "admonition" -:Doctree Elements: attention, caution, danger, error, hint, important, - note, tip, warning, admonition, title -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as body elements. - -Admonitions are specially marked "topics" that can appear anywhere an -ordinary body element can. They contain arbitrary body elements. -Typically, an admonition is rendered as an offset block in a document, -sometimes outlined or shaded, with a title matching the admonition -type. For example:: - - .. DANGER:: - Beware killer rabbits! - -This directive might be rendered something like this:: - - +------------------------+ - | !DANGER! | - | | - | Beware killer rabbits! | - +------------------------+ - -The following admonition directives have been implemented: - -- attention -- caution -- danger -- error -- hint -- important -- note -- tip -- warning - -Any text immediately following the directive indicator (on the same -line and/or indented on following lines) is interpreted as a directive -block and is parsed for normal body elements. For example, the -following "note" admonition directive contains one paragraph and a -bullet list consisting of two list items:: - - .. note:: This is a note admonition. - This is the second line of the first paragraph. - - - The note contains all indented body elements - following. - - It includes this bullet list. - - -.. _admonition: - -Generic Admonition -================== - -:Directive Type: "admonition" -:Doctree Elements: admonition, title -:Directive Arguments: One, required (admonition title) -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as body elements. - -This is a generic, titled admonition. The title may be anything the -author desires. - -The author-supplied title is also used as a "class" attribute value -after being converted into a valid identifier form (down-cased; -non-alphanumeric characters converted to single hyphens; "admonition-" -prefixed). For example, this admonition:: - - .. admonition:: And, by the way... - - You can make up your own admonition too. - -becomes the following document tree (pseudo-XML):: - - <document source="test data"> - <admonition class="admonition-and-by-the-way"> - <title> - And, by the way... - <paragraph> - You can make up your own admonition too. - -The following option is recognized: - -``class`` : text - Override the computed "class" attribute value. See the class_ - directive below. - - --------- - Images --------- - -There are two image directives: "image" and "figure". - - -Image -===== - -:Directive Type: "image" -:Doctree Element: image -:Directive Arguments: One, required (image URI). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: None. - -An "image" is a simple picture:: - - .. image:: picture.png - -The URI for the image source file is specified in the directive -argument. As with hyperlink targets, the image URI may begin on the -same line as the explicit markup start and target name, or it may -begin in an indented text block immediately following, with no -intervening blank lines. If there are multiple lines in the link -block, they are stripped of leading and trailing whitespace and joined -together. - -Optionally, the image link block may contain a flat field list, the -_`image options`. For example:: - - .. image:: picture.jpeg - :height: 100 - :width: 200 - :scale: 50 - :alt: alternate text - :align: right - -The following options are recognized: - -``alt`` : text - Alternate text: a short description of the image, displayed by - applications that cannot display images, or spoken by applications - for visually impaired users. - -``height`` : integer - The height of the image in pixels, used to reserve space or scale - the image vertically. - -``width`` : integer - The width of the image in pixels, used to reserve space or scale - the image horizontally. - -``scale`` : integer - The uniform scaling factor of the image, a percentage (but no "%" - symbol is required or allowed). "100" means full-size. - -``align`` : "top", "middle", "bottom", "left", "center", or "right" - The alignment of the image, equivalent to the HTML ``<img>`` tag's - "align" attribute. The values "top", "middle", and "bottom" - control an image's vertical alignment (relative to the text - baseline); they are only useful for inline images (substitutions). - The values "left", "center", and "right" control an image's - horizontal alignment, allowing the image to float and have the - text flow around it. The specific behavior depends upon the - browser or rendering software used. - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the image element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -Figure -====== - -:Directive Type: "figure" -:Doctree Elements: figure, image, caption, legend -:Directive Arguments: One, required (image URI). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the figure caption and an optional - legend. - -A "figure" consists of image_ data (including `image options`_), an -optional caption (a single paragraph), and an optional legend -(arbitrary body elements):: - - .. figure:: picture.png - :scale: 50 - :alt: map to buried treasure - - This is the caption of the figure (a simple paragraph). - - The legend consists of all elements after the caption. In this - case, the legend consists of this paragraph and the following - table: - - +-----------------------+-----------------------+ - | Symbol | Meaning | - +=======================+=======================+ - | .. image:: tent.png | Campground | - +-----------------------+-----------------------+ - | .. image:: waves.png | Lake | - +-----------------------+-----------------------+ - | .. image:: peak.png | Mountain | - +-----------------------+-----------------------+ - -There must be blank lines before the caption paragraph and before the -legend. To specify a legend without a caption, use an empty comment -("..") in place of the caption. - -The "figure" directive supports all of the options of the "image" -directive (see `image options`_ above). In addition, the following -options are recognized: - -``figwidth`` : integer or "image" - The width of the figure in pixels, to limit the horizontal space - used. A special value of "image" is allowed, in which case the - included image's actual width is used (requires PIL_ [#]_). If the - image file is not found or the required software is unavailable, - this option is ignored. - - Sets the "width" attribute of the "figure" doctree element. - - This option does not scale the included image; use the "width" - `image`_ option for that. :: - - +---------------------------+ - | figure | - | | - |<------ figwidth --------->| - | | - | +---------------------+ | - | | image | | - | | | | - | |<--- width --------->| | - | +---------------------+ | - | | - |The figure's caption should| - |wrap at this width. | - +---------------------------+ - -``figclass`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the figure element. See the - class_ directive below. - -.. [#] `Python Imaging Library`_. - -.. _PIL: -.. _Python Imaging Library: http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/ - - ---------------- - Body Elements ---------------- - -Topic -===== - -:Directive Type: "topic" -:Doctree Element: topic -:Directive Arguments: 1, required (topic title). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the topic body. - -A topic is like a block quote with a title, or a self-contained -section with no subsections. Use the "topic" directive to indicate a -self-contained idea that is separate from the flow of the document. -Topics may occur anywhere a section or transition may occur. Body -elements (including topics) may not contain nested topics. - -The directive's sole argument is interpreted as the topic title; the -next line must be blank. All subsequent lines make up the topic body, -interpreted as body elements. For example:: - - .. topic:: Topic Title - - Subsequent indented lines comprise - the body of the topic, and are - interpreted as body elements. - -The following option is recognized: - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the topic element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -Sidebar -======= - -:Directive Type: "sidebar" -:Doctree Element: sidebar -:Directive Arguments: One, required (sidebar title). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the sidebar body. - -Sidebars are like miniature, parallel documents that occur inside -other documents, providing related or reference material. A sidebar -is typically offset by a border and "floats" to the side of the page; -the document's main text may flow around it. Sidebars can also be -likened to super-footnotes; their content is outside of the flow of -the document's main text. - -Sidebars may occur anywhere a section or transition may occur. Body -elements (including sidebars) may not contain nested sidebars. - -The directive's sole argument is interpreted as the sidebar title, -which may be followed by a subtitle option (see below); the next line -must be blank. All subsequent lines make up the sidebar body, -interpreted as body elements. For example:: - - .. sidebar:: Sidebar Title - :subtitle: Optional Sidebar Subtitle - - Subsequent indented lines comprise - the body of the sidebar, and are - interpreted as body elements. - -The following options are recognized: - -``subtitle`` : text - The sidebar's subtitle. - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the sidebar element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -Line Block -========== - -:Directive Type: "line-block" -:Doctree Element: line_block -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Becomes the body of the line block. - -The "line-block" directive constructs an element where whitespace -(including linebreaks) is significant and inline markup is supported. -It is equivalent to a `parsed literal block`_ with different -rendering: typically in an ordinary serif typeface instead of a -typewriter/monospaced face, and not automatically indented. (Have the -line-block directive begin a block quote to get an indented line -block.) Line blocks are useful for address blocks and verse (poetry, -song lyrics), where the structure of lines is significant. For -example, here's a classic:: - - "To Ma Own Beloved Lassie: A Poem on her 17th Birthday", by - Ewan McTeagle (for Lassie O'Shea): - - .. line-block:: - - Lend us a couple of bob till Thursday. - I'm absolutely skint. - But I'm expecting a postal order and I can pay you back - as soon as it comes. - Love, Ewan. - -The following option is recognized: - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the line_block element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -.. _parsed-literal: - -Parsed Literal Block -==================== - -:Directive Type: "parsed-literal" -:Doctree Element: literal_block -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Becomes the body of the literal block. - -Unlike an ordinary literal block, the "parsed-literal" directive -constructs a literal block where the text is parsed for inline markup. -It is equivalent to a `line block`_ with different rendering: -typically in a typewriter/monospaced typeface, like an ordinary -literal block. Parsed literal blocks are useful for adding hyperlinks -to code examples. However, care must be taken with the text, because -inline markup is recognized; there is no protection from parsing. -Backslash-escapes may be necessary in places. - -For example, all the element names in this content model are links:: - - .. parsed-literal:: - - ((title_, - subtitle_?)?, - docinfo_?, - decoration_?, - `%structure.model;`_) - -The following option is recognized: - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the literal_block element. See - the class_ directive below. - - -Rubric -====== - -:Directive Type: "rubric" -:Doctree Element: rubric -:Directive Arguments: 1, required (rubric text). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: None. - - rubric n. 1. a title, heading, or the like, in a manuscript, - book, statute, etc., written or printed in red or otherwise - distinguished from the rest of the text. ... - - -- Random House Webster's College Dictionary, 1991 - -The "rubric" directive inserts a "rubric" element into the document -tree. A rubric is like an informal heading that doesn't correspond to -the document's structure. - -The following option is recognized: - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the rubric element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -Epigraph -======== - -:Directive Type: "epigraph" -:Doctree Element: block_quote -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the body of the block quote. - -Produces an epigraph-class block quote. For example, this input:: - - .. epigraph:: - - No matter where you go, there you are. - - -- Buckaroo Banzai - -becomes this document tree fragment:: - - <block_quote class="epigraph"> - <paragraph> - No matter where you go, there you are. - <attribution> - Buckaroo Banzai - - -Highlights -========== - -:Directive Type: "highlights" -:Doctree Element: block_quote -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the body of the block quote. - -Produces a highlights-class block quote. See Epigraph_ above. - - -Pull-Quote -========== - -:Directive Type: "pull-quote" -:Doctree Element: block_quote -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as the body of the block quote. - -Produces a pull-quote-class block quote. See Epigraph_ above. - - ----------------- - Document Parts ----------------- - -.. _contents: - -Table of Contents -================= - -:Directive Type: "contents" -:Doctree Elements: pending, topic -:Directive Arguments: One, optional: title. -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "contents" directive inserts a table of contents (TOC) in two -passes: initial parse and transform. During the initial parse, a -"pending" element is generated which acts as a placeholder, storing -the TOC title and any options internally. At a later stage in the -processing, the "pending" element is replaced by a "topic" element, a -title and the table of contents proper. - -The directive in its simplest form:: - - .. contents:: - -Language-dependent boilerplate text will be used for the title. The -English default title text is "Contents". - -An explicit title, may be specified:: - - .. contents:: Table of Contents - -The title may span lines, although it is not recommended:: - - .. contents:: Here's a very long Table of - Contents title - -Options may be specified for the directive, using a field list:: - - .. contents:: Table of Contents - :depth: 2 - -If the default title is to be used, the options field list may begin -on the same line as the directive marker:: - - .. contents:: :depth: 2 - -The following options are recognized: - -``depth`` : integer - The number of section levels that are collected in the table of - contents. The default is unlimited depth. - -``local`` : flag (empty) - Generate a local table of contents. Entries will only include - subsections of the section in which the directive is given. If no - explicit title is given, the table of contents will not be titled. - -``backlinks`` : "entry" or "top" or "none" - Generate links from section headers back to the table of contents - entries, the table of contents itself, or generate no backlinks. - -``class`` : text - Set a "class" attribute value on the topic element. See the - class_ directive below. - - -.. _sectnum: -.. _section-autonumbering: - -Automatic Section Numbering -=========================== - -:Directive Type: "sectnum" or "section-autonumbering" (synonyms) -:Doctree Elements: pending, generated -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "sectnum" (or "section-autonumbering") directive automatically -numbers sections and subsections in a document. Section numbers are -of the "multiple enumeration" form, where each level has a number, -separated by periods. For example, the title of section 1, subsection -2, subsubsection 3 would have "1.2.3" prefixed. - -The "sectnum" directive does its work in two passes: the initial parse -and a transform. During the initial parse, a "pending" element is -generated which acts as a placeholder, storing any options internally. -At a later stage in the processing, the "pending" element triggers a -transform, which adds section numbers to titles. Section numbers are -enclosed in a "generated" element, and titles have their "auto" -attribute set to "1". - -The following options are recognized: - -``depth`` : integer - The number of section levels that are numbered by this directive. - The default is unlimited depth. - - ------------- - References ------------- - -.. _target-notes: - -Target Footnotes -================ - -:Directive Type: "target-notes" -:Doctree Elements: pending, footnote, footnote_reference -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "target-notes" directive creates a footnote for each external -target in the text, and corresponding footnote references after each -reference. For every explicit target (of the form, ``.. _target name: -URL``) in the text, a footnote will be generated containing the -visible URL as content. - - -Footnotes -========= - -**NOT IMPLEMENTED YET** - -:Directive Type: "footnotes" -:Doctree Elements: pending, topic -:Directive Arguments: None? -:Directive Options: Possible? -:Directive Content: None. - -@@@ - - -Citations -========= - -**NOT IMPLEMENTED YET** - -:Directive Type: "citations" -:Doctree Elements: pending, topic -:Directive Arguments: None? -:Directive Options: Possible? -:Directive Content: None. - -@@@ - - ---------------- - HTML-Specific ---------------- - -Meta -==== - -:Directive Type: "meta" -:Doctree Element: meta (non-standard) -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Must contain a flat field list. - -The "meta" directive is used to specify HTML metadata stored in HTML -META tags. "Metadata" is data about data, in this case data about web -pages. Metadata is used to describe and classify web pages in the -World Wide Web, in a form that is easy for search engines to extract -and collate. - -Within the directive block, a flat field list provides the syntax for -metadata. The field name becomes the contents of the "name" attribute -of the META tag, and the field body (interpreted as a single string -without inline markup) becomes the contents of the "content" -attribute. For example:: - - .. meta:: - :description: The reStructuredText plaintext markup language - :keywords: plaintext, markup language - -This would be converted to the following HTML:: - - <meta name="description" - content="The reStructuredText plaintext markup language"> - <meta name="keywords" content="plaintext, markup language"> - -Support for other META attributes ("http-equiv", "scheme", "lang", -"dir") are provided through field arguments, which must be of the form -"attr=value":: - - .. meta:: - :description lang=en: An amusing story - :description lang=fr: Un histoire amusant - -And their HTML equivalents:: - - <meta name="description" lang="en" content="An amusing story"> - <meta name="description" lang="fr" content="Un histoire amusant"> - -Some META tags use an "http-equiv" attribute instead of the "name" -attribute. To specify "http-equiv" META tags, simply omit the name:: - - .. meta:: - :http-equiv=Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1 - -HTML equivalent:: - - <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" - content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> - - -Imagemap -======== - -**NOT IMPLEMENTED YET** - -Non-standard element: imagemap. - - ---------------- - Miscellaneous ---------------- - -.. _include: - -Including an External Document Fragment -======================================= - -:Directive Type: "include" -:Doctree Elements: depend on data being included -:Directive Arguments: One, required (path to include file). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "include" directive reads a reStructuredText-formatted text file -and parses it in the current document's context at the point of the -directive. For example:: - - This first example will be parsed at the document level, and can - thus contain any construct, including section headers. - - .. include:: inclusion.txt - - Back in the main document. - - This second example will be parsed in a block quote context. - Therefore it may only contain body elements. It may not - contain section headers. - - .. include:: inclusion.txt - -If an included document fragment contains section structure, the title -adornments must match those of the master document. - -The text encoding of the master input source is used for included -files. - -The following options are recognized: - -``literal`` : flag (empty) - The entire included text is inserted into the document as a single - literal block (useful for program listings). - - -.. _raw: - -Raw Data Pass-Through -===================== - -:Directive Type: "raw" -:Doctree Element: raw -:Directive Arguments: One, required (output format type). -:Directive Options: Possible. -:Directive Content: Stored verbatim, uninterpreted. None (empty) if a - "file" or "url" option given. - -The "raw" directive indicates non-reStructuredText data that is to be -passed untouched to the Writer. The name of the output format is -given in the first argument. The interpretation of the raw data is up -to the Writer. A Writer may ignore any raw output not matching its -format. - -For example, the following input would be passed untouched by an HTML -Writer:: - - .. raw:: html - - <hr width=50 size=10> - -A LaTeX Writer could insert the following raw content into its -output stream:: - - .. raw:: latex - - \documentclass[twocolumn]{article} - -Raw data can also be read from an external file, specified in a -directive option. In this case, the content block must be empty. For -example:: - - .. raw:: html - :file: inclusion.html - -The following options are recognized: - -``file`` : string - The local filesystem path of a raw data file to be included. -``url`` : string - An Internet URL reference to a raw data file to be included. - - -.. _replace: - -Replacement Text -================ - -:Directive Type: "replace" -:Doctree Element: Text & inline elements -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: A single paragraph; may contain inline markup. - -The "replace" directive is used to indicate replacement text for a -substitution reference. It may be used within substitution -definitions only. For example, this directive can be used to expand -abbreviations:: - - .. |reST| replace:: reStructuredText - - Yes, |reST| is a long word, so I can't blame anyone for wanting to - abbreviate it. - -As reStructuredText doesn't support nested inline markup, the only way -to create a reference with styled text is to use substitutions with -the "replace" directive:: - - I recommend you try |Python|_. - - .. |Python| replace:: Python, *the* best language around - .. _Python: http://www.python.org/ - - -.. _unicode: - -Unicode Character Codes -======================= - -:Directive Type: "unicode" -:Doctree Element: Text -:Directive Arguments: One or more, required (Unicode character codes, - optional text, and comments). -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "unicode" directive converts Unicode character codes (numerical -values) to characters, and may be used in substitution definitions -only. Codes may be decimal numbers, hexadecimal numbers (prefixed by -``0x``, ``x``, ``\x``, ``u``, or ``\u``), or XML-style numeric -character entities (e.g. ``ᨫ``). Codes are case-insensitive. - -Text following " .. " is a comment and is ignored. Spaces are -ignored, and any other text remains as-is. - -Example:: - - Copyright |copy| 2003, |BogusMegaCorp (TM)|. - - .. |copy| unicode:: 0xA9 .. copyright sign - .. |BogusMegaCorp (TM)| unicode:: BogusMegaCorp U+2122 - .. with trademark sign - - -Class -===== - -:Directive Type: "class" -:Doctree Element: pending -:Directive Arguments: One, required (class name / attribute value). -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: None. - -The "class" directive sets a "class" attribute value on the first -immediately following non-comment element [#]_. For details of the -"class" attribute, see `its entry`__ in `The Docutils Document Tree`_. -The "class" attribute value is converted to lowercase and all -non-alphanumeric characters are converted to hyphens in order to match -this regular expression: ``[a-z](-?[a-z0-9]+)*``. See the docstring -from ``docutils.nodes.make_id`` for the rationale. - -Examples:: - - .. class:: special - - This is a "special" paragraph. - - .. class:: exceptional - - An Exceptional Section - ====================== - - This is an ordinary paragraph. - -The text above is parsed and transformed into this doctree fragment:: - - <paragraph class="special"> - This is a "special" paragraph. - <section class="exceptional"> - <title> - An Exceptional Section - <paragraph> - This is an ordinary paragraph. - -.. [#] To set a "class" attribute value on a block quote, the "class" - directive must be followed by an empty comment:: - - .. class:: highlights - .. - - Block quote text. - - The directive doesn't allow content, therefore an empty comment is - required to terminate the directive. Without the empty comment, - the block quote text would be interpreted as the "class" - directive's content, and the parser would complain. - -__ ../doctree.html#class - - -Restructuredtext-Test-Directive -=============================== - -:Directive Type: "restructuredtext-test-directive" -:Doctree Element: system_warning -:Directive Arguments: None. -:Directive Options: None. -:Directive Content: Interpreted as a literal block. - -This directive is provided for test purposes only. (Nobody is -expected to type in a name *that* long!) It is converted into a -level-1 (info) system message showing the directive data, possibly -followed by a literal block containing the rest of the directive -block. - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/introduction.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/rst/introduction.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 13823b5b7..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/introduction.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,315 +0,0 @@ -===================================== - An Introduction to reStructuredText -===================================== -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -reStructuredText_ is an easy-to-read, what-you-see-is-what-you-get -plaintext markup syntax and parser system. It is useful for inline -program documentation (such as Python docstrings), for quickly -creating simple web pages, and for standalone documents. -reStructuredText_ is a proposed revision and reinterpretation of the -StructuredText_ and Setext_ lightweight markup systems. - -reStructuredText is designed for extensibility for specific -application domains. Its parser is a component of Docutils_. - -This document defines the goals_ of reStructuredText and provides a -history_ of the project. It is written using the reStructuredText -markup, and therefore serves as an example of its use. For a gentle -introduction to using reStructuredText, please read `A -ReStructuredText Primer`_. The `Quick reStructuredText`_ user -reference is also useful. The `reStructuredText Markup -Specification`_ is the definitive reference. There is also an -analysis of the `Problems With StructuredText`_. - -ReStructuredText's web page is -http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html. - -.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html -.. _StructuredText: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/FrontPage -.. _Setext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/mirror/setext.html -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ -.. _A ReStructuredText Primer: ../../docs/rst/quickstart.html -.. _Quick reStructuredText: ../../docs/rst/quickref.html -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: reStructuredText.html -.. _Problems with StructuredText: problems.html - - -Goals -===== - -The primary goal of reStructuredText_ is to define a markup syntax for -use in Python docstrings and other documentation domains, that is -readable and simple, yet powerful enough for non-trivial use. The -intended purpose of the reStructuredText markup is twofold: - -- the establishment of a set of standard conventions allowing the - expression of structure within plaintext, and - -- the conversion of such documents into useful structured data - formats. - -The secondary goal of reStructuredText is to be accepted by the Python -community (by way of being blessed by PythonLabs and the BDFL [#]_) as -a standard for Python inline documentation (possibly one of several -standards, to account for taste). - -.. [#] Python's creator and "Benevolent Dictator For Life", - Guido van Rossum. - -To clarify the primary goal, here are specific design goals, in order, -beginning with the most important: - -1. Readable. The marked-up text must be easy to read without any - prior knowledge of the markup language. It should be as easily - read in raw form as in processed form. - -2. Unobtrusive. The markup that is used should be as simple and - unobtrusive as possible. The simplicity of markup constructs - should be roughly proportional to their frequency of use. The most - common constructs, with natural and obvious markup, should be the - simplest and most unobtrusive. Less common constructs, for which - there is no natural or obvious markup, should be distinctive. - -3. Unambiguous. The rules for markup must not be open for - interpretation. For any given input, there should be one and only - one possible output (including error output). - -4. Unsurprising. Markup constructs should not cause unexpected output - upon processing. As a fallback, there must be a way to prevent - unwanted markup processing when a markup construct is used in a - non-markup context (for example, when documenting the markup syntax - itself). - -5. Intuitive. Markup should be as obvious and easily remembered as - possible, for the author as well as for the reader. Constructs - should take their cues from such naturally occurring sources as - plaintext email messages, newsgroup postings, and text - documentation such as README.txt files. - -6. Easy. It should be easy to mark up text using any ordinary text - editor. - -7. Scalable. The markup should be applicable regardless of the length - of the text. - -8. Powerful. The markup should provide enough constructs to produce a - reasonably rich structured document. - -9. Language-neutral. The markup should apply to multiple natural (as - well as artificial) languages, not only English. - -10. Extensible. The markup should provide a simple syntax and - interface for adding more complex general markup, and custom - markup. - -11. Output-format-neutral. The markup will be appropriate for - processing to multiple output formats, and will not be biased - toward any particular format. - -The design goals above were used as criteria for accepting or -rejecting syntax, or selecting between alternatives. - -It is emphatically *not* the goal of reStructuredText to define -docstring semantics, such as docstring contents or docstring length. -These issues are orthogonal to the markup syntax and beyond the scope -of this specification. - -Also, it is not the goal of reStructuredText to maintain compatibility -with StructuredText_ or Setext_. reStructuredText shamelessly steals -their great ideas and ignores the not-so-great. - -Author's note: - - Due to the nature of the problem we're trying to solve (or, - perhaps, due to the nature of the proposed solution), the above - goals unavoidably conflict. I have tried to extract and distill - the wisdom accumulated over the years in the Python Doc-SIG_ - mailing list and elsewhere, to come up with a coherent and - consistent set of syntax rules, and the above goals by which to - measure them. - - There will inevitably be people who disagree with my particular - choices. Some desire finer control over their markup, others - prefer less. Some are concerned with very short docstrings, - others with full-length documents. This specification is an - effort to provide a reasonably rich set of markup constructs in a - reasonably simple form, that should satisfy a reasonably large - group of reasonable people. - - David Goodger (goodger@users.sourceforge.net), 2001-04-20 - -.. _Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/ - - -History -======= - -reStructuredText_, the specification, is based on StructuredText_ and -Setext_. StructuredText was developed by Jim Fulton of `Zope -Corporation`_ (formerly Digital Creations) and first released in 1996. -It is now released as a part of the open-source "Z Object Publishing -Environment" (ZOPE_). Ian Feldman's and Tony Sanders' earlier Setext_ -specification was either an influence on StructuredText or, by their -similarities, at least evidence of the correctness of this approach. - -I discovered StructuredText_ in late 1999 while searching for a way to -document the Python modules in one of my projects. Version 1.1 of -StructuredText was included in Daniel Larsson's pythondoc_. Although -I was not able to get pythondoc to work for me, I found StructuredText -to be almost ideal for my needs. I joined the Python Doc-SIG_ -(Documentation Special Interest Group) mailing list and found an -ongoing discussion of the shortcomings of the StructuredText -"standard". This discussion has been going on since the inception of -the mailing list in 1996, and possibly predates it. - -I decided to modify the original module with my own extensions and -some suggested by the Doc-SIG members. I soon realized that the -module was not written with extension in mind, so I embarked upon a -general reworking, including adapting it to the "re" regular -expression module (the original inspiration for the name of this -project). Soon after I completed the modifications, I discovered that -StructuredText.py was up to version 1.23 in the ZOPE distribution. -Implementing the new syntax extensions from version 1.23 proved to be -an exercise in frustration, as the complexity of the module had become -overwhelming. - -In 2000, development on StructuredTextNG_ ("Next Generation") began at -`Zope Corporation`_ (then Digital Creations). It seems to have many -improvements, but still suffers from many of the problems of classic -StructuredText. - -I decided that a complete rewrite was in order, and even started a -`reStructuredText SourceForge project`_ (now inactive). My -motivations (the "itches" I aim to "scratch") are as follows: - -- I need a standard format for inline documentation of the programs I - write. This inline documentation has to be convertible to other - useful formats, such as HTML. I believe many others have the same - need. - -- I believe in the Setext/StructuredText idea and want to help - formalize the standard. However, I feel the current specifications - and implementations have flaws that desperately need fixing. - -- reStructuredText could form part of the foundation for a - documentation extraction and processing system, greatly benefitting - Python. But it is only a part, not the whole. reStructuredText is - a markup language specification and a reference parser - implementation, but it does not aspire to be the entire system. I - don't want reStructuredText or a hypothetical Python documentation - processor to die stillborn because of over-ambition. - -- Most of all, I want to help ease the documentation chore, the bane - of many a programmer. - -Unfortunately I was sidetracked and stopped working on this project. -In November 2000 I made the time to enumerate the problems of -StructuredText and possible solutions, and complete the first draft of -a specification. This first draft was posted to the Doc-SIG in three -parts: - -- `A Plan for Structured Text`__ -- `Problems With StructuredText`__ -- `reStructuredText: Revised Structured Text Specification`__ - -__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001239.html -__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001240.html -__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001241.html - -In March 2001 a flurry of activity on the Doc-SIG spurred me to -further revise and refine my specification, the result of which you -are now reading. An offshoot of the reStructuredText project has been -the realization that a single markup scheme, no matter how well -thought out, may not be enough. In order to tame the endless debates -on Doc-SIG, a flexible `Docstring Processing System framework`_ needed -to be constructed. This framework has become the more important of -the two projects; reStructuredText_ has found its place as one -possible choice for a single component of the larger framework. - -The project web site and the first project release were rolled out in -June 2001, including posting the second draft of the spec [#spec-2]_ -and the first draft of PEPs 256, 257, and 258 [#peps-1]_ to the -Doc-SIG. These documents and the project implementation proceeded to -evolve at a rapid pace. Implementation history details can be found -in the `project history file`_. - -In November 2001, the reStructuredText parser was nearing completion. -Development of the parser continued with the addition of small -convenience features, improvements to the syntax, the filling in of -gaps, and bug fixes. After a long holiday break, in early 2002 most -development moved over to the other Docutils components, the -"Readers", "Writers", and "Transforms". A "standalone" reader -(processes standalone text file documents) was completed in February, -and a basic HTML writer (producing HTML 4.01, using CSS-1) was -completed in early March. - -`PEP 287`_, "reStructuredText Standard Docstring Format", was created -to formally propose reStructuredText as a standard format for Python -docstrings, PEPs, and other files. It was first posted to -comp.lang.python_ and the Python-dev_ mailing list on 2002-04-02. - -Version 0.4 of the reStructuredText__ and `Docstring Processing -System`_ projects were released in April 2002. The two projects were -immediately merged, renamed to "Docutils_", and a 0.1 release soon -followed. - -.. __: `reStructuredText SourceForge project`_ - -.. [#spec-2] The second draft of the spec: - - - `An Introduction to reStructuredText`__ - - `Problems With StructuredText`__ - - `reStructuredText Markup Specification`__ - - `Python Extensions to the reStructuredText Markup - Specification`__ - - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001858.html - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001859.html - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001860.html - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001861.html - -.. [#peps-1] First drafts of the PEPs: - - - `PEP 256: Docstring Processing System Framework`__ - - `PEP 258: DPS Generic Implementation Details`__ - - `PEP 257: Docstring Conventions`__ - - Current working versions of the PEPs can be found in - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/, and official versions can be - found in the `master PEP repository`_. - - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001855.html - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001856.html - __ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001857.html - - -.. _Zope Corporation: http://www.zope.com -.. _ZOPE: http://www.zope.org -.. _reStructuredText SourceForge project: - http://structuredtext.sourceforge.net/ -.. _pythondoc: http://starship.python.net/crew/danilo/pythondoc/ -.. _StructuredTextNG: - http://dev.zope.org/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/StructuredTextNG -.. _project history file: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/HISTORY.html -.. _PEP 287: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pep-0287.html -.. _Docstring Processing System framework: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pep-0256.html -.. _comp.lang.python: news:comp.lang.python -.. _Python-dev: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/ -.. _Docstring Processing System: http://docstring.sourceforge.net/ -.. _master PEP repository: http://www.python.org/peps/ - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 1ad25ff35..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2679 +0,0 @@ -======================================= - reStructuredText Markup Specification -======================================= -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. Note:: - - This document is a detailed technical specification; it is not a - tutorial or a primer. If this is your first exposure to - reStructuredText, please read `A ReStructuredText Primer`_ and the - `Quick reStructuredText`_ user reference first. - -.. _A ReStructuredText Primer: ../../docs/rst/quickstart.html -.. _Quick reStructuredText: ../../docs/rst/quickref.html - - -reStructuredText_ is plaintext that uses simple and intuitive -constructs to indicate the structure of a document. These constructs -are equally easy to read in raw and processed forms. This document is -itself an example of reStructuredText (raw, if you are reading the -text file, or processed, if you are reading an HTML document, for -example). The reStructuredText parser is a component of Docutils_. - -Simple, implicit markup is used to indicate special constructs, such -as section headings, bullet lists, and emphasis. The markup used is -as minimal and unobtrusive as possible. Less often-used constructs -and extensions to the basic reStructuredText syntax may have more -elaborate or explicit markup. - -reStructuredText is applicable to documents of any length, from the -very small (such as inline program documentation fragments, e.g. -Python docstrings) to the quite large (this document). - -The first section gives a quick overview of the syntax of the -reStructuredText markup by example. A complete specification is given -in the `Syntax Details`_ section. - -`Literal blocks`_ (in which no markup processing is done) are used for -examples throughout this document, to illustrate the plaintext markup. - - -.. contents:: - - ------------------------ - Quick Syntax Overview ------------------------ - -A reStructuredText document is made up of body or block-level -elements, and may be structured into sections. Sections_ are -indicated through title style (underlines & optional overlines). -Sections contain body elements and/or subsections. Some body elements -contain further elements, such as lists containing list items, which -in turn may contain paragraphs and other body elements. Others, such -as paragraphs, contain text and `inline markup`_ elements. - -Here are examples of `body elements`_: - -- Paragraphs_ (and `inline markup`_):: - - Paragraphs contain text and may contain inline markup: - *emphasis*, **strong emphasis**, `interpreted text`, ``inline - literals``, standalone hyperlinks (http://www.python.org), - external hyperlinks (Python_), internal cross-references - (example_), footnote references ([1]_), citation references - ([CIT2002]_), substitution references (|example|), and _`inline - internal targets`. - - Paragraphs are separated by blank lines and are left-aligned. - -- Five types of lists: - - 1. `Bullet lists`_:: - - - This is a bullet list. - - - Bullets can be "-", "*", or "+". - - 2. `Enumerated lists`_:: - - 1. This is an enumerated list. - - 2. Enumerators may be arabic numbers, letters, or roman - numerals. - - 3. `Definition lists`_:: - - what - Definition lists associate a term with a definition. - - how - The term is a one-line phrase, and the definition is one - or more paragraphs or body elements, indented relative to - the term. - - 4. `Field lists`_:: - - :what: Field lists map field names to field bodies, like - database records. They are often part of an extension - syntax. - - :how: The field marker is a colon, the field name, and a - colon. - - The field body may contain one or more body elements, - indented relative to the field marker. - - 5. `Option lists`_, for listing command-line options:: - - -a command-line option "a" - -b file options can have arguments - and long descriptions - --long options can be long also - --input=file long options can also have - arguments - /V DOS/VMS-style options too - - There must be at least two spaces between the option and the - description. - -- `Literal blocks`_:: - - Literal blocks are indented, and indicated with a double-colon - ("::") at the end of the preceding paragraph (right here -->):: - - if literal_block: - text = 'is left as-is' - spaces_and_linebreaks = 'are preserved' - markup_processing = None - -- `Block quotes`_:: - - Block quotes consist of indented body elements: - - This theory, that is mine, is mine. - - -- Anne Elk (Miss) - -- `Doctest blocks`_:: - - >>> print 'Python-specific usage examples; begun with ">>>"' - Python-specific usage examples; begun with ">>>" - >>> print '(cut and pasted from interactive Python sessions)' - (cut and pasted from interactive Python sessions) - -- Two syntaxes for tables_: - - 1. `Grid tables`_; complete, but complex and verbose:: - - +------------------------+------------+----------+ - | Header row, column 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 | - +========================+============+==========+ - | body row 1, column 1 | column 2 | column 3 | - +------------------------+------------+----------+ - | body row 2 | Cells may span | - +------------------------+-----------------------+ - - 2. `Simple tables`_; easy and compact, but limited:: - - ==================== ========== ========== - Header row, column 1 Header 2 Header 3 - ==================== ========== ========== - body row 1, column 1 column 2 column 3 - body row 2 Cells may span columns - ==================== ====================== - -- `Explicit markup blocks`_ all begin with an explicit block marker, - two periods and a space: - - - Footnotes_:: - - .. [1] A footnote contains body elements, consistently - indented by at least 3 spaces. - - - Citations_:: - - .. [CIT2002] Just like a footnote, except the label is - textual. - - - `Hyperlink targets`_:: - - .. _Python: http://www.python.org - - .. _example: - - The "_example" target above points to this paragraph. - - - Directives_:: - - .. image:: mylogo.png - - - `Substitution definitions`_:: - - .. |symbol here| image:: symbol.png - - - Comments_:: - - .. Comments begin with two dots and a space. Anything may - follow, except for the syntax of footnotes/citations, - hyperlink targets, directives, or substitution definitions. - - ----------------- - Syntax Details ----------------- - -Descriptions below list "doctree elements" (document tree element -names; XML DTD generic identifiers) corresponding to syntax -constructs. For details on the hierarchy of elements, please see `The -Docutils Document Tree`_ and the `Docutils Generic DTD`_ XML document -type definition. - - -Whitespace -========== - -Spaces are recommended for indentation_, but tabs may also be used. -Tabs will be converted to spaces. Tab stops are at every 8th column. - -Other whitespace characters (form feeds [chr(12)] and vertical tabs -[chr(11)]) are converted to single spaces before processing. - - -Blank Lines ------------ - -Blank lines are used to separate paragraphs and other elements. -Multiple successive blank lines are equivalent to a single blank line, -except within literal blocks (where all whitespace is preserved). -Blank lines may be omitted when the markup makes element separation -unambiguous, in conjunction with indentation. The first line of a -document is treated as if it is preceded by a blank line, and the last -line of a document is treated as if it is followed by a blank line. - - -Indentation ------------ - -Indentation is used to indicate, and is only significant in -indicating: - -- multi-line contents of list items, -- multiple body elements within a list item (including nested lists), -- the definition part of a definition list item, -- block quotes, -- the extent of literal blocks, and -- the extent of explicit markup blocks. - -Any text whose indentation is less than that of the current level -(i.e., unindented text or "dedents") ends the current level of -indentation. - -Since all indentation is significant, the level of indentation must be -consistent. For example, indentation is the sole markup indicator for -`block quotes`_:: - - This is a top-level paragraph. - - This paragraph belongs to a first-level block quote. - - Paragraph 2 of the first-level block quote. - -Multiple levels of indentation within a block quote will result in -more complex structures:: - - This is a top-level paragraph. - - This paragraph belongs to a first-level block quote. - - This paragraph belongs to a second-level block quote. - - Another top-level paragraph. - - This paragraph belongs to a second-level block quote. - - This paragraph belongs to a first-level block quote. The - second-level block quote above is inside this first-level - block quote. - -When a paragraph or other construct consists of more than one line of -text, the lines must be left-aligned:: - - This is a paragraph. The lines of - this paragraph are aligned at the left. - - This paragraph has problems. The - lines are not left-aligned. In addition - to potential misinterpretation, warning - and/or error messages will be generated - by the parser. - -Several constructs begin with a marker, and the body of the construct -must be indented relative to the marker. For constructs using simple -markers (`bullet lists`_, `enumerated lists`_, footnotes_, citations_, -`hyperlink targets`_, directives_, and comments_), the level of -indentation of the body is determined by the position of the first -line of text, which begins on the same line as the marker. For -example, bullet list bodies must be indented by at least two columns -relative to the left edge of the bullet:: - - - This is the first line of a bullet list - item's paragraph. All lines must align - relative to the first line. [1]_ - - This indented paragraph is interpreted - as a block quote. - - Because it is not sufficiently indented, - this paragraph does not belong to the list - item. - - .. [1] Here's a footnote. The second line is aligned - with the beginning of the footnote label. The ".." - marker is what determines the indentation. - -For constructs using complex markers (`field lists`_ and `option -lists`_), where the marker may contain arbitrary text, the indentation -of the first line *after* the marker determines the left edge of the -body. For example, field lists may have very long markers (containing -the field names):: - - :Hello: This field has a short field name, so aligning the field - body with the first line is feasible. - - :Number-of-African-swallows-required-to-carry-a-coconut: It would - be very difficult to align the field body with the left edge - of the first line. It may even be preferable not to begin the - body on the same line as the marker. - - -Escaping Mechanism -================== - -The character set universally available to plaintext documents, 7-bit -ASCII, is limited. No matter what characters are used for markup, -they will already have multiple meanings in written text. Therefore -markup characters *will* sometimes appear in text **without being -intended as markup**. Any serious markup system requires an escaping -mechanism to override the default meaning of the characters used for -the markup. In reStructuredText we use the backslash, commonly used -as an escaping character in other domains. - -A backslash followed by any character (except whitespace characters) -escapes that character. The escaped character represents the -character itself, and is prevented from playing a role in any markup -interpretation. The backslash is removed from the output. A literal -backslash is represented by two backslashes in a row (the first -backslash "escapes" the second, preventing it being interpreted in an -"escaping" role). - -Backslash-escaped whitespace characters are removed from the document. -This allows for character-level `inline markup`_. - -There are two contexts in which backslashes have no special meaning: -literal blocks and inline literals. In these contexts, a single -backslash represents a literal backslash, without having to double up. - -Please note that the reStructuredText specification and parser do not -address the issue of the representation or extraction of text input -(how and in what form the text actually *reaches* the parser). -Backslashes and other characters may serve a character-escaping -purpose in certain contexts and must be dealt with appropriately. For -example, Python uses backslashes in strings to escape certain -characters, but not others. The simplest solution when backslashes -appear in Python docstrings is to use raw docstrings:: - - r"""This is a raw docstring. Backslashes (\) are not touched.""" - - -Reference Names -=============== - -Simple reference names are single words consisting of alphanumerics -plus isolated (no two adjacent) internal hyphens, underscores, and -periods; no whitespace or other characters are allowed. Footnote -labels (Footnotes_ & `Footnote References`_), citation labels -(Citations_ & `Citation References`_), `interpreted text`_ roles, and -some `hyperlink references`_ use the simple reference name syntax. - -Reference names using punctuation or whose names are phrases (two or -more space-separated words) are called "phrase-references". -Phrase-references are expressed by enclosing the phrase in backquotes -and treating the backquoted text as a reference name:: - - Want to learn about `my favorite programming language`_? - - .. _my favorite programming language: http://www.python.org - -Simple reference names may also optionally use backquotes. - -Reference names are whitespace-neutral and case-insensitive. When -resolving reference names internally: - -- whitespace is normalized (one or more spaces, horizontal or vertical - tabs, newlines, carriage returns, or form feeds, are interpreted as - a single space), and - -- case is normalized (all alphabetic characters are converted to - lowercase). - -For example, the following `hyperlink references`_ are equivalent:: - - - `A HYPERLINK`_ - - `a hyperlink`_ - - `A - Hyperlink`_ - -Hyperlinks_, footnotes_, and citations_ all share the same namespace -for reference names. The labels of citations (simple reference names) -and manually-numbered footnotes (numbers) are entered into the same -database as other hyperlink names. This means that a footnote -(defined as "``.. [1]``") which can be referred to by a footnote -reference (``[1]_``), can also be referred to by a plain hyperlink -reference (1_). Of course, each type of reference (hyperlink, -footnote, citation) may be processed and rendered differently. Some -care should be taken to avoid reference name conflicts. - - -Document Structure -================== - -Document --------- - -Doctree element: document. - -The top-level element of a parsed reStructuredText document is the -"document" element. After initial parsing, the document element is a -simple container for a document fragment, consisting of `body -elements`_, transitions_, and sections_, but lacking a document title -or other bibliographic elements. The code that calls the parser may -choose to run one or more optional post-parse transforms_, -rearranging the document fragment into a complete document with a -title and possibly other metadata elements (author, date, etc.; see -`Bibliographic Fields`_). - -Specifically, there is no way to indicate a document title and -subtitle explicitly in reStructuredText. Instead, a lone top-level -section title (see Sections_ below) can be treated as the document -title. Similarly, a lone second-level section title immediately after -the "document title" can become the document subtitle. See the -`DocTitle transform`_ for details. - - -Sections --------- - -Doctree elements: section, title. - -Sections are identified through their titles, which are marked up with -adornment: "underlines" below the title text, or underlines and -matching "overlines" above the title. An underline/overline is a -single repeated punctuation character that begins in column 1 and -forms a line extending at least as far as the right edge of the title -text. Specifically, an underline/overline character may be any -non-alphanumeric printable 7-bit ASCII character [#]_. When an -overline is used, the length and character used must match the -underline. Underline-only adornment styles are distinct from -overline-and-underline styles that use the same character. There may -be any number of levels of section titles, although some output -formats may have limits (HTML has 6 levels). - -.. [#] The following are all valid section title adornment - characters:: - - ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / : ; < = > ? @ [ \ ] ^ _ ` { | } ~ - - Some characters are more suitable than others. The following are - recommended:: - - = - ` : . ' " ~ ^ _ * + # - -Rather than imposing a fixed number and order of section title -adornment styles, the order enforced will be the order as encountered. -The first style encountered will be an outermost title (like HTML H1), -the second style will be a subtitle, the third will be a subsubtitle, -and so on. - -Below are examples of section title styles:: - - =============== - Section Title - =============== - - --------------- - Section Title - --------------- - - Section Title - ============= - - Section Title - ------------- - - Section Title - ````````````` - - Section Title - ''''''''''''' - - Section Title - ............. - - Section Title - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - - Section Title - ************* - - Section Title - +++++++++++++ - - Section Title - ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -When a title has both an underline and an overline, the title text may -be inset, as in the first two examples above. This is merely -aesthetic and not significant. Underline-only title text may *not* be -inset. - -A blank line after a title is optional. All text blocks up to the -next title of the same or higher level are included in a section (or -subsection, etc.). - -All section title styles need not be used, nor need any specific -section title style be used. However, a document must be consistent -in its use of section titles: once a hierarchy of title styles is -established, sections must use that hierarchy. - -Each section title automatically generates a hyperlink target pointing -to the section. The text of the hyperlink target (the "reference -name") is the same as that of the section title. See `Implicit -Hyperlink Targets`_ for a complete description. - -Sections may contain `body elements`_, transitions_, and nested -sections. - - -Transitions ------------ - -Doctree element: transition. - - Instead of subheads, extra space or a type ornament between - paragraphs may be used to mark text divisions or to signal - changes in subject or emphasis. - - (The Chicago Manual of Style, 14th edition, section 1.80) - -Transitions are commonly seen in novels and short fiction, as a gap -spanning one or more lines, with or without a type ornament such as a -row of asterisks. Transitions separate other body elements. A -transition should not begin or end a section or document, nor should -two transitions be immediately adjacent. - -The syntax for a transition marker is a horizontal line of 4 or more -repeated punctuation characters. The syntax is the same as section -title underlines without title text. Transition markers require blank -lines before and after:: - - Para. - - ---------- - - Para. - -Unlike section title underlines, no hierarchy of transition markers is -enforced, nor do differences in transition markers accomplish -anything. It is recommended that a single consistent style be used. - -The processing system is free to render transitions in output in any -way it likes. For example, horizontal rules (``<hr>``) in HTML output -would be an obvious choice. - - -Body Elements -============= - -Paragraphs ----------- - -Doctree element: paragraph. - -Paragraphs consist of blocks of left-aligned text with no markup -indicating any other body element. Blank lines separate paragraphs -from each other and from other body elements. Paragraphs may contain -`inline markup`_. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +------------------------------+ - | paragraph | - | | - +------------------------------+ - - +------------------------------+ - | paragraph | - | | - +------------------------------+ - - -Bullet Lists ------------- - -Doctree elements: bullet_list, list_item. - -A text block which begins with a "-", "*", or "+", followed by -whitespace, is a bullet list item (a.k.a. "unordered" list item). -List item bodies must be left-aligned and indented relative to the -bullet; the text immediately after the bullet determines the -indentation. For example:: - - - This is the first bullet list item. The blank line above the - first list item is required; blank lines between list items - (such as below this paragraph) are optional. - - - This is the first paragraph in the second item in the list. - - This is the second paragraph in the second item in the list. - The blank line above this paragraph is required. The left edge - of this paragraph lines up with the paragraph above, both - indented relative to the bullet. - - - This is a sublist. The bullet lines up with the left edge of - the text blocks above. A sublist is a new list so requires a - blank line above and below. - - - This is the third item of the main list. - - This paragraph is not part of the list. - -Here are examples of **incorrectly** formatted bullet lists:: - - - This first line is fine. - A blank line is required between list items and paragraphs. - (Warning) - - - The following line appears to be a new sublist, but it is not: - - This is a paragraph continuation, not a sublist (since there's - no blank line). This line is also incorrectly indented. - - Warnings may be issued by the implementation. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +------+-----------------------+ - | "- " | list item | - +------| (body elements)+ | - +-----------------------+ - - -Enumerated Lists ----------------- - -Doctree elements: enumerated_list, list_item. - -Enumerated lists (a.k.a. "ordered" lists) are similar to bullet lists, -but use enumerators instead of bullets. An enumerator consists of an -enumeration sequence member and formatting, followed by whitespace. -The following enumeration sequences are recognized: - -- arabic numerals: 1, 2, 3, ... (no upper limit). -- uppercase alphabet characters: A, B, C, ..., Z. -- lower-case alphabet characters: a, b, c, ..., z. -- uppercase Roman numerals: I, II, III, IV, ..., MMMMCMXCIX (4999). -- lowercase Roman numerals: i, ii, iii, iv, ..., mmmmcmxcix (4999). - -The following formatting types are recognized: - -- suffixed with a period: "1.", "A.", "a.", "I.", "i.". -- surrounded by parentheses: "(1)", "(A)", "(a)", "(I)", "(i)". -- suffixed with a right-parenthesis: "1)", "A)", "a)", "I)", "i)". - -While parsing an enumerated list, a new list will be started whenever: - -- An enumerator is encountered which does not have the same format and - sequence type as the current list (e.g. "1.", "(a)" produces two - separate lists). - -- The enumerators are not in sequence (e.g., "1.", "3." produces two - separate lists). - -It is recommended that the enumerator of the first list item be -ordinal-1 ("1", "A", "a", "I", or "i"). Although other start-values -will be recognized, they may not be supported by the output format. A -level-1 [info] system message will be generated for any list beginning -with a non-ordinal-1 enumerator. - -Lists using Roman numerals must begin with "I"/"i" or a -multi-character value, such as "II" or "XV". Any other -single-character Roman numeral ("V", "X", "L", "C", "D", "M") will be -interpreted as a letter of the alphabet, not as a Roman numeral. -Likewise, lists using letters of the alphabet may not begin with -"I"/"i", since these are recognized as Roman numeral 1. - -The second line of each enumerated list item is checked for validity. -This is to prevent ordinary paragraphs from being mistakenly -interpreted as list items, when they happen to begin with text -identical to enumerators. For example, this text is parsed as an -ordinary paragraph:: - - A. Einstein was a really - smart dude. - -However, ambiguity cannot be avoided if the paragraph consists of only -one line. This text is parsed as an enumerated list item:: - - A. Einstein was a really smart dude. - -If a single-line paragraph begins with text identical to an enumerator -("A.", "1.", "(b)", "I)", etc.), the first character will have to be -escaped in order to have the line parsed as an ordinary paragraph:: - - \A. Einstein was a really smart dude. - -Nested enumerated lists must be created with indentation. For -example:: - - 1. Item 1. - - a) Item 1a. - b) Item 1b. - -Example syntax diagram:: - - +-------+----------------------+ - | "1. " | list item | - +-------| (body elements)+ | - +----------------------+ - - -Definition Lists ----------------- - -Doctree elements: definition_list, definition_list_item, term, -classifier, definition. - -Each definition list item contains a term, an optional classifier, and -a definition. A term is a simple one-line word or phrase. An -optional classifier may follow the term on the same line, after an -inline " : " (space, colon, space). A definition is a block indented -relative to the term, and may contain multiple paragraphs and other -body elements. There may be no blank line between a term line and a -definition block (this distinguishes definition lists from `block -quotes`_). Blank lines are required before the first and after the -last definition list item, but are optional in-between. For example:: - - term 1 - Definition 1. - - term 2 - Definition 2, paragraph 1. - - Definition 2, paragraph 2. - - term 3 : classifier - Definition 3. - -Inline markup is parsed in the term line before the term/classifier -delimiter (" : ") is recognized. The delimiter will only be -recognized if it appears outside of any inline markup. - -A definition list may be used in various ways, including: - -- As a dictionary or glossary. The term is the word itself, a - classifier may be used to indicate the usage of the term (noun, - verb, etc.), and the definition follows. - -- To describe program variables. The term is the variable name, a - classifier may be used to indicate the type of the variable (string, - integer, etc.), and the definition describes the variable's use in - the program. This usage of definition lists supports the classifier - syntax of Grouch_, a system for describing and enforcing a Python - object schema. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +---------------------------+ - | term [ " : " classifier ] | - +--+------------------------+--+ - | definition | - | (body elements)+ | - +---------------------------+ - - -Field Lists ------------ - -Doctree elements: field_list, field, field_name, field_body. - -Field lists are used as part of an extension syntax, such as options -for directives_, or database-like records meant for further -processing. They may also be used for two-column table-like -structures resembling database records (label & data pairs). -Applications of reStructuredText may recognize field names and -transform fields or field bodies in certain contexts. For examples, -see `Bibliographic Fields`_ below, or the "image" and "meta" -directives in `reStructuredText Directives`_. - -Field lists are mappings from field names to field bodies, modeled on -RFC822_ headers. A field name is made up of one or more letters, -numbers, whitespace, and punctuation, except colons (":"). Field -names are case-insensitive. The field name, along with a single colon -prefix and suffix, together form the field marker. The field marker -is followed by whitespace and the field body. The field body may -contain multiple body elements, indented relative to the field marker. -The first line after the field name marker determines the indentation -of the field body. For example:: - - :Date: 2001-08-16 - :Version: 1 - :Authors: - Me - - Myself - - I - :Indentation: Since the field marker may be quite long, the second - and subsequent lines of the field body do not have to line up - with the first line, but they must be indented relative to the - field name marker, and they must line up with each other. - :Parameter i: integer - -The interpretation of individual words in a multi-word field name is -up to the application. The application may specify a syntax for the -field name. For example, second and subsequent words may be treated -as "arguments", quoted phrases may be treated as a single argument, -and direct support for the "name=value" syntax may be added. - -Standard RFC822_ headers cannot be used for this construct because -they are ambiguous. A word followed by a colon at the beginning of a -line is common in written text. However, in well-defined contexts -such as when a field list invariably occurs at the beginning of a -document (PEPs and email messages), standard RFC822 headers could be -used. - -Syntax diagram (simplified):: - - +--------------------+----------------------+ - | ":" field name ":" | field body | - +-------+------------+ | - | (body elements)+ | - +-----------------------------------+ - - -Bibliographic Fields -```````````````````` - -Doctree elements: docinfo, author, authors, organization, contact, -version, status, date, copyright, field, topic. - -When a field list is the first non-comment element in a document -(after the document title, if there is one), it may have its fields -transformed to document bibliographic data. This bibliographic data -corresponds to the front matter of a book, such as the title page and -copyright page. - -Certain registered field names (listed below) are recognized and -transformed to the corresponding doctree elements, most becoming child -elements of the "docinfo" element. No ordering is required of these -fields, although they may be rearranged to fit the document structure, -as noted. Unless otherwise indicated below, each of the bibliographic -elements' field bodies may contain a single paragraph only. Field -bodies may be checked for `RCS keywords`_ and cleaned up. Any -unrecognized fields will remain as generic fields in the docinfo -element. - -The registered bibliographic field names and their corresponding -doctree elements are as follows: - -- Field name "Author": author element. -- "Authors": authors. -- "Organization": organization. -- "Contact": contact. -- "Address": address. -- "Version": version. -- "Status": status. -- "Date": date. -- "Copyright": copyright. -- "Dedication": topic. -- "Abstract": topic. - -The "Authors" field may contain either: a single paragraph consisting -of a list of authors, separated by ";" or ","; or a bullet list whose -elements each contain a single paragraph per author. ";" is checked -first, so "Doe, Jane; Doe, John" will work. In some languages -(e.g. Swedish), there is no singular/plural distinction between -"Author" and "Authors", so only an "Authors" field is provided, and a -single name is interpreted as an "Author". If a single name contains -a comma, end it with a semicolon to disambiguate: ":Authors: Doe, -Jane;". - -The "Address" field is for a multi-line surface mailing address. A -specialized form of line block`_ (see `reStructuredText Directives`_), -newlines and whitespace will be preserved. - -The "Dedication" and "Abstract" fields may contain arbitrary body -elements. Only one of each is allowed. They become topic elements -with "Dedication" or "Abstract" titles (or language equivalents) -immediately following the docinfo element. - -This field-name-to-element mapping can be replaced for other -languages. See the `DocInfo transform`_ implementation documentation -for details. - -Unregistered/generic fields may contain one or more paragraphs or -arbitrary body elements. - - -RCS Keywords -```````````` - -`Bibliographic fields`_ recognized by the parser are normally checked -for RCS [#]_ keywords and cleaned up [#]_. RCS keywords may be -entered into source files as "$keyword$", and once stored under RCS or -CVS [#]_, they are expanded to "$keyword: expansion text $". For -example, a "Status" field will be transformed to a "status" element:: - - :Status: $keyword: expansion text $ - -.. [#] Revision Control System. -.. [#] RCS keyword processing can be turned off (unimplemented). -.. [#] Concurrent Versions System. CVS uses the same keywords as RCS. - -Processed, the "status" element's text will become simply "expansion -text". The dollar sign delimiters and leading RCS keyword name are -removed. - -The RCS keyword processing only kicks in when all of these conditions -hold: - -1. The field list is in bibliographic context (first non-comment - construct in the document, after a document title if there is - one). - -2. The field name is a recognized bibliographic field name. - -3. The sole contents of the field is an expanded RCS keyword, of the - form "$Keyword: data $". - - -Option Lists ------------- - -Doctree elements: option_list, option_list_item, option_group, option, -option_string, option_argument, description. - -Option lists are two-column lists of command-line options and -descriptions, documenting a program's options. For example:: - - -a Output all. - -b Output both (this description is - quite long). - -c arg Output just arg. - --long Output all day long. - - -p This option has two paragraphs in the description. - This is the first. - - This is the second. Blank lines may be omitted between - options (as above) or left in (as here and below). - - --very-long-option A VMS-style option. Note the adjustment for - the required two spaces. - - --an-even-longer-option - The description can also start on the next line. - - -2, --two This option has two variants. - - -f FILE, --file=FILE These two options are synonyms; both have - arguments. - - /V A VMS/DOS-style option. - -There are several types of options recognized by reStructuredText: - -- Short POSIX options consist of one dash and an option letter. -- Long POSIX options consist of two dashes and an option word; some - systems use a single dash. -- Old GNU-style "plus" options consist of one plus and an option - letter ("plus" options are deprecated now, their use discouraged). -- DOS/VMS options consist of a slash and an option letter or word. - -Please note that both POSIX-style and DOS/VMS-style options may be -used by DOS or Windows software. These and other variations are -sometimes used mixed together. The names above have been chosen for -convenience only. - -The syntax for short and long POSIX options is based on the syntax -supported by Python's getopt.py_ module, which implements an option -parser similar to the `GNU libc getopt_long()`_ function but with some -restrictions. There are many variant option systems, and -reStructuredText option lists do not support all of them. - -Although long POSIX and DOS/VMS option words may be allowed to be -truncated by the operating system or the application when used on the -command line, reStructuredText option lists do not show or support -this with any special syntax. The complete option word should be -given, supported by notes about truncation if and when applicable. - -Options may be followed by an argument placeholder, whose role and -syntax should be explained in the description text. Either a space or -an equals sign may be used as a delimiter between options and option -argument placeholders. - -Multiple option "synonyms" may be listed, sharing a single -description. They must be separated by comma-space. - -There must be at least two spaces between the option(s) and the -description. The description may contain multiple body elements. The -first line after the option marker determines the indentation of the -description. As with other types of lists, blank lines are required -before the first option list item and after the last, but are optional -between option entries. - -Syntax diagram (simplified):: - - +----------------------------+-------------+ - | option [" " argument] " " | description | - +-------+--------------------+ | - | (body elements)+ | - +----------------------------------+ - - -Literal Blocks --------------- - -Doctree element: literal_block. - -A paragraph consisting of two colons ("::") signifies that all -following **indented** text blocks comprise a literal block. No -markup processing is done within a literal block. It is left as-is, -and is typically rendered in a monospaced typeface:: - - This is a typical paragraph. A literal block follows. - - :: - - for a in [5,4,3,2,1]: # this is program code, shown as-is - print a - print "it's..." - # a literal block continues until the indentation ends - - This text has returned to the indentation of the first paragraph, - is outside of the literal block, and is therefore treated as an - ordinary paragraph. - -The paragraph containing only "::" will be completely removed from the -output; no empty paragraph will remain. - -As a convenience, the "::" is recognized at the end of any paragraph. -If immediately preceded by whitespace, both colons will be removed -from the output (this is the "partially minimized" form). When text -immediately precedes the "::", *one* colon will be removed from the -output, leaving only one colon visible (i.e., "::" will be replaced by -":"; this is the "fully minimized" form). - -In other words, these are all equivalent (please pay attention to the -colons after "Paragraph"): - -1. Expanded form:: - - Paragraph: - - :: - - Literal block - -2. Partially minimized form:: - - Paragraph: :: - - Literal block - -3. Fully minimized form:: - - Paragraph:: - - Literal block - -The minimum leading whitespace will be removed from each line of the -literal block. Other than that, all whitespace (including line -breaks) is preserved. Blank lines are required before and after a -literal block, but these blank lines are not included as part of the -literal block. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +------------------------------+ - | paragraph | - | (ends with "::") | - +------------------------------+ - +---------------------------+ - | literal block | - +---------------------------+ - - -Block Quotes ------------- - -Doctree element: block_quote, attribution. - -A text block that is indented relative to the preceding text, without -markup indicating it to be a literal block, is a block quote. All -markup processing (for body elements and inline markup) continues -within the block quote:: - - This is an ordinary paragraph, introducing a block quote. - - "It is my business to know things. That is my trade." - - -- Sherlock Holmes - -If the final block of a block quote begins with "--" (flush left -within the block quote), it is interpreted as an attribution. If the -attribution consists of multiple lines, the left edges of the second -and subsequent lines must align. - -Blank lines are required before and after a block quote, but these -blank lines are not included as part of the block quote. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +------------------------------+ - | (current level of | - | indentation) | - +------------------------------+ - +---------------------------+ - | block quote | - | (body elements)+ | - | | - | -- attribution text | - | (optional) | - +---------------------------+ - - -Doctest Blocks --------------- - -Doctree element: doctest_block. - -Doctest blocks are interactive Python sessions cut-and-pasted into -docstrings. They are meant to illustrate usage by example, and -provide an elegant and powerful testing environment via the `doctest -module`_ in the Python standard library. - -Doctest blocks are text blocks which begin with ``">>> "``, the Python -interactive interpreter main prompt, and end with a blank line. -Doctest blocks are treated as a special case of literal blocks, -without requiring the literal block syntax. If both are present, the -literal block syntax takes priority over Doctest block syntax:: - - This is an ordinary paragraph. - - >>> print 'this is a Doctest block' - this is a Doctest block - - The following is a literal block:: - - >>> This is not recognized as a doctest block by - reStructuredText. It *will* be recognized by the doctest - module, though! - -Indentation is not required for doctest blocks. - - -Tables ------- - -Doctree elements: table, tgroup, colspec, thead, tbody, row, entry. - -ReStructuredText provides two syntaxes for delineating table cells: -`Grid Tables`_ and `Simple Tables`_. - -As with other body elements, blank lines are required before and after -tables. Tables' left edges should align with the left edge of -preceding text blocks; if indented, the table is considered to be part -of a block quote. - -Once isolated, each table cell is treated as a miniature document; the -top and bottom cell boundaries act as delimiting blank lines. Each -cell contains zero or more body elements. Cell contents may include -left and/or right margins, which are removed before processing. - - -Grid Tables -``````````` - -Grid tables provide a complete table representation via grid-like -"ASCII art". Grid tables allow arbitrary cell contents (body -elements), and both row and column spans. However, grid tables can be -cumbersome to produce, especially for simple data sets. The `Emacs -table mode`_ is a tool that allows easy editing of grid tables, in -Emacs. See `Simple Tables`_ for a simpler (but limited) -representation. - -Grid tables are described with a visual grid made up of the characters -"-", "=", "|", and "+". The hyphen ("-") is used for horizontal lines -(row separators). The equals sign ("=") may be used to separate -optional header rows from the table body (not supported by the `Emacs -table mode`_). The vertical bar ("|") is used for vertical lines -(column separators). The plus sign ("+") is used for intersections of -horizontal and vertical lines. Example:: - - +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+ - | Header row, column 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 | Header 4 | - | (header rows optional) | | | | - +========================+============+==========+==========+ - | body row 1, column 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | - +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+ - | body row 2 | Cells may span columns. | - +------------------------+------------+---------------------+ - | body row 3 | Cells may | - Table cells | - +------------------------+ span rows. | - contain | - | body row 4 | | - body elements. | - +------------------------+------------+---------------------+ - -Some care must be taken with grid tables to avoid undesired -interactions with cell text in rare cases. For example, the following -table contains a cell in row 2 spanning from column 2 to column 4:: - - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 1, col 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 2 | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 3 | | | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - -If a vertical bar is used in the text of that cell, it could have -unintended effects if accidentally aligned with column boundaries:: - - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 1, col 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 2 | Use the command ``ls | more``. | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 3 | | | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - -Several solutions are possible. All that is needed is to break the -continuity of the cell outline rectangle. One possibility is to shift -the text by adding an extra space before:: - - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 1, col 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 2 | Use the command ``ls | more``. | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 3 | | | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - -Another possibility is to add an extra line to row 2:: - - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 1, col 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 2 | Use the command ``ls | more``. | - | | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - | row 3 | | | | - +--------------+----------+-----------+-----------+ - - -Simple Tables -````````````` - -Simple tables provide a compact and easy to type but limited -row-oriented table representation for simple data sets. Cell contents -are typically single paragraphs, although arbitrary body elements may -be represented in most cells. Simple tables allow multi-line rows (in -all but the first column) and column spans, but not row spans. See -`Grid Tables`_ above for a complete table representation. - -Simple tables are described with horizontal borders made up of "=" and -"-" characters. The equals sign ("=") is used for top and bottom -table borders, and to separate optional header rows from the table -body. The hyphen ("-") is used to indicate column spans in a single -row by underlining the joined columns. - -A simple table begins with a top border of equals signs with one or -more spaces at each column boundary (two or more spaces recommended). -Regardless of spans, the top border *must* fully describe all table -columns. There must be at least two columns in the table (to -differentiate it from section headers). The last of the optional -header rows is underlined with '=', again with spaces at column -boundaries. There may not be a blank line below the header row -separator; it would be interpreted as the bottom border of the table. -The bottom boundary of the table consists of '=' underlines, also with -spaces at column boundaries. For example, here is a truth table, a -three-column table with one header row and four body rows:: - - ===== ===== ======= - A B A and B - ===== ===== ======= - False False False - True False False - False True False - True True True - ===== ===== ======= - -Underlines of '-' may be used to indicate column spans by "filling in" -column margins to join adjacent columns. Column span underlines must -be complete (they must cover all columns) and align with established -column boundaries. Text lines containing column span underlines may -not contain any other text. A column span underline applies only to -one row immediately above it. For example, here is a table with a -column span in the header:: - - ===== ===== ====== - Inputs Output - ------------ ------ - A B A or B - ===== ===== ====== - False False False - True False True - False True True - True True True - ===== ===== ====== - -Each line of text must contain spaces at column boundaries, except -where cells have been joined by column spans. Each line of text -starts a new row, except when there is a blank cell in the first -column. In that case, that line of text is parsed as a continuation -line. For this reason, cells in the first column of new rows (*not* -continuation lines) *must* contain some text; blank cells would lead -to a misinterpretation. An empty comment ("..") is sufficient and -will be omitted from the processed output (see Comments_ below). -Also, this mechanism limits cells in the first column to only one line -of text. Use `grid tables`_ if this limitation is unacceptable. - -Underlines of '-' may also be used to visually separate rows, even if -there are no column spans. This is especially useful in long tables, -where rows are many lines long. - -Blank lines are permitted within simple tables. Their interpretation -depends on the context. Blank lines *between* rows are ignored. -Blank lines *within* multi-line rows may separate paragraphs or other -body elements within cells. - -The rightmost column is unbounded; text may continue past the edge of -the table (as indicated by the table borders). However, it is -recommended that borders be made long enough to contain the entire -text. - -The following example illustrates continuation lines (row 2 consists -of two lines of text, and four lines for row 3), a blank line -separating paragraphs (row 3, column 2), and text extending past the -right edge of the table:: - - ===== ===== - col 1 col 2 - ===== ===== - 1 Second column of row 1. - 2 Second column of row 2. - Second line of paragraph. - 3 - Second column of row 3. - - - Second item in bullet - list (row 3, column 2). - ===== ===== - - -Explicit Markup Blocks ----------------------- - -An explicit markup block is a text block: - -- whose first line begins with ".." followed by whitespace (the - "explicit markup start"), -- whose second and subsequent lines (if any) are indented relative to - the first, and -- which ends before an unindented line. - -Explicit markup blocks are analogous to bullet list items, with ".." -as the bullet. The text immediately after the explicit markup start -determines the indentation of the block body. Blank lines are -required between explicit markup blocks and other elements, but are -optional between explicit markup blocks where unambiguous. - -The explicit markup syntax is used for footnotes, citations, hyperlink -targets, directives, substitution definitions, and comments. - - -Footnotes -````````` - -Doctree elements: footnote, label. - -Each footnote consists of an explicit markup start (".. "), a left -square bracket, the footnote label, a right square bracket, and -whitespace, followed by indented body elements. A footnote label can -be: - -- a whole decimal number consisting of one or more digits, - -- a single "#" (denoting `auto-numbered footnotes`_), - -- a "#" followed by a simple reference name (an `autonumber label`_), - or - -- a single "*" (denoting `auto-symbol footnotes`_). - -If the first body element within a footnote is a simple paragraph, it -may begin on the same line as the footnote label. Other elements must -begin on a new line, consistently indented (by at least 3 spaces) and -left-aligned. - -Footnotes may occur anywhere in the document, not only at the end. -Where or how they appear in the processed output depends on the -processing system. - -Here is a manually numbered footnote:: - - .. [1] Body elements go here. - -Each footnote automatically generates a hyperlink target pointing to -itself. The text of the hyperlink target name is the same as that of -the footnote label. `Auto-numbered footnotes`_ generate a number as -their footnote label and reference name. See `Implicit Hyperlink -Targets`_ for a complete description of the mechanism. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +-------+-------------------------+ - | ".. " | "[" label "]" footnote | - +-------+ | - | (body elements)+ | - +-------------------------+ - - -Auto-Numbered Footnotes -....................... - -A number sign ("#") may be used as the first character of a footnote -label to request automatic numbering of the footnote or footnote -reference. - -The first footnote to request automatic numbering is assigned the -label "1", the second is assigned the label "2", and so on (assuming -there are no manually numbered footnotes present; see `Mixed Manual -and Auto-Numbered Footnotes`_ below). A footnote which has -automatically received a label "1" generates an implicit hyperlink -target with name "1", just as if the label was explicitly specified. - -.. _autonumber label: `autonumber labels`_ - -A footnote may specify a label explicitly while at the same time -requesting automatic numbering: ``[#label]``. These labels are called -_`autonumber labels`. Autonumber labels do two things: - -- On the footnote itself, they generate a hyperlink target whose name - is the autonumber label (doesn't include the "#"). - -- They allow an automatically numbered footnote to be referred to more - than once, as a footnote reference or hyperlink reference. For - example:: - - If [#note]_ is the first footnote reference, it will show up as - "[1]". We can refer to it again as [#note]_ and again see - "[1]". We can also refer to it as note_ (an ordinary internal - hyperlink reference). - - .. [#note] This is the footnote labeled "note". - -The numbering is determined by the order of the footnotes, not by the -order of the references. For footnote references without autonumber -labels (``[#]_``), the footnotes and footnote references must be in -the same relative order but need not alternate in lock-step. For -example:: - - [#]_ is a reference to footnote 1, and [#]_ is a reference to - footnote 2. - - .. [#] This is footnote 1. - .. [#] This is footnote 2. - .. [#] This is footnote 3. - - [#]_ is a reference to footnote 3. - -Special care must be taken if footnotes themselves contain -auto-numbered footnote references, or if multiple references are made -in close proximity. Footnotes and references are noted in the order -they are encountered in the document, which is not necessarily the -same as the order in which a person would read them. - - -Auto-Symbol Footnotes -..................... - -An asterisk ("*") may be used for footnote labels to request automatic -symbol generation for footnotes and footnote references. The asterisk -may be the only character in the label. For example:: - - Here is a symbolic footnote reference: [*]_. - - .. [*] This is the footnote. - -A transform will insert symbols as labels into corresponding footnotes -and footnote references. The number of references must be equal to -the number of footnotes. One symbol footnote cannot have multiple -references. - -The standard Docutils system uses the following symbols for footnote -marks [#]_: - -- asterisk/star ("*") -- dagger (HTML character entity "†") -- double dagger ("‡") -- section mark ("§") -- pilcrow or paragraph mark ("¶") -- number sign ("#") -- spade suit ("♠") -- heart suit ("♥") -- diamond suit ("♦") -- club suit ("♣") - -.. [#] This list was inspired by the list of symbols for "Note - Reference Marks" in The Chicago Manual of Style, 14th edition, - section 12.51. "Parallels" ("||") were given in CMoS instead of - the pilcrow. The last four symbols (the card suits) were added - arbitrarily. - -If more than ten symbols are required, the same sequence will be -reused, doubled and then tripled, and so on ("**" etc.). - - -Mixed Manual and Auto-Numbered Footnotes -........................................ - -Manual and automatic footnote numbering may both be used within a -single document, although the results may not be expected. Manual -numbering takes priority. Only unused footnote numbers are assigned -to auto-numbered footnotes. The following example should be -illustrative:: - - [2]_ will be "2" (manually numbered), - [#]_ will be "3" (anonymous auto-numbered), and - [#label]_ will be "1" (labeled auto-numbered). - - .. [2] This footnote is labeled manually, so its number is fixed. - - .. [#label] This autonumber-labeled footnote will be labeled "1". - It is the first auto-numbered footnote and no other footnote - with label "1" exists. The order of the footnotes is used to - determine numbering, not the order of the footnote references. - - .. [#] This footnote will be labeled "3". It is the second - auto-numbered footnote, but footnote label "2" is already used. - - -Citations -````````` - -Citations are identical to footnotes except that they use only -non-numeric labels such as ``[note]`` or ``[GVR2001]``. Citation -labels are simple `reference names`_ (case-insensitive single words -consisting of alphanumerics plus internal hyphens, underscores, and -periods; no whitespace). Citations may be rendered separately and -differently from footnotes. For example:: - - Here is a citation reference: [CIT2002]_. - - .. [CIT2002] This is the citation. It's just like a footnote, - except the label is textual. - - -.. _hyperlinks: - -Hyperlink Targets -````````````````` - -Doctree element: target. - -These are also called _`explicit hyperlink targets`, to differentiate -them from `implicit hyperlink targets`_ defined below. - -Hyperlink targets identify a location within or outside of a document, -which may be linked to by `hyperlink references`_. - -Hyperlink targets may be named or anonymous. Named hyperlink targets -consist of an explicit markup start (".. "), an underscore, the -reference name (no trailing underscore), a colon, whitespace, and a -link block:: - - .. _hyperlink-name: link-block - -Reference names are whitespace-neutral and case-insensitive. See -`Reference Names`_ for details and examples. - -Anonymous hyperlink targets consist of an explicit markup start -(".. "), two underscores, a colon, whitespace, and a link block; there -is no reference name:: - - .. __: anonymous-hyperlink-target-link-block - -An alternate syntax for anonymous hyperlinks consists of two -underscores, a space, and a link block:: - - __ anonymous-hyperlink-target-link-block - -See `Anonymous Hyperlinks`_ below. - -There are three types of hyperlink targets: internal, external, and -indirect. - -1. _`Internal hyperlink targets` have empty link blocks. They provide - an end point allowing a hyperlink to connect one place to another - within a document. An internal hyperlink target points to the - element following the target. For example:: - - Clicking on this internal hyperlink will take us to the target_ - below. - - .. _target: - - The hyperlink target above points to this paragraph. - - Internal hyperlink targets may be "chained". Multiple adjacent - internal hyperlink targets all point to the same element:: - - .. _target1: - .. _target2: - - The targets "target1" and "target2" are synonyms; they both - point to this paragraph. - - If the element "pointed to" is an external hyperlink target (with a - URI in its link block; see #2 below) the URI from the external - hyperlink target is propagated to the internal hyperlink targets; - they will all "point to" the same URI. There is no need to - duplicate a URI. For example, all three of the following hyperlink - targets refer to the same URI:: - - .. _Python DOC-SIG mailing list archive: - .. _archive: - .. _Doc-SIG: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/ - - An inline form of internal hyperlink target is available; see - `Inline Internal Targets`_. - -2. _`External hyperlink targets` have an absolute or relative URI or - email address in their link blocks. For example, take the - following input:: - - See the Python_ home page for info. - - `Write to me`_ with your questions. - - .. _Python: http://www.python.org - .. _Write to me: jdoe@example.com - - After processing into HTML, the hyperlinks might be expressed as:: - - See the <a href="http://www.python.org">Python</a> home page - for info. - - <a href="mailto:jdoe@example.com">Write to me</a> with your - questions. - - An external hyperlink's URI may begin on the same line as the - explicit markup start and target name, or it may begin in an - indented text block immediately following, with no intervening - blank lines. If there are multiple lines in the link block, they - are stripped of leading and trailing whitespace and concatenated. - The following external hyperlink targets are equivalent:: - - .. _one-liner: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html - - .. _starts-on-this-line: http:// - docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html - - .. _entirely-below: - http://docutils. - sourceforge.net/rst.html - - If an external hyperlink target's URI contains an underscore as its - last character, it must be escaped to avoid being mistaken for an - indirect hyperlink target:: - - This link_ refers to a file called ``underscore_``. - - .. _link: underscore\_ - - It is possible (although not generally recommended) to include URIs - directly within hyperlink references. See `Embedded URIs`_ below. - -3. _`Indirect hyperlink targets` have a hyperlink reference in their - link blocks. In the following example, target "one" indirectly - references whatever target "two" references, and target "two" - references target "three", an internal hyperlink target. In - effect, all three reference the same thing:: - - .. _one: two_ - .. _two: three_ - .. _three: - - Just as with `hyperlink references`_ anywhere else in a document, - if a phrase-reference is used in the link block it must be enclosed - in backquotes. As with `external hyperlink targets`_, the link - block of an indirect hyperlink target may begin on the same line as - the explicit markup start or the next line. It may also be split - over multiple lines, in which case the lines are joined with - whitespace before being normalized. - - For example, the following indirect hyperlink targets are - equivalent:: - - .. _one-liner: `A HYPERLINK`_ - .. _entirely-below: - `a hyperlink`_ - .. _split: `A - Hyperlink`_ - -If a reference name contains a colon followed by whitespace, either: - -- the phrase must be enclosed in backquotes:: - - .. _`FAQTS: Computers: Programming: Languages: Python`: - http://python.faqts.com/ - -- or the colon(s) must be backslash-escaped in the link target:: - - .. _Chapter One\: "Tadpole Days": - - It's not easy being green... - -See `Implicit Hyperlink Targets`_ below for the resolution of -duplicate reference names. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +-------+----------------------+ - | ".. " | "_" name ":" link | - +-------+ block | - | | - +----------------------+ - - -Anonymous Hyperlinks -.................... - -The `World Wide Web Consortium`_ recommends in its `HTML Techniques -for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines`_ that authors should -"clearly identify the target of each link." Hyperlink references -should be as verbose as possible, but duplicating a verbose hyperlink -name in the target is onerous and error-prone. Anonymous hyperlinks -are designed to allow convenient verbose hyperlink references, and are -analogous to `Auto-Numbered Footnotes`_. They are particularly useful -in short or one-off documents. However, this feature is easily abused -and can result in unreadable plaintext and/or unmaintainable -documents. Caution is advised. - -Anonymous `hyperlink references`_ are specified with two underscores -instead of one:: - - See `the web site of my favorite programming language`__. - -Anonymous targets begin with ".. __:"; no reference name is required -or allowed:: - - .. __: http://www.python.org - -As a convenient alternative, anonymous targets may begin with "__" -only:: - - __ http://www.python.org - -The reference name of the reference is not used to match the reference -to its target. Instead, the order of anonymous hyperlink references -and targets within the document is significant: the first anonymous -reference will link to the first anonymous target. The number of -anonymous hyperlink references in a document must match the number of -anonymous targets. For readability, it is recommended that targets be -kept close to references. Take care when editing text containing -anonymous references; adding, removing, and rearranging references -require attention to the order of corresponding targets. - - -Directives -`````````` - -Doctree elements: depend on the directive. - -Directives are an extension mechanism for reStructuredText, a way of -adding support for new constructs without adding new syntax. All -standard directives (those implemented and registered in the reference -reStructuredText parser) are described in the `reStructuredText -Directives`_ document, and are always available. Any other directives -are domain-specific, and may require special action to make them -available when processing the document. - -For example, here's how an image may be placed:: - - .. image:: mylogo.jpeg - -A figure (a graphic with a caption) may placed like this:: - - .. figure:: larch.png - - The larch. - -An admonition (note, caution, etc.) contains other body elements:: - - .. note:: This is a paragraph - - - Here is a bullet list. - -Directives are indicated by an explicit markup start (".. ") followed -by the directive type, two colons, and whitespace (together called the -"directive marker"). Directive types are case-insensitive single -words (alphanumerics plus internal hyphens, underscores, and periods; -no whitespace). Two colons are used after the directive type for -these reasons: - -- To avoid clashes with common comment text like:: - - .. Danger: modify at your own risk! - -- If an implementation of reStructuredText does not recognize a - directive (i.e., the directive-handler is not installed), the entire - directive block (including the directive itself) will be treated as - a literal block, and a level-3 (error) system message generated. - Thus "::" is a natural choice. - -The directive block is consists of any text on the first line of the -directive after the directive marker, and any subsequent indented -text. The interpretation of the directive block is up to the -directive code. There are three logical parts to the directive block: - -1. Directive arguments. -2. Directive options. -3. Directive content. - -Individual directives can employ any combination of these parts. -Directive arguments can be filesystem paths, URLs, title text, etc. -Directive options are indicated using `field lists`_; the field names -and contents are directive-specific. Arguments and options must form -a contiguous block beginning on the first or second line of the -directive; a blank line indicates the beginning of the directive -content block. If either arguments and/or options are employed by the -directive, a blank line must separate them from the directive content. -The "figure" directive employs all three parts:: - - .. figure:: larch.png - :scale: 50 - - The larch. - -Simple directives may not require any content. If a directive that -does not employ a content block is followed by indented text anyway, -it is an error. If a block quote should immediately follow a -directive, use an empty comment in-between (see Comments_ below). - -Actions taken in response to directives and the interpretation of text -in the directive content block or subsequent text block(s) are -directive-dependent. See `reStructuredText Directives`_ for details. - -Directives are meant for the arbitrary processing of their contents, -which can be transformed into something possibly unrelated to the -original text. It may also be possible for directives to be used as -pragmas, to modify the behavior of the parser, such as to experiment -with alternate syntax. There is no parser support for this -functionality at present; if a reasonable need for pragma directives -is found, they may be supported. - -Directives do not generate "directive" elements; they are a *parser -construct* only, and have no intrinsic meaning outside of -reStructuredText. Instead, the parser will transform recognized -directives into (possibly specialized) document elements. Unknown -directives will trigger level-3 (error) system messages. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +-------+-------------------------------+ - | ".. " | directive type "::" directive | - +-------+ block | - | | - +-------------------------------+ - - -Substitution Definitions -```````````````````````` - -Doctree element: substitution_definition. - -Substitution definitions are indicated by an explicit markup start -(".. ") followed by a vertical bar, the substitution text, another -vertical bar, whitespace, and the definition block. Substitution text -may not begin or end with whitespace. A substitution definition block -contains an embedded inline-compatible directive (without the leading -".. "), such as an image. For example:: - - The |biohazard| symbol must be used on containers used to - dispose of medical waste. - - .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png - -It is an error for a substitution definition block to directly or -indirectly contain a circular substitution reference. - -`Substitution references`_ are replaced in-line by the processed -contents of the corresponding definition (linked by matching -substitution text). Matches are case-sensitive but forgiving; if no -exact match is found, a case-insensitive comparison is attempted. - -Substitution definitions allow the power and flexibility of -block-level directives_ to be shared by inline text. They are a way -to include arbitrarily complex inline structures within text, while -keeping the details out of the flow of text. They are the equivalent -of SGML/XML's named entities or programming language macros. - -Without the substitution mechanism, every time someone wants an -application-specific new inline structure, they would have to petition -for a syntax change. In combination with existing directive syntax, -any inline structure can be coded without new syntax (except possibly -a new directive). - -Syntax diagram:: - - +-------+-----------------------------------------------------+ - | ".. " | "|" substitution text "| " directive type "::" data | - +-------+ directive block | - | | - +-----------------------------------------------------+ - -Following are some use cases for the substitution mechanism. Please -note that most of the embedded directives shown are examples only and -have not been implemented. - -Objects - Substitution references may be used to associate ambiguous text - with a unique object identifier. - - For example, many sites may wish to implement an inline "user" - directive:: - - |Michael| and |Jon| are our widget-wranglers. - - .. |Michael| user:: mjones - .. |Jon| user:: jhl - - Depending on the needs of the site, this may be used to index the - document for later searching, to hyperlink the inline text in - various ways (mailto, homepage, mouseover Javascript with profile - and contact information, etc.), or to customize presentation of - the text (include username in the inline text, include an icon - image with a link next to the text, make the text bold or a - different color, etc.). - - The same approach can be used in documents which frequently refer - to a particular type of objects with unique identifiers but - ambiguous common names. Movies, albums, books, photos, court - cases, and laws are possible. For example:: - - |The Transparent Society| offers a fascinating alternate view - on privacy issues. - - .. |The Transparent Society| book:: isbn=0738201448 - - Classes or functions, in contexts where the module or class names - are unclear and/or interpreted text cannot be used, are another - possibility:: - - 4XSLT has the convenience method |runString|, so you don't - have to mess with DOM objects if all you want is the - transformed output. - - .. |runString| function:: module=xml.xslt class=Processor - -Images - Images are a common use for substitution references:: - - West led the |H| 3, covered by dummy's |H| Q, East's |H| K, - and trumped in hand with the |S| 2. - - .. |H| image:: /images/heart.png - :height: 11 - :width: 11 - .. |S| image:: /images/spade.png - :height: 11 - :width: 11 - - * |Red light| means stop. - * |Green light| means go. - * |Yellow light| means go really fast. - - .. |Red light| image:: red_light.png - .. |Green light| image:: green_light.png - .. |Yellow light| image:: yellow_light.png - - |-><-| is the official symbol of POEE_. - - .. |-><-| image:: discord.png - .. _POEE: http://www.poee.org/ - - The "image" directive has been implemented. - -Styles [#]_ - Substitution references may be used to associate inline text with - an externally defined presentation style:: - - Even |the text in Texas| is big. - - .. |the text in Texas| style:: big - - The style name may be meaningful in the context of some particular - output format (CSS class name for HTML output, LaTeX style name - for LaTeX, etc), or may be ignored for other output formats (such - as plaintext). - - .. @@@ This needs to be rethought & rewritten or removed: - - Interpreted text is unsuitable for this purpose because the set - of style names cannot be predefined - it is the domain of the - content author, not the author of the parser and output - formatter - and there is no way to associate a style name - argument with an interpreted text style role. Also, it may be - desirable to use the same mechanism for styling blocks:: - - .. style:: motto - At Bob's Underwear Shop, we'll do anything to get in - your pants. - - .. style:: disclaimer - All rights reversed. Reprint what you like. - - .. [#] There may be sufficient need for a "style" mechanism to - warrant simpler syntax such as an extension to the interpreted - text role syntax. The substitution mechanism is cumbersome for - simple text styling. - -Templates - Inline markup may be used for later processing by a template - engine. For example, a Zope_ author might write:: - - Welcome back, |name|! - - .. |name| tal:: replace user/getUserName - - After processing, this ZPT output would result:: - - Welcome back, - <span tal:replace="user/getUserName">name</span>! - - Zope would then transform this to something like "Welcome back, - David!" during a session with an actual user. - -Replacement text - The substitution mechanism may be used for simple macro - substitution. This may be appropriate when the replacement text - is repeated many times throughout one or more documents, - especially if it may need to change later. A short example is - unavoidably contrived:: - - |RST| is a little annoying to type over and over, especially - when writing about |RST| itself, and spelling out the - bicapitalized word |RST| every time isn't really necessary for - |RST| source readability. - - .. |RST| replace:: reStructuredText_ - .. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html - - Substitution is also appropriate when the replacement text cannot - be represented using other inline constructs, or is obtrusively - long:: - - But still, that's nothing compared to a name like - |j2ee-cas|__. - - .. |j2ee-cas| replace:: - the Java `TM`:super: 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition Client - Access Services - __ http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/earlyAccess/ - j2eecas/ - - -Comments -```````` - -Doctree element: comment. - -Arbitrary indented text may follow the explicit markup start and will -be processed as a comment element. No further processing is done on -the comment block text; a comment contains a single "text blob". -Depending on the output formatter, comments may be removed from the -processed output. The only restriction on comments is that they not -use the same syntax as any of the other explicit markup constructs: -substitution definitions, directives, footnotes, citations, or -hyperlink targets. To ensure that none of the other explicit markup -constructs is recognized, leave the ".." on a line by itself:: - - .. This is a comment - .. - _so: is this! - .. - [and] this! - .. - this:: too! - .. - |even| this:: ! - -A explicit markup start followed by a blank line and nothing else -(apart from whitespace) is an "empty comment". It serves to terminate -a preceding construct, and does **not** consume any indented text -following. To have a block quote follow a list or any indented -construct, insert an unindented empty comment in-between. - -Syntax diagram:: - - +-------+----------------------+ - | ".. " | comment | - +-------+ block | - | | - +----------------------+ - - -Implicit Hyperlink Targets -========================== - -Implicit hyperlink targets are generated by section titles, footnotes, -and citations, and may also be generated by extension constructs. -Implicit hyperlink targets otherwise behave identically to explicit -`hyperlink targets`_. - -Problems of ambiguity due to conflicting duplicate implicit and -explicit reference names are avoided by following this procedure: - -1. `Explicit hyperlink targets`_ override any implicit targets having - the same reference name. The implicit hyperlink targets are - removed, and level-1 (info) system messages are inserted. - -2. Duplicate implicit hyperlink targets are removed, and level-1 - (info) system messages inserted. For example, if two or more - sections have the same title (such as "Introduction" subsections of - a rigidly-structured document), there will be duplicate implicit - hyperlink targets. - -3. Duplicate explicit hyperlink targets are removed, and level-2 - (warning) system messages are inserted. Exception: duplicate - `external hyperlink targets`_ (identical hyperlink names and - referenced URIs) do not conflict, and are not removed. - -System messages are inserted where target links have been removed. -See "Error Handling" in `PEP 258`_. - -The parser must return a set of *unique* hyperlink targets. The -calling software (such as the Docutils_) can warn of unresolvable -links, giving reasons for the messages. - - -Inline Markup -============= - -In reStructuredText, inline markup applies to words or phrases within -a text block. The same whitespace and punctuation that serves to -delimit words in written text is used to delimit the inline markup -syntax constructs. The text within inline markup may not begin or end -with whitespace. Arbitrary `character-level inline markup`_ is -supported although not encouraged. Inline markup cannot be nested. - -There are nine inline markup constructs. Five of the constructs use -identical start-strings and end-strings to indicate the markup: - -- emphasis_: "*" -- `strong emphasis`_: "**" -- `interpreted text`_: "`" -- `inline literals`_: "``" -- `substitution references`_: "|" - -Three constructs use different start-strings and end-strings: - -- `inline internal targets`_: "_`" and "`" -- `footnote references`_: "[" and "]_" -- `hyperlink references`_: "`" and "\`_" (phrases), or just a - trailing "_" (single words) - -`Standalone hyperlinks`_ are recognized implicitly, and use no extra -markup. - -The inline markup start-string and end-string recognition rules are as -follows. If any of the conditions are not met, the start-string or -end-string will not be recognized or processed. - -1. Inline markup start-strings must start a text block or be - immediately preceded by whitespace or one of:: - - ' " ( [ { < - / : - -2. Inline markup start-strings must be immediately followed by - non-whitespace. - -3. Inline markup end-strings must be immediately preceded by - non-whitespace. - -4. Inline markup end-strings must end a text block or be immediately - followed by whitespace or one of:: - - ' " ) ] } > - / : . , ; ! ? \ - -5. If an inline markup start-string is immediately preceded by a - single or double quote, "(", "[", "{", or "<", it must not be - immediately followed by the corresponding single or double quote, - ")", "]", "}", or ">". - -6. An inline markup end-string must be separated by at least one - character from the start-string. - -7. An unescaped backslash preceding a start-string or end-string will - disable markup recognition, except for the end-string of `inline - literals`_. See `Escaping Mechanism`_ above for details. - -For example, none of the following are recognized as containing inline -markup start-strings: - -- asterisks: * "*" '*' (*) (* [*] {*} 1*x BOM32_* -- double asterisks: ** a**b O(N**2) etc. -- backquotes: ` `` etc. -- underscores: _ __ __init__ __init__() etc. -- vertical bars: | || etc. - -It may be desirable to use inline literals for some of these anyhow, -especially if they represent code snippets. It's a judgment call. - -These cases *do* require either literal-quoting or escaping to avoid -misinterpretation:: - - *4, class_, *args, **kwargs, `TeX-quoted', *ML, *.txt - -The inline markup recognition rules were devised intentionally to -allow 90% of non-markup uses of "*", "`", "_", and "|" *without* -resorting to backslashes. For 9 of the remaining 10%, use inline -literals or literal blocks:: - - "``\*``" -> "\*" (possibly in another font or quoted) - -Only those who understand the escaping and inline markup rules should -attempt the remaining 1%. ;-) - -Inline markup delimiter characters are used for multiple constructs, -so to avoid ambiguity there must be a specific recognition order for -each character. The inline markup recognition order is as follows: - -- Asterisks: `Strong emphasis`_ ("**") is recognized before emphasis_ - ("*"). - -- Backquotes: `Inline literals`_ ("``"), `inline internal targets`_ - (leading "_`", trailing "`"), are mutually independent, and are - recognized before phrase `hyperlink references`_ (leading "`", - trailing "\`_") and `interpreted text`_ ("`"). - -- Trailing underscores: Footnote references ("[" + label + "]_") and - simple `hyperlink references`_ (name + trailing "_") are mutually - independent. - -- Vertical bars: `Substitution references`_ ("|") are independently - recognized. - -- `Standalone hyperlinks`_ are the last to be recognized. - - -Character-Level Inline Markup ------------------------------ - -It is possible to mark up individual characters within a word with -backslash escapes (see `Escaping Mechanism`_ above). Backslash -escapes can be used to allow arbitrary text to immediately follow -inline markup:: - - Python ``list``\s use square bracket syntax. - -The backslash will disappear from the processed document. The word -"list" will appear as inline literal text, and the letter "s" will -immediately follow it as normal text, with no space in-between. - -Arbitrary text may immediately precede inline markup using -backslash-escaped whitespace:: - - Possible in *re*\ ``Structured``\ *Text*, though not encouraged. - -The backslashes and spaces separating "re", "Structured", and "Text" -above will disappear from the processed document. - -.. CAUTION:: - - The use of backslash-escapes for character-level inline markup is - not encouraged. Such use is ugly and detrimental to the - unprocessed document's readability. Please use this feature - sparingly and only where absolutely necessary. - - -Emphasis --------- - -Doctree element: emphasis. - -Start-string = end-string = "*". - -Text enclosed by single asterisk characters is emphasized:: - - This is *emphasized text*. - -Emphasized text is typically displayed in italics. - - -Strong Emphasis ---------------- - -Doctree element: strong. - -Start-string = end-string = "**". - -Text enclosed by double-asterisks is emphasized strongly:: - - This is **strong text**. - -Strongly emphasized text is typically displayed in boldface. - - -Interpreted Text ----------------- - -Doctree element: depends on the explicit or implicit role and -processing. - -Start-string = end-string = "`". - -Interpreted text is text that is meant to be related, indexed, linked, -summarized, or otherwise processed, but the text itself is typically -left alone. Interpreted text is enclosed by single backquote -characters:: - - This is `interpreted text`. - -The "role" of the interpreted text determines how the text is -interpreted. The role may be inferred implicitly (as above; the -"default role" is used) or indicated explicitly, using a role marker. -A role marker consists of a colon, the role name, and another colon. -A role name is a single word consisting of alphanumerics plus internal -hyphens, underscores, and periods; no whitespace or other characters -are allowed. A role marker is either a prefix or a suffix to the -interpreted text, whichever reads better; it's up to the author:: - - :role:`interpreted text` - - `interpreted text`:role: - -Interpreted text allows extensions to the available inline descriptive -markup constructs. To emphasis_, `strong emphasis`_, `inline -literals`_, and `hyperlink references`_, we can add "title reference", -"index entry", "acronym", "class", "red", "blinking" or anything else -we want. Only pre-determined roles are recognized; unknown roles will -generate errors. A core set of standard roles is implemented in the -reference parser; see `reStructuredText Interpreted Text Roles`_ for -individual descriptions. In addition, applications may support -specialized roles. - - -Inline Literals ---------------- - -Doctree element: literal. - -Start-string = end-string = "``". - -Text enclosed by double-backquotes is treated as inline literals:: - - This text is an example of ``inline literals``. - -Inline literals may contain any characters except two adjacent -backquotes in an end-string context (according to the recognition -rules above). No markup interpretation (including backslash-escape -interpretation) is done within inline literals. - -Line breaks are *not* preserved in inline literals. Although a -reStructuredText parser will preserve runs of spaces in its output, -the final representation of the processed document is dependent on the -output formatter, thus the preservation of whitespace cannot be -guaranteed. If the preservation of line breaks and/or other -whitespace is important, `literal blocks`_ should be used. - -Inline literals are useful for short code snippets. For example:: - - The regular expression ``[+-]?(\d+(\.\d*)?|\.\d+)`` matches - floating-point numbers (without exponents). - - -Hyperlink References --------------------- - -Doctree element: reference. - -- Named hyperlink references: - - - Start-string = "" (empty string), end-string = "_". - - Start-string = "`", end-string = "\`_". (Phrase references.) - -- Anonymous hyperlink references: - - - Start-string = "" (empty string), end-string = "__". - - Start-string = "`", end-string = "\`__". (Phrase references.) - -Hyperlink references are indicated by a trailing underscore, "_", -except for `standalone hyperlinks`_ which are recognized -independently. The underscore can be thought of as a right-pointing -arrow. The trailing underscores point away from hyperlink references, -and the leading underscores point toward `hyperlink targets`_. - -Hyperlinks consist of two parts. In the text body, there is a source -link, a reference name with a trailing underscore (or two underscores -for `anonymous hyperlinks`_):: - - See the Python_ home page for info. - -A target link with a matching reference name must exist somewhere else -in the document. See `Hyperlink Targets`_ for a full description). - -`Anonymous hyperlinks`_ (which see) do not use reference names to -match references to targets, but otherwise behave similarly to named -hyperlinks. - - -Embedded URIs -````````````` - -A hyperlink reference may directly embed a target URI inline, within -angle brackets ("<...>") as follows:: - - See the `Python home page <http://www.python.org>`_ for info. - -This is exactly equivalent to:: - - See the `Python home page`_ for info. - - .. _Python home page: http://www.python.org - -The bracketed URI must be preceded by whitespace and be the last text -before the end string. With a single trailing underscore, the -reference is named and the same target URI may be referred to again. - -With two trailing underscores, the reference and target are both -anonymous, and the target cannot be referred to again. These are -"one-off" hyperlinks. For example:: - - `RFC 2396 <http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt>`__ and `RFC - 2732 <http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2732.txt>`__ together - define the syntax of URIs. - -Equivalent to:: - - `RFC 2396`__ and `RFC 2732`__ together define the syntax of URIs. - - __ http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt - __ http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2732.txt - -If reference text happens to end with angle-bracketed text that is -*not* a URI, the open-angle-bracket needs to be backslash-escaped. -For example, here is a reference to a title describing a tag:: - - See `HTML Element: \<a>`_ below. - -.. CAUTION:: - - This construct offers easy authoring and maintenance of hyperlinks - at the expense of general readability. Inline URIs, especially - long ones, inevitably interrupt the natural flow of text. For - documents meant to be read in source form, the use of independent - block-level `hyperlink targets`_ is **strongly recommended**. The - embedded URI construct is most suited to documents intended *only* - to be read in processed form. - - -Inline Internal Targets ------------------------- - -Doctree element: target. - -Start-string = "_`", end-string = "`". - -Inline internal targets are the equivalent of explicit `internal -hyperlink targets`_, but may appear within running text. The syntax -begins with an underscore and a backquote, is followed by a hyperlink -name or phrase, and ends with a backquote. Inline internal targets -may not be anonymous. - -For example, the following paragraph contains a hyperlink target named -"Norwegian Blue":: - - Oh yes, the _`Norwegian Blue`. What's, um, what's wrong with it? - -See `Implicit Hyperlink Targets`_ for the resolution of duplicate -reference names. - - -Footnote References -------------------- - -Doctree element: footnote_reference. - -Start-string = "[", end-string = "]_". - -Each footnote reference consists of a square-bracketed label followed -by a trailing underscore. Footnote labels are one of: - -- one or more digits (i.e., a number), - -- a single "#" (denoting `auto-numbered footnotes`_), - -- a "#" followed by a simple reference name (an `autonumber label`_), - or - -- a single "*" (denoting `auto-symbol footnotes`_). - -For example:: - - Please RTFM [1]_. - - .. [1] Read The Fine Manual - - -Citation References -------------------- - -Doctree element: citation_reference. - -Start-string = "[", end-string = "]_". - -Each citation reference consists of a square-bracketed label followed -by a trailing underscore. Citation labels are simple `reference -names`_ (case-insensitive single words, consisting of alphanumerics -plus internal hyphens, underscores, and periods; no whitespace). - -For example:: - - Here is a citation reference: [CIT2002]_. - -See Citations_ for the citation itself. - - -Substitution References ------------------------ - -Doctree element: substitution_reference, reference. - -Start-string = "|", end-string = "|" (optionally followed by "_" or -"__"). - -Vertical bars are used to bracket the substitution reference text. A -substitution reference may also be a hyperlink reference by appending -a "_" (named) or "__" (anonymous) suffix; the substitution text is -used for the reference text in the named case. - -The processing system replaces substitution references with the -processed contents of the corresponding `substitution definitions`_ -(which see for the definition of "correspond"). Substitution -definitions produce inline-compatible elements. - -Examples:: - - This is a simple |substitution reference|. It will be replaced by - the processing system. - - This is a combination |substitution and hyperlink reference|_. In - addition to being replaced, the replacement text or element will - refer to the "substitution and hyperlink reference" target. - - -Standalone Hyperlinks ---------------------- - -Doctree element: reference. - -Start-string = end-string = "" (empty string). - -A URI (absolute URI [#URI]_ or standalone email address) within a text -block is treated as a general external hyperlink with the URI itself -as the link's text. For example:: - - See http://www.python.org for info. - -would be marked up in HTML as:: - - See <a href="http://www.python.org">http://www.python.org</a> for - info. - -Two forms of URI are recognized: - -1. Absolute URIs. These consist of a scheme, a colon (":"), and a - scheme-specific part whose interpretation depends on the scheme. - - The scheme is the name of the protocol, such as "http", "ftp", - "mailto", or "telnet". The scheme consists of an initial letter, - followed by letters, numbers, and/or "+", "-", ".". Recognition is - limited to known schemes, per the W3C's `Index of WWW Addressing - Schemes`_. - - The scheme-specific part of the resource identifier may be either - hierarchical or opaque: - - - Hierarchical identifiers begin with one or two slashes and may - use slashes to separate hierarchical components of the path. - Examples are web pages and FTP sites:: - - http://www.python.org - - ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python - - - Opaque identifiers do not begin with slashes. Examples are - email addresses and newsgroups:: - - mailto:someone@somewhere.com - - news:comp.lang.python - - With queries, fragments, and %-escape sequences, URIs can become - quite complicated. A reStructuredText parser must be able to - recognize any absolute URI, as defined in RFC2396_ and RFC2732_. - -2. Standalone email addresses, which are treated as if they were - absolute URIs with a "mailto:" scheme. Example:: - - someone@somewhere.com - -Punctuation at the end of a URI is not considered part of the URI. - -.. [#URI] Uniform Resource Identifier. URIs are a general form of - URLs (Uniform Resource Locators). For the syntax of URIs see - RFC2396_ and RFC2732_. - - ----------------- - Error Handling ----------------- - -Doctree element: system_message, problematic. - -Markup errors are handled according to the specification in `PEP -258`_. - - -.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html -.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ -.. _The Docutils Document Tree: ../doctree.html -.. _Docutils Generic DTD: ../gpdi.dtd -.. _transforms: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docutils/transforms/ -.. _Grouch: http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/grouch/ -.. _RFC822: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt -.. _DocTitle transform: -.. _DocInfo transform: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docutils/transforms/frontmatter.py -.. _getopt.py: - http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-getopt.html -.. _GNU libc getopt_long(): - http://www.gnu.org/manual/glibc-2.2.3/html_node/libc_516.html -.. _doctest module: - http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-doctest.html -.. _Emacs table mode: http://table.sourceforge.net/ -.. _Index of WWW Addressing Schemes: - http://www.w3.org/Addressing/schemes.html -.. _World Wide Web Consortium: http://www.w3.org/ -.. _HTML Techniques for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines: - http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10-HTML-TECHS/#link-text -.. _reStructuredText Directives: directives.html -.. _reStructuredText Interpreted Text Roles: interpreted.html -.. _RFC2396: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt -.. _RFC2732: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2732.txt -.. _Zope: http://www.zope.com/ -.. _PEP 258: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/pep-0258.txt - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/roles.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/rst/roles.txt deleted file mode 100644 index a34c4a5ed..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/rst/roles.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,175 +0,0 @@ -========================================= - reStructuredText Interpreted Text Roles -========================================= -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -This document describes the interpreted text roles implemented in the -reference reStructuredText parser. - -Interpreted text uses backquotes (`) around the text. An explicit -role marker may optionally appear before or after the text, delimited -with colons. For example:: - - This is `interpreted text` using the default role. - - This is :title:`interpreted text` using an explicit role. - -A default role may be defined by applications of reStructuredText; it -is used if no explicit ``:role:`` prefix or suffix is given. The -"default default role" is `:title-reference:`_. - -See the `Interpreted Text`_ section in the `reStructuredText Markup -Specification`_ for syntax details. - -.. _Interpreted Text: ./reStructuredText.html#interpreted-text -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: ./reStructuredText.html - - -.. contents:: - - -``:emphasis:`` -============== - -:Aliases: None -:DTD Element: emphasis - -Implements emphasis. These are equivalent:: - - *text* - :emphasis:`text` - - -``:literal:`` -============== - -:Aliases: None -:DTD Element: literal - -Implements inline literal text. These are equivalent:: - - ``text`` - :literal:`text` - -Care must be taken with backslash-escapes though. These are *not* -equivalent:: - - ``text \ and \ backslashes`` - :literal:`text \ and \ backslashes` - -The backslashes in the first line are preserved (and do nothing), -whereas the backslashes in the second line escape the following -spaces. - - -``:pep-reference:`` -=================== - -:Aliases: ``:PEP:`` -:DTD Element: reference - -The ``:pep-reference:`` role is used to create an HTTP reference to a -PEP (Python Enhancement Proposal). The ``:PEP:`` alias is usually -used. For example:: - - See :PEP:`287` for more information about reStructuredText. - -This is equivalent to:: - - See `PEP 287`__ for more information about reStructuredText. - - __ http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0287.html - - -``:rfc-reference:`` -=================== - -:Aliases: ``:RFC:`` -:DTD Element: reference - -The ``:rfc-reference:`` role is used to create an HTTP reference to an -RFC (Internet Request for Comments). The ``:RFC:`` alias is usually -used. For example:: - - See :RFC:`2822` for information about email headers. - -This is equivalent to:: - - See `RFC 2822`__ for information about email headers. - - __ http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2822.html - - -``:strong:`` -============ - -:Aliases: None -:DTD Element: strong - -Implements strong emphasis. These are equivalent:: - - **text** - :strong:`text` - - -``:subscript:`` -=============== - -:Aliases: ``:sub:`` -:DTD Element: subscript - -Implements subscripts. - - -``:superscript:`` -================= - -:Aliases: ``:sup:`` -:DTD Element: superscript - -Implements superscripts. - - -``:title-reference:`` -===================== - -:Aliases: ``:title:``, ``:t:``. -:DTD Element: title_reference - -The ``:title-reference:`` role is used to describe the titles of -books, periodicals, and other materials. It is the equivalent of the -HTML "cite" element, and it is expected that HTML writers will -typically render "title_reference" elements using "cite". - -Since title references are typically rendered with italics, they are -often marked up using ``*emphasis*``, which is misleading and vague. -The "title_reference" element provides accurate and unambiguous -descriptive markup. - -Let's assume ``:title-reference:`` is the default interpreted text -role (see below) for this example:: - - `Design Patterns` [GoF95]_ is an excellent read. - -The following document fragment (pseudo-XML_) will result from -processing:: - - <paragraph> - <title_reference> - Design Patterns - - <citation_reference refname="gof95"> - GoF95 - is an excellent read. - -``:title-reference:`` is the default interpreted text role in the -standard reStructuredText parser. This means that no explicit role is -required. Applications of reStructuredText may designate a different -default role, in which case the explicit role must be used. - - -.. _pseudo-XML: ../doctree.html#pseudo-xml diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/soextblx.dtd b/docutils/docs/ref/soextblx.dtd deleted file mode 100644 index 56ba311ba..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/soextblx.dtd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,312 +0,0 @@ -<!-- -=========================================================================== - OASIS XML Exchange Table Model Declaration Module -=========================================================================== -:Date: 1999-03-15 ---> - -<!-- This set of declarations defines the XML version of the Exchange - Table Model as of the date shown in the Formal Public Identifier - (FPI) for this entity. - - This set of declarations may be referred to using a public external - entity declaration and reference as shown in the following three - lines: - - <!ENTITY % calstblx - PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD XML Exchange Table Model 19990315//EN"> - %calstblx; - - If various parameter entities used within this set of declarations - are to be given non-default values, the appropriate declarations - should be given before calling in this package (i.e., before the - "%calstblx;" reference). ---> - -<!-- The motivation for this XML version of the Exchange Table Model - is simply to create an XML version of the SGML Exchange Table - Model. By design, no effort has been made to "improve" the model. - - This XML version incorporates the logical bare minimum changes - necessary to make the Exchange Table Model a valid XML DTD. ---> - -<!-- The XML version of the Exchange Table Model differs from - the SGML version in the following ways: - - The following parameter entities have been removed: - - - tbl.table.excep, tbl.hdft.excep, tbl.row.excep, tbl.entry.excep - There are no exceptions in XML. The following normative statement - is made in lieu of exceptions: the exchange table model explicitly - forbids a table from occurring within another table. If the - content model of an entry includes a table element, then this - cannot be enforced by the DTD, but it is a deviation from the - exchange table model to include a table within a table. - - - tbl.hdft.name, tbl.hdft.mdl, tbl.hdft.excep, tbl.hdft.att - The motivation for these elements was to change the table - header/footer elements. Since XML does not allow element declarations - to contain name groups, and the exchange table model does not - allow a table to contain footers, the continued presence of these - attributes seems unnecessary. - - The following parameter entity has been added: - - - tbl.thead.att - This entity parameterizes the attributes on thead. It replaces - the tbl.hdft.att parameter entity. - - Other miscellaneous changes: - - - Tag ommission indicators have been removed - - Comments have been removed from declarations - - NUMBER attributes have been changed to NMTOKEN - - NUTOKEN attributes have been to changed to NMTOKEN - - Removed the grouping characters around the content model - parameter entry for the 'entry' element. This is necessary - so that an entry can contain #PCDATA and be defined as an - optional, repeatable OR group beginning with #PCDATA. ---> - -<!-- This entity includes a set of element and attribute declarations - that partially defines the Exchange table model. However, the model - is not well-defined without the accompanying natural language - description of the semantics (meanings) of these various elements, - attributes, and attribute values. The semantic writeup, also available - from SGML Open, should be used in conjunction with this entity. ---> - -<!-- In order to use the Exchange table model, various parameter entity - declarations are required. A brief description is as follows: - - ENTITY NAME WHERE USED WHAT IT IS - - %yesorno In ATTLIST of: An attribute declared value - almost all elements for a "boolean" attribute - - %paracon In content model of: The "text" (logical content) - <entry> of the model group for <entry> - - %titles In content model of: The "title" part of the model - table element group for the table element - - %tbl.table.name In declaration of: The name of the "table" - table element element - - %tbl.table-titles.mdl In content model of: The model group for the title - table elements part of the content model for - table element - - %tbl.table.mdl In content model of: The model group for the content - table elements model for table element, - often (and by default) defined - in terms of %tbl.table-titles.mdl - and tgroup - - %tbl.table.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - table element table element - - %bodyatt In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - table element table element (for backward - compatibility with the SGML - model) - - %tbl.tgroup.mdl In content model of: The model group for the content - <tgroup> model for <tgroup> - - %tbl.tgroup.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the -4 <tgroup> <tgroup> element - - %tbl.thead.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - <thead> <thead> element - - %tbl.tbody.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - <tbody> <tbody> element - - %tbl.colspec.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - <colspec> <colspec> element - - %tbl.row.mdl In content model of: The model group for the content - <row> model for <row> - - %tbl.row.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - <row> <row> element - - %tbl.entry.mdl In content model of: The model group for the content - <entry> model for <entry> - - %tbl.entry.att In ATTLIST of: Additional attributes on the - <entry> <entry> element - - This set of declarations will use the default definitions shown below - for any of these parameter entities that are not declared before this - set of declarations is referenced. ---> - -<!-- These definitions are not directly related to the table model, but are - used in the default CALS table model and may be defined elsewhere (and - prior to the inclusion of this table module) in the referencing DTD. --> - -<!ENTITY % yesorno 'NMTOKEN'> <!-- no if zero(s), yes if any other value --> -<!ENTITY % titles 'title?'> -<!ENTITY % paracon '#PCDATA'> <!-- default for use in entry content --> - -<!-- -The parameter entities as defined below change and simplify the CALS table -model as published (as part of the Example DTD) in MIL-HDBK-28001. The -resulting simplified DTD has support from the SGML Open vendors and is -therefore more interoperable among different systems. - -These following declarations provide the Exchange default definitions -for these entities. However, these entities can be redefined (by giving -the appropriate parameter entity declaration(s) prior to the reference -to this Table Model declaration set entity) to fit the needs of the -current application. - -Note, however, that changes may have significant effect on the ability to -interchange table information. These changes may manifest themselves -in useability, presentation, and possible structure information degradation. ---> - -<!ENTITY % tbl.table.name "table"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.table-titles.mdl "%titles;,"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.table-main.mdl "tgroup+"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.table.mdl "%tbl.table-titles.mdl; %tbl.table-main.mdl;"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.table.att " - pgwide %yesorno; #IMPLIED "> -<!ENTITY % bodyatt ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.tgroup.mdl "colspec*,thead?,tbody"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.tgroup.att ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.thead.att ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.tbody.att ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.colspec.att ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.row.mdl "entry+"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.row.att ""> -<!ENTITY % tbl.entry.mdl "(%paracon;)*"> -<!ENTITY % tbl.entry.att ""> - -<!-- ===== Element and attribute declarations follow. ===== --> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.table.name "table" - ENTITY % tbl.table-titles.mdl "%titles;," - ENTITY % tbl.table.mdl "%tbl.table-titles; tgroup+" - ENTITY % tbl.table.att " - pgwide %yesorno; #IMPLIED " ---> - -<!ELEMENT %tbl.table.name; (%tbl.table.mdl;)> - -<!ATTLIST %tbl.table.name; - frame (top|bottom|topbot|all|sides|none) #IMPLIED - colsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - rowsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - %tbl.table.att; - %bodyatt; -> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.tgroup.mdl "colspec*,thead?,tbody" - ENTITY % tbl.tgroup.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT tgroup (%tbl.tgroup.mdl;) > - -<!ATTLIST tgroup - cols NMTOKEN #REQUIRED - colsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - rowsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - align (left|right|center|justify|char) #IMPLIED - %tbl.tgroup.att; -> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.colspec.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT colspec EMPTY > - -<!ATTLIST colspec - colnum NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - colname NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - colwidth CDATA #IMPLIED - colsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - rowsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - align (left|right|center|justify|char) #IMPLIED - char CDATA #IMPLIED - charoff NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - %tbl.colspec.att; -> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.thead.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT thead (row+)> - -<!ATTLIST thead - valign (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED - %tbl.thead.att; -> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.tbody.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT tbody (row+)> - -<!ATTLIST tbody - valign (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED - %tbl.tbody.att; -> - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % tbl.row.mdl "entry+" - ENTITY % tbl.row.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT row (%tbl.row.mdl;)> - -<!ATTLIST row - rowsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - valign (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED - %tbl.row.att; -> - - -<!-- - Default declarations previously defined in this entity and - referenced below include: - ENTITY % paracon "#PCDATA" - ENTITY % tbl.entry.mdl "(%paracon;)*" - ENTITY % tbl.entry.att "" ---> - -<!ELEMENT entry %tbl.entry.mdl;> - -<!ATTLIST entry - colname NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - namest NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - nameend NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - morerows NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - colsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - rowsep %yesorno; #IMPLIED - align (left|right|center|justify|char) #IMPLIED - char CDATA #IMPLIED - charoff NMTOKEN #IMPLIED - valign (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED - %tbl.entry.att; -> diff --git a/docutils/docs/ref/transforms.txt b/docutils/docs/ref/transforms.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 4c5fe135a..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/ref/transforms.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,103 +0,0 @@ -===================== - Docutils Transforms -===================== - -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - - -.. contents:: - - -For background about transforms and the Transformer object, see `PEP -258`_. - -.. _PEP 258: pep-0258.html#transformer - - -Transforms Listed in Priority Order -=================================== - -============================== ============================ ======== -Transform: module.Class Added By Priority -============================== ============================ ======== -misc.class "class" (d/p) 210 - -references.Substitutions standalone (r), pep (r) 220 - -frontmatter.DocTitle standalone (r) 320 - -frontmatter.DocInfo standalone (r) 340 - -peps.Headers pep (r) 360 - -peps.Contents pep (r) 380 - -references.ChainedTargets standalone (r), pep (r) 420 - -references.AnonymousHyperlinks standalone (r), pep (r) 440 - -references.IndirectHyperlinks standalone (r), pep (r) 460 - -peps.TargetNotes pep (r) 520 - -references.TargetNotes peps.TargetNotes (t/p) 0 - -misc.CallBack peps.TargetNotes (t/p) 1 - -references.TargetNotes "target-notes" (d/p) 540 - -references.Footnotes standalone (r), pep (r) 620 - -references.ExternalTargets standalone (r), pep (r) 640 - -references.InternalTargets standalone (r), pep (r) 660 - -parts.SectNum "sectnum" (d/p) 710 - -parts.Contents "contents" (d/p), 720 - peps.Contents (t/p) - -peps.PEPZero pep.Headers (t/p) 760 - -components.Filter "meta" (d/p) 780 - -universal.Decorations Transformer 820 - -universal.FinalChecks Transformer 840 - -universal.Messages Transformer 860 - -universal.TestMessages DocutilsTestSupport 890 - -misc.CallBack n/a 990 -============================== ============================ ======== - -Key: - -* (r): Reader -* (d): Directive -* (t): Transform -* (/p): Via a "pending" node - - -Transform Priority Range Categories -=================================== - -==== ==== ================================================ - Priority ----------- ------------------------------------------------ -From To Category -==== ==== ================================================ - 0 99 immediate execution (added by another transform) - 100 199 very early (non-standard) - 200 299 very early - 300 399 early - 400 699 main - 700 799 late - 800 899 very late - 900 999 very late (non-standard) -==== ==== ================================================ diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/latex.txt b/docutils/docs/user/latex.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 1b3d0b53b..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/latex.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,263 +0,0 @@ -======================= - Docutils LaTex Writer -======================= - -:Author: Engelbert Gruber -:Contact: grubert@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. contents:: - - -Introduction -============ - -Producing latex code from reST input could be done in at least two ways: - -a. Transform the internal markup into corresponding latex markup e.g. - a section title would be written as ```\section{this section ...}``. -b. Using latex as a typesetting system to produce desired paperwork - without caring about loosing document structure information. - -The former might be preferable, but limits to latexs capabilities, so -in reality it is a mix. - - -Options -======= - -Configuration can be done in two ways (again): - -1. Options to the docutils tool: e.g. language selection. -2. Options to latex via the stylesheet file. - -The generated latex documents should be kept processable by a standard -latex installation (if such a thing exists), therefore the document -contains default settings. To allow *overwriting defaults* the stylesheet -is included at last. - -Options on the Commandline --------------------------- - -===================== ================================================ -Setting/Config Entry Description -===================== ================================================ ---use-latex-toc To get pagenumbers in the table of contents the - table of contents must be generated by latex. - Usually latex must be run twice to get numbers - correct. ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---hyperlink-color Color of any hyperlinks embedded in text - (default: "blue", "0" to disable). ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---documentclass Specify latex documentclass, *but* beaware that - books have chapters articles not. - (default: "article"). ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---stylesheet Specify a stylesheet file. The file will be - ``input`` by latex in the document header. - If this is set to "" disables generation of - input latex command. - (default: "style.tex"). ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---footnote-references Format for footnote references: one of - "superscript" or "brackets". - Default is "brackets". ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ ---attribution Format for block quote attributions: one of - "dash" (em-dash prefix), "parentheses"/"parens", - or "none". - - Default: "dash". Options: ``--attribution``. -===================== ================================================ - - -Options in the Stylesheet -------------------------- - -===================== ================================================ -Setting/Config Entry Description -===================== ================================================ -papersize Default: a4paper. Paper geometry can be changed - using ``\geometry{xxx}`` entries. - - Some possibilities: - - * a4paper, b3paper, letterpaper, executivepaper, - legalpaper - * landscape, portrait, twoside. - - and a ton of other option setting margins. - - An example:: - - \geometry{a5paper,landscape} ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ -paragraph indent By default latex indents the forst line in a - paragraph. The following lines set indentation - to zero but add a vertical space between - paragraphs.:: - - \setlength{\parindent}{0pt} - \setlength{\parskip}{6pt plus 2pt minus 1pt} ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ -admonitionwidth The width for admonitions. - Default: 0.9*textwidth, this can be changed - e.g.:: - - \setlength{\admonitionwidth}{0.7\textwidth} ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ -docinfowidth The width for the docinfo table. - Default: 0.9*textwidth, changed to e.g.:: - - \setlength{\docinfowidth}{0.7\textwidth} ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ -rubric style The header contains the definition of a new - LaTeX command rubric. Inserting:: - - \renewcommand{\rubric}[1]{\subsection*{ - ~\hfill {\color{red} #1} \hfill ~}} - - sets rubric to subsection style in red. - - Default: subsection style italic. ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------ -font selection see below -===================== ================================================ - -Missing options ---------------- - -* Selection of latex fontsize. -* Assumed reST linelength for table width setting. - -Font selection --------------- - -When generating pdf-files from LaTeX, use the pdflatex command, the files -are a lot smaller if postscript fonts are used. To do so put -``\usepackage{times}`` into the styleshee - -It is said that the typewriter font in computer modern font, the default -LaTeX font package, is too heavy compared to the others. There is a package -or some commands too fix this, which i currently cannot find. - -Some people diagnose a similar unbalance for the postscript fonts, the -package to fix this is ```\usepackage{pslatex}``. - - -Commands directly to LaTeX -========================== - -By means of the reST-raw directive one can give commands directly to -LaTeX, e.g. forcing a page break:: - - .. raw:: latex - - \newpage - - -Or setting formulas in LaTeX:: - - .. raw:: latex - - $$x^3 + 3x^2a + 3xa^2 + a^3,$$ - - -Or making a colorbox: If someone wants to get a red background for a textblock, -she/he can put \definecolor{bg}{rgb}{.9,0,0} into style.tex and in -reStructuredText do something like this:: - - |begincolorbox| - Nobody expects the spanish inquisition. - |endcolorbox| - - .. |begincolorbox| raw:: latex - - \\begin{center} - \\colorbox{bg}{ - \\parbox{0.985\\linewidth}{ - - .. |endcolorbox| raw:: latex - - }} - \\end{center} - - -Problems -======== - -Open to be fixed or open to discussion. - -Tables ------- - -:Tablewidth: reST-documents line length is assumed to be 80 characters. The - tablewidth is set relative to this value. If someone produces - documents with line length of 132 this will fail. - - Table width is tried to fit in page even if it is wider than - the assumed linewidth, still assumed linewidth is a hook. - -* In tools.txt the option tables right column, there should be some more spacing - between the description and the next paragraph "Default:". - - Paragraph separation in tables is hairy. - see http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=struttab - - - The strut solution did not work. - - setting extrarowheight added ad top of row not between paragraphs in - a cell. ALTHOUGH i set it to 2pt because, text is too close to the topline. - - baselineskip/stretch does not help. -* Should there be two hlines after table head and on table end ? -* Table: multicol cells are always {l}. -* Table heads and footer for longtable (firstpage lastpage ..). -* Longtable does not work with multirow -* Tabularx says "do not use any multicolmn which spans any X column. - maybe use ltxtable instead of tabularx (Longtable combined with tabularx). - but ltxtable disables longtable's multicolumn. -* Table cells with multirow and multicolumn -* Tables have borders, and the border is missing in empty cells. - - -Miscellaneous -------------- - -* recongize LaTeX (or even latex) and replace by ```\LaTeX``. -* Support embed-stylesheet. -* the ^-sign is problematic: using mathmode wedge is usually the wrong font. -* Sidebar handling. -* Maybe add end of line after term in definition list. see - http://roundup.sf.net/doc-0.5/features.pdf -* Pdfbookmark level 4 (and greater) does not work (might be settable but OTOH). -* center subsection{Abstract} gives a latex error here. - ``! LaTeX Error: Something's wrong--perhaps a missing \item.`` - Committed a HACK: centering by hfill. -* Document errors are also too silent. -* Use optionlist for docinfo, the table does only work for single page. -* Consider peter funk's hooks for TeXpert: - - * Define his own document preamble (including the choice to - choose his own documentclass. That would make the ``--documentclass`` - option superfluous). I suggest to call this option ``--preamble`` - * Use two additional hooks to put additional stuff just behind the - ``\begin{document}`` and just before the ``\end{document}`` macros. - Typical uses would be ``\tableofcontents``, ``\listoffigures`` and - ``\appendix``, ``\makeindex``, ``\makeglossary`` and some such - for larger documents. - -* Hyphens: co-developers should be co--developers ? -* The indentional problematic error in test.txt is not referring anywhere. -* Footnotes are not all on the same page (as in tools/test.txt) and do not link back - and forth. -* No link to system errors. -* Hyperlinks are not hyphenated this leads to bad spacing. see tools/test.txt - 2.14 directives directives -* Meta keywords into pdf ? -* Pagestyle headings does not work, when sections are starred. -* For additional docinfo items: the field_body is inserted as text, i.e. no - markup is done. -* Multiple author entries in docinfo (same thing as in html). - diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/ball1.gif b/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/ball1.gif Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index 3e14441d9..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/ball1.gif +++ /dev/null diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/biohazard.png b/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/biohazard.png Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index ae4629d8b..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/biohazard.png +++ /dev/null diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/title.png b/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/title.png Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index cc6218efe..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/rst/images/title.png +++ /dev/null diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickref.html b/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickref.html deleted file mode 100644 index b60cbf1b0..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickref.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1243 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN"> -<html> - <head> - <title>Quick reStructuredText</title> - - <style type="text/css"><!-- - a.backref { text-decoration: none ; color: black } - --></style> - - </head> - - <body> - <h1>Quick <i>re</i><font size="+4"><tt>Structured</tt></font><i>Text</i></h1> - - <!-- Caveat: if you're reading the HTML for the examples, --> - <!-- beware that it was hand-generated, not by Docutils/ReST. --> - - <p align="right"><em><a href="http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickref.html" - >http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickref.html</a></em> - <br align="right"><em>Being a cheat-sheet for reStructuredText</em> - <br align="right"><em>Updated 2003-06-10</em> - - <blockquote> - <p>Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - </blockquote> - - - <p>The full details of the markup may be found on the - <a href="http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html">reStructuredText</a> - page. This document is just intended as a reminder. - - <p>Links that look like "(<a href="#details">details</a>)" point - into the HTML version of the full <a - href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html">reStructuredText - specification</a> document. These are relative links; if they - don't work, please use the <a - href="http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickref.html" - >master "Quick reStructuredText"</a> document. - - <h2><a name="contents">Contents</a></h2> - - <ul> - <li><a href="#inline-markup">Inline Markup</a></li> - <li><a href="#escaping">Escaping with Backslashes</a></li> - <li><a href="#section-structure">Section Structure</a></li> - <li><a href="#paragraphs">Paragraphs</a></li> - <li><a href="#bullet-lists">Bullet Lists</a></li> - <li><a href="#enumerated-lists">Enumerated Lists</a></li> - <li><a href="#definition-lists">Definition Lists</a></li> - <li><a href="#field-lists">Field Lists</a></li> - <li><a href="#option-lists">Option Lists</a></li> - <li><a href="#literal-blocks">Literal Blocks</a></li> - <li><a href="#block-quotes">Block Quotes</a></li> - <li><a href="#doctest-blocks">Doctest Blocks</a></li> - <li><a href="#tables">Tables</a></li> - <li><a href="#transitions">Transitions</a></li> - <li><a href="#explicit-markup">Explicit Markup</a> - <ul> - <li><a href="#footnotes">Footnotes</a></li> - <li><a href="#citations">Citations</a></li> - <li><a href="#hyperlink-targets">Hyperlink Targets</a> - <ul> - <li><a href="#external-hyperlink-targets">External Hyperlink Targets</a></li> - <li><a href="#internal-hyperlink-targets">Internal Hyperlink Targets</a></li> - <li><a href="#indirect-hyperlink-targets">Indirect Hyperlink Targets</a></li> - <li><a href="#implicit-hyperlink-targets">Implicit Hyperlink Targets</a></li> - </ul></li> - <li><a href="#directives">Directives</a></li> - <li><a href="#substitution-references-and-definitions">Substitution References and Definitions</a></li> - <li><a href="#comments">Comments</a></li> - </ul></li> - <li><a href="#getting-help">Getting Help</a></li> - </ul> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="inline-markup" class="backref" - >Inline Markup</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#inline-markup">details</a>) - - <p>Inline markup allows words and phrases within text to have - character styles (like italics and boldface) and functionality - (like hyperlinks). - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th>Plain text - <th>Typical result - <th>Notes - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>*emphasis*</samp> - <td><em>emphasis</em> - <td>Normally rendered as italics. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>**strong emphasis**</samp> - <td><strong>strong emphasis</strong> - <td>Normally rendered as boldface. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>`interpreted text`</samp> - <td>(see note at right) - <td>The rendering and <em>meaning</em> of interpreted text is - domain- or application-dependent. It can be used for things - like index entries or explicit descriptive markup (like program - identifiers). - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>``inline literal``</samp> - <td><code>inline literal</code> - <td>Normally rendered as monospaced text. Spaces should be - preserved, but line breaks will not be. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>reference_</samp> - <td><a href="#hyperlink-targets">reference</a> - <td>A simple, one-word hyperlink reference. See <a - href="#hyperlinks" >Hyperlinks</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>`phrase reference`_</samp> - <td><a href="#hyperlink-targets">phrase reference</a> - <td>A hyperlink reference with spaces or punctuation needs to be - quoted with backquotes. See <a - href="#hyperlink-targets">Hyperlinks</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>anonymous__</samp> - <td><a href="#hyperlink-targets">anonymous</a> - <td>With two underscores instead of one, both simple and phrase - references may be anonymous (the reference text is not repeated - at the target). See <a - href="#hyperlink-targets">Hyperlinks</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>_`inline internal target`</samp> - <td><a name="inline-internal-target">inline internal target</a> - <td>A crossreference target within text. - See <a href="#hyperlink-targets">Hyperlinks</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>|substitution reference|</samp> - <td>(see note at right) - <td>The result is substituted in from the <a - href="#substitution-references-and-definitions">substitution - definition</a>. It could be text, an image, a hyperlink, or a - combination of these and others. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>footnote reference [1]_</samp> - <td>footnote reference <sup><a href="#footnotes">1</a></sup> - <td>See <a href="#footnotes">Footnotes</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>citation reference [CIT2002]_</samp> - <td>citation reference <a href="#citations">[CIT2002]</a> - <td>See <a href="#citations">Citations</a>. - - <tr valign="top"> - <td nowrap><samp>http://docutils.sf.net/</samp> - <td><a href="http://docutils.sf.net/">http://docutils.sf.net/</a> - <td>A standalone hyperlink. - - </table> - - <p>Asterisk, backquote, vertical bar, and underscore are inline - delimiter characters. Asterisk, backquote, and vertical bar act - like quote marks; matching characters surround the marked-up word - or phrase, whitespace or other quoting is required outside them, - and there can't be whitespace just inside them. If you want to use - inline delimiter characters literally, <a href="#escaping">escape - (with backslash)</a> or quote them (with double backquotes; i.e. - use inline literals). - - <p>In detail, the reStructuredText specification says that in - inline markup, the following rules apply to start-strings and - end-strings (inline markup delimiters): - - <ol> - <li>The start-string must start a text block or be - immediately preceded by whitespace or any of - <samp>' " ( [ {</samp> or <samp><</samp>. - <li>The start-string must be immediately followed by non-whitespace. - <li>The end-string must be immediately preceded by non-whitespace. - <li>The end-string must end a text block (end of document or - followed by a blank line) or be immediately followed by whitespace - or any of <samp>' " . , : ; ! ? - ) ] } / \</samp> - or <samp>></samp>. - <li>If a start-string is immediately preceded by one of - <samp>' " ( [ {</samp> or <samp><</samp>, it must not be - immediately followed by the corresponding character from - <samp>' " ) ] }</samp> or <samp>></samp>. - <li>An end-string must be separated by at least one - character from the start-string. - <li>An <a href="#escaping">unescaped</a> backslash preceding a - start-string or end-string will disable markup recognition, except - for the end-string of inline literals. - </ol> - - <p>Also remember that inline markup may not be nested (well, - except that inline literals can contain any of the other inline - markup delimiter characters, but that doesn't count because - nothing is processed). - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="escaping" class="backref" - >Escaping with Backslashes</a></h2> - - <p>(<a - href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#backslashes">details</a>) - - <p>reStructuredText uses backslashes ("\") to override the special - meaning given to markup characters and get the literal characters - themselves. To get a literal backslash, use an escaped backslash - ("\\"). For example: - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Raw reStructuredText - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"><td> - <samp>*escape* ``with`` "\"</samp> - <td><em>escape</em> <samp>with</samp> "" - <tr valign="top"><td> - <samp>\*escape* \``with`` "\\"</samp> - <td>*escape* ``with`` "\" - </table> - - <p>In Python strings it will, of course, be necessary - to escape any backslash characters so that they actually - <em>reach</em> reStructuredText. - The simplest way to do this is to use raw strings: - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Python string - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"><td> - <samp>r"""\*escape* \`with` "\\""""</samp> - <td>*escape* `with` "\" - <tr valign="top"><td> - <samp> """\\*escape* \\`with` "\\\\""""</samp> - <td>*escape* `with` "\" - <tr valign="top"><td> - <samp> """\*escape* \`with` "\\""""</samp> - <td><em>escape</em> with "" - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="section-structure" class="backref" - >Section Structure</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#sections">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>=====</samp> -<br><samp>Title</samp> -<br><samp>=====</samp> -<br><samp>Subtitle</samp> -<br><samp>--------</samp> -<br><samp>Titles are underlined (or over-</samp> -<br><samp>and underlined) with a printing</samp> -<br><samp>nonalphanumeric 7-bit ASCII</samp> -<br><samp>character. Recommended choices</samp> -<br><samp>are "``= - ` : ' " ~ ^ _ * + # < >``".</samp> -<br><samp>The underline/overline must be at</samp> -<br><samp>least as long as the title text.</samp> - - <td> - <font size="+2"><strong>Title</strong></font> - <p><font size="+1"><strong>Subtitle</strong></font> - <p>Titles are underlined (or over- - and underlined) with a printing - nonalphanumeric 7-bit ASCII - character. Recommended choices - are "<samp>= - ` : ' " ~ ^ _ * + # < ></samp>". - The underline/overline must be at - least as long as the title text. - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="paragraphs" class="backref" - >Paragraphs</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#paragraphs">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<p><samp>This is a paragraph.</samp> - -<p><samp>Paragraphs line up at their left</samp> -<br><samp>edges, and are normally separated</samp> -<br><samp>by blank lines.</samp> - - <td> - <p>This is a paragraph. - - <p>Paragraphs line up at their left edges, and are normally - separated by blank lines. - - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="bullet-lists" class="backref" - >Bullet Lists</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#bullet-lists">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>Bullet lists:</samp> - -<p><samp>- This is item 1</samp> -<br><samp>- This is item 2</samp> - -<p><samp>- Bullets are "-", "*" or "+".</samp> -<br><samp> Continuing text must be aligned</samp> -<br><samp> after the bullet and whitespace.</samp> - -<p><samp>Note that a blank line is required</samp> -<br><samp>before the first item and after the</samp> -<br><samp>last, but is optional between items.</samp> - <td>Bullet lists: - <ul> - <li>This is item 1 - <li>This is item 2 - <li>Bullets are "-", "*" or "+". - Continuing text must be aligned - after the bullet and whitespace. - </ul> - <p>Note that a blank line is required before the first - item and after the last, but is optional between items. - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="enumerated-lists" class="backref" - >Enumerated Lists</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#enumerated-lists">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>Enumerated lists:</samp> - -<p><samp>3. This is the first item</samp> -<br><samp>4. This is the second item</samp> -<br><samp>5. Enumerators are arabic numbers,</samp> -<br><samp> single letters, or roman numerals</samp> -<br><samp>6. List items should be sequentially</samp> -<br><samp> numbered, but need not start at 1</samp> -<br><samp> (although not all formatters will</samp> -<br><samp> honour the first index).</samp> - <td>Enumerated lists: - <ol type="1"> - <li value="3">This is the first item - <li>This is the second item - <li>Enumerators are arabic numbers, single letters, - or roman numerals - <li>List items should be sequentially numbered, - but need not start at 1 (although not all - formatters will honour the first index). - </ol> - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="definition-lists" class="backref" - >Definition Lists</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#definition-lists">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>Definition lists:</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>what</samp> -<br><samp> Definition lists associate a term with</samp> -<br><samp> a definition.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>how</samp> -<br><samp> The term is a one-line phrase, and the</samp> -<br><samp> definition is one or more paragraphs or</samp> -<br><samp> body elements, indented relative to the</samp> -<br><samp> term. Blank lines are not allowed</samp> -<br><samp> between term and definition.</samp> - <td>Definition lists: - <dl> - <dt><strong>what</strong> - <dd>Definition lists associate a term with - a definition. - - <dt><strong>how</strong> - <dd>The term is a one-line phrase, and the - definition is one or more paragraphs or - body elements, indented relative to the - term. Blank lines are not allowed - between term and definition. - </dl> - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="field-lists" class="backref" - >Field Lists</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#field-lists">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>:Authors:</samp> -<br><samp> Tony J. (Tibs) Ibbs,</samp> -<br><samp> David Goodger</samp> - -<p><samp> (and sundry other good-natured folks)</samp> - -<p><samp>:Version: 1.0 of 2001/08/08</samp> -<br><samp>:Dedication: To my father.</samp> - <td> - <table> - <tr valign="top"> - <td><strong>Authors:</strong> - <td>Tony J. (Tibs) Ibbs, - David Goodger - <tr><td><td>(and sundry other good-natured folks) - <tr><td><strong>Version:</strong><td>1.0 of 2001/08/08 - <tr><td><strong>Dedication:</strong><td>To my father. - </table> - </table> - - <p>Field lists are used as part of an extension syntax, such as - options for <a href="#directives">directives</a>, or database-like - records meant for further processing. Field lists may also be - used as generic two-column table constructs in documents. - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="option-lists" class="backref" - >Option Lists</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#option-lists">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <p><samp> --a command-line option "a" -<br>-b file options can have arguments -<br> and long descriptions -<br>--long options can be long also -<br>--input=file long options can also have -<br> arguments -<br>/V DOS/VMS-style options too -</samp> - - <td> - <table border="0" width="100%"> - <tbody valign="top"> - <tr> - <td width="30%"><p><samp>-a</samp> - <td><p>command-line option "a" - <tr> - <td><p><samp>-b <i>file</i></samp> - <td><p>options can have arguments and long descriptions - <tr> - <td><p><samp>--long</samp> - <td><p>options can be long also - <tr> - <td><p><samp>--input=<i>file</i></samp> - <td><p>long options can also have arguments - <tr> - <td><p><samp>/V</samp> - <td><p>DOS/VMS-style options too - </table> - </table> - - <p>There must be at least two spaces between the option and the - description. - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="literal-blocks" class="backref" - >Literal Blocks</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#literal-blocks">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>A paragraph containing only two colons</samp> -<br><samp>indicates that the following indented</samp> -<br><samp>text is a literal block.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>::</samp> -<br> -<br><samp> Whitespace, newlines, blank lines, and</samp> -<br><samp> all kinds of markup (like *this* or</samp> -<br><samp> \this) is preserved by literal blocks.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp> The paragraph containing only '::'</samp> -<br><samp> will be omitted from the result.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>The ``::`` may be tacked onto the very</samp> -<br><samp>end of any paragraph. The ``::`` will be</samp> -<br><samp>omitted if it is preceded by whitespace.</samp> -<br><samp>The ``::`` will be converted to a single</samp> -<br><samp>colon if preceded by text, like this::</samp> -<br> -<br><samp> It's very convenient to use this form.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>Literal blocks end when text returns to</samp> -<br><samp>the preceding paragraph's indentation.</samp> -<br><samp>This means that something like::</samp> -<br> -<br><samp> We start here</samp> -<br><samp> and continue here</samp> -<br><samp> and end here.</samp> -<br> -<br><samp>is possible.</samp> - - <td> - <p>A paragraph containing only two colons -indicates that the following indented -text is a literal block. - - <pre> - Whitespace, newlines, blank lines, and - all kinds of markup (like *this* or - \this) is preserved by literal blocks. - - The paragraph containing only '::' - will be omitted from the result.</pre> - - <p>The <samp>::</samp> may be tacked onto the very -end of any paragraph. The <samp>::</samp> will be -omitted if it is preceded by whitespace. -The <samp>::</samp> will be converted to a single -colon if preceded by text, like this: - - <pre> - It's very convenient to use this form.</pre> - - <p>Literal blocks end when text returns to -the preceding paragraph's indentation. -This means that something like: - - <pre> - We start here - and continue here - and end here.</pre> - - <p>is possible. - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="block-quotes" class="backref" - >Block Quotes</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#block-quotes">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<samp>Block quotes are just:</samp> - -<p><samp> Indented paragraphs,</samp> - -<p><samp> and they may nest.</samp> - <td> - Block quotes are just: - <blockquote> - <p>Indented paragraphs, - <blockquote> - <p>and they may nest. - </blockquote> - </blockquote> - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="doctest-blocks" class="backref" - >Doctest Blocks</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#doctest-blocks">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <p><samp>Doctest blocks are interactive -<br>Python sessions. They begin with -<br>"``>>>``" and end with a blank line.</samp> - - <p><samp>>>> print "This is a doctest block." -<br>This is a doctest block.</samp> - - <td> - <p>Doctest blocks are interactive - Python sessions. They begin with - "<samp>>>></samp>" and end with a blank line. - - <p><samp>>>> print "This is a doctest block." -<br>This is a doctest block.</samp> - </table> - - <p>"The <a - href="http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-doctest.html">doctest</a> - module searches a module's docstrings for text that looks like an - interactive Python session, then executes all such sessions to - verify they still work exactly as shown." (From the doctest docs.) - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="tables" class="backref" - >Tables</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#tables">details</a>) - - <p>There are two syntaxes for tables in reStructuredText. Grid - tables are complete but cumbersome to create. Simple tables are - easy to create but limited (no row spans, etc.).</p> - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<p><samp>Grid table:</samp></p> - -<p><samp>+------------+------------+-----------+</samp> -<br><samp>| Header 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 |</samp> -<br><samp>+============+============+===========+</samp> -<br><samp>| body row 1 | column 2 | column 3 |</samp> -<br><samp>+------------+------------+-----------+</samp> -<br><samp>| body row 2 | Cells may span columns.|</samp> -<br><samp>+------------+------------+-----------+</samp> -<br><samp>| body row 3 | Cells may | - Cells |</samp> -<br><samp>+------------+ span rows. | - contain |</samp> -<br><samp>| body row 4 | | - blocks. |</samp> -<br><samp>+------------+------------+-----------+</samp></p> - <td> - <p>Grid table:</p> - <table border="1"> - <tr valign="top"> - <th>Header 1 - <th>Header 2 - <th>Header 3 - <tr> - <td>body row 1 - <td>column 2 - <td>column 3 - <tr> - <td>body row 2 - <td colspan="2">Cells may span columns. - <tr valign="top"> - <td>body row 3 - <td rowspan="2">Cells may<br>span rows. - <td rowspan="2"> - <ul> - <li>Cells - <li>contain - <li>blocks. - </ul> - <tr valign="top"> - <td>body row 4 - </table> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> -<p><samp>Simple table:</samp></p> - -<p><samp>===== ===== ======</samp> -<br><samp> Inputs Output</samp> -<br><samp>------------ ------</samp> -<br><samp> A B A or B</samp> -<br><samp>===== ===== ======</samp> -<br><samp>False False False</samp> -<br><samp>True False True</samp> -<br><samp>False True True</samp> -<br><samp>True True True</samp> -<br><samp>===== ===== ======</samp></p> - - <td> - <p>Simple table:</p> - <table frame="border" rules="all"> - <colgroup> - <col colwidth="31%" /> - <col colwidth="31%" /> - <col colwidth="38%" /> - </colgroup> - <thead valign="bottom"> - <tr> - <th colspan="2">Inputs - <th>Output - <tr> - <th>A - <th>B - <th>A or B - <tbody valign="top"> - <tr> - <td>False - <td>False - <td>False - <tr> - <td>True - <td>False - <td>True - <tr> - <td>False - <td>True - <td>True - <tr> - <td>True - <td>True - <td>True - </table> - - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="transitions" class="backref" - >Transitions</a></h2> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#transitions">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <p><samp> -A transition marker is a horizontal line -<br>of 4 or more repeated punctuation -<br>characters.</samp> - - <p><samp>------------</samp> - - <p><samp>A transition should not begin or end a -<br>section or document, nor should two -<br>transitions be immediately adjacent.</samp> - - <td> - <p>A transition marker is a horizontal line - of 4 or more repeated punctuation - characters.</p> - - <hr> - - <p>A transition should not begin or end a - section or document, nor should two - transitions be immediately adjacent. - </table> - - <p>Transitions are commonly seen in novels and short fiction, as a - gap spanning one or more lines, marking text divisions or - signaling changes in subject, time, point of view, or emphasis. - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="explicit-markup" class="backref" - >Explicit Markup</a></h2> - - <p>Explicit markup blocks are used for constructs which float - (footnotes), have no direct paper-document representation - (hyperlink targets, comments), or require specialized processing - (directives). They all begin with two periods and whitespace, the - "explicit markup start". - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="footnotes" class="backref" - >Footnotes</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#footnotes">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Footnote references, like [5]_.</samp> - <br><samp>Note that footnotes may get</samp> - <br><samp>rearranged, e.g., to the bottom of</samp> - <br><samp>the "page".</samp> - - <p><samp>.. [5] A numerical footnote. Note</samp> - <br><samp> there's no colon after the ``]``.</samp> - - <td> - Footnote references, like <sup><a href="#5">5</a></sup>. - Note that footnotes may get rearranged, e.g., to the bottom of - the "page". - - <p><table> - <tr><td colspan="2"><hr> - <!-- <tr><td colspan="2">Footnotes: --> - <tr><td><a name="5"><strong>[5]</strong></a><td> A numerical footnote. - Note there's no colon after the <samp>]</samp>. - </table> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Autonumbered footnotes are</samp> - <br><samp>possible, like using [#]_ and [#]_.</samp> - <p><samp>.. [#] This is the first one.</samp> - <br><samp>.. [#] This is the second one.</samp> - - <p><samp>They may be assigned 'autonumber</samp> - <br><samp>labels' - for instance, - <br>[#fourth]_ and [#third]_.</samp> - - <p><samp>.. [#third] a.k.a. third_</samp> - <p><samp>.. [#fourth] a.k.a. fourth_</samp> - <td> - Autonumbered footnotes are possible, like using <sup><a - href="#auto1">1</a></sup> and <sup><a href="#auto2">2</a></sup>. - - <p>They may be assigned 'autonumber labels' - for instance, - <sup><a href="#fourth">4</a></sup> and <sup><a - href="#third">3</a></sup>. - - <p><table> - <tr><td colspan="2"><hr> - <!-- <tr><td colspan="2">Footnotes: --> - <tr><td><a name="auto1"><strong>[1]</strong></a><td> This is the first one. - <tr><td><a name="auto2"><strong>[2]</strong></a><td> This is the second one. - <tr><td><a name="third"><strong>[3]</strong></a><td> a.k.a. <a href="#third">third</a> - <tr><td><a name="fourth"><strong>[4]</strong></a><td> a.k.a. <a href="#fourth">fourth</a> - </table> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Auto-symbol footnotes are also</samp> - <br><samp>possible, like this: [*]_ and [*]_.</samp> - <p><samp>.. [*] This is the first one.</samp> - <br><samp>.. [*] This is the second one.</samp> - - <td> - Auto-symbol footnotes are also - possible, like this: <sup><a href="#symbol1">*</a></sup> - and <sup><a href="#symbol2">†</a></sup>. - - <p><table> - <tr><td colspan="2"><hr> - <!-- <tr><td colspan="2">Footnotes: --> - <tr><td><a name="symbol1"><strong>[*]</strong></a><td> This is the first symbol footnote - <tr><td><a name="symbol2"><strong>[†]</strong></a><td> This is the second one. - </table> - - </table> - - <p>The numbering of auto-numbered footnotes is determined by the - order of the footnotes, not of the references. For auto-numbered - footnote references without autonumber labels - ("<samp>[#]_</samp>"), the references and footnotes must be in the - same relative order. Similarly for auto-symbol footnotes - ("<samp>[*]_</samp>"). - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="citations" class="backref" - >Citations</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#citations">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Citation references, like [CIT2002]_.</samp> - <br><samp>Note that citations may get</samp> - <br><samp>rearranged, e.g., to the bottom of</samp> - <br><samp>the "page".</samp> - - <p><samp>.. [CIT2002] A citation</samp> - <br><samp> (as often used in journals).</samp> - - <p><samp>Citation labels contain alphanumerics,</samp> - <br><samp>underlines, hyphens and fullstops.</samp> - <br><samp>Case is not significant.</samp> - - <p><samp>Given a citation like [this]_, one</samp> - <br><samp>can also refer to it like this_.</samp> - - <p><samp>.. [this] here.</samp> - - <td> - Citation references, like <a href="#cit2002">[CIT2002]</a>. - Note that citations may get rearranged, e.g., to the bottom of - the "page". - - <p>Citation labels contain alphanumerics, underlines, hyphens - and fullstops. Case is not significant. - - <p>Given a citation like <a href="#this">[this]</a>, one - can also refer to it like <a href="#this">this</a>. - - <p><table> - <tr><td colspan="2"><hr> - <!-- <tr><td colspan="2">Citations: --> - <tr><td><a name="cit2002"><strong>[CIT2002]</strong></a><td> A citation - (as often used in journals). - <tr><td><a name="this"><strong>[this]</strong></a><td> here. - </table> - - </table> - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="hyperlink-targets" class="backref" - >Hyperlink Targets</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#hyperlink-targets">details</a>) - - <h4><a href="#contents" name="external-hyperlink-targets" class="backref" - >External Hyperlink Targets</a></h4> - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>External hyperlinks, like Python_.</samp> - - <p><samp>.. _Python: http://www.python.org/</samp> - <td> - <table width="100%"> - <tr bgcolor="#99CCFF"><td><em>Fold-in form</em> - <tr><td>Indirect hyperlinks, like - <a href="http://www.python.org">Python</a>. - <tr bgcolor="#99CCFF"><td><em>Call-out form</em> - <tr><td>External hyperlinks, like - <a href="#labPython"><i>Python</i></a>. - - <p><table> - <tr><td colspan="2"><hr> - <tr><td><a name="labPython"><i>Python:</i></a> - <td> <a href="http://www.python.org/">http://www.python.org/</a> - </table> - </table> - </table> - - <p>"<em>Fold-in</em>" is the representation typically used in HTML - documents (think of the indirect hyperlink being "folded in" like - ingredients into a cake), and "<em>call-out</em>" is more suitable for - printed documents, where the link needs to be presented explicitly, for - example as a footnote. - - <h4><a href="#contents" name="internal-hyperlink-targets" class="backref" - >Internal Hyperlink Targets</a></h4> - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td><samp>Internal crossreferences, like example_.</samp> - - <p><samp>.. _example:</samp> - - <p><samp>This is an example crossreference target.</samp> - <td> - <table width="100%"> - <tr bgcolor="#99CCFF"><td><em>Fold-in form</em> - <!-- Note that some browsers may not like an "a" tag that --> - <!-- does not have any content, so we could arbitrarily --> - <!-- use the first word as content - *or* just trust to --> - <!-- luck! --> - <tr><td>Internal crossreferences, like <a href="#example-foldin">example</a> - <p><a name="example-foldin">This</a> is an example - crossreference target. - <tr><td bgcolor="#99CCFF"><em>Call-out form</em> - <tr><td>Internal crossreferences, like <a href="#example-callout">example</a> - - <p><a name="example-callout"><i>example:</i></a> - <br>This is an example crossreference target. - </table> - - </table> - - <h4><a href="#contents" name="indirect-hyperlink-targets" class="backref" - >Indirect Hyperlink Targets</a></h4> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#indirect-hyperlink-targets">details</a>) - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Python_ is `my favourite -<br>programming language`__.</samp> - - <p><samp>.. _Python: http://www.python.org/</samp> - - <p><samp>__ Python_</samp> - - <td> - <p><a href="http://www.python.org/">Python</a> is - <a href="http://www.python.org/">my favourite - programming language</a>. - - </table> - - <p>The second hyperlink target (the line beginning with - "<samp>__</samp>") is both an indirect hyperlink target - (<i>indirectly</i> pointing at the Python website via the - "<samp>Python_</samp>" reference) and an <b>anonymous hyperlink - target</b>. In the text, a double-underscore suffix is used to - indicate an <b>anonymous hyperlink reference</b>. In an anonymous - hyperlink target, the reference text is not repeated. This is - useful for references with long text or throw-away references, but - the target should be kept close to the reference to prevent them - going out of sync. - - <h4><a href="#contents" name="implicit-hyperlink-targets" class="backref" - >Implicit Hyperlink Targets</a></h4> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#implicit-hyperlink-targets">details</a>) - - <p>Section titles, footnotes, and citations automatically generate - hyperlink targets (the title text or footnote/citation label is - used as the hyperlink name). - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>Titles are targets, too</samp> - <br><samp>=======================</samp> - <br><samp>Implict references, like `Titles are</samp> - <br><samp>targets, too`_.</samp> - <td> - <font size="+2"><strong><a name="title">Titles are targets, too</a></strong></font> - <p>Implict references, like <a href="#Title">Titles are - targets, too</a>. - </table> - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="directives" class="backref" - >Directives</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#directives">details</a>) - - <p>Directives are a general-purpose extension mechanism, a way of - adding support for new constructs without adding new syntax. For - a description of all standard directives, see <a - href="../../spec/rst/directives.html" >reStructuredText - Directives</a>. - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td><samp>For instance:</samp> - - <p><samp>.. image:: images/ball1.gif</samp> - - <td> - For instance: - <p><img src="images/ball1.gif" alt="ball1"> - </table> - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="substitution-references-and-definitions" - class="backref" >Substitution References and Definitions</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#substitution-definitions">details</a>) - - <p>Substitutions are like inline directives, allowing graphics and - arbitrary constructs within text. - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td><samp> -The |biohazard| symbol must be -used on containers used to -dispose of medical waste.</samp> - - <p><samp> -.. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png</samp> - - <td> - - <p>The <img src="images/biohazard.png" align="bottom" alt="biohazard"> symbol - must be used on containers used to dispose of medical waste. - - </table> - - <h3><a href="#contents" name="comments" class="backref" - >Comments</a></h3> - - <p>(<a href="../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html#comments">details</a>) - - <p>Any text which begins with an explicit markup start but doesn't - use the syntax of any of the constructs above, is a comment. - - <p><table border="1" width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffcc" cellpadding="3"> - <thead> - <tr align="left" bgcolor="#99CCFF"> - <th width="50%">Plain text - <th width="50%">Typical result - </thead> - <tbody> - <tr valign="top"> - <td><samp>.. This text will not be shown</samp> - <br><samp> (but, for instance, in HTML might be</samp> - <br><samp> rendered as an HTML comment)</samp> - - <td> - <!-- This text will not be shown --> - <!-- (but, for instance in HTML might be --> - <!-- rendered as an HTML comment) --> - - <tr valign="top"> - <td> - <samp>An empty "comment" does not</samp> - <br><samp>"consume" following blocks.</samp> - <p><samp>..</samp> - <p><samp> So this block is not "lost",</samp> - <br><samp> despite its indentation.</samp> - <td> - An empty "comment" does not - "consume" following blocks. - <blockquote> - So this block is not "lost", - despite its indentation. - </blockquote> - </table> - - <h2><a href="#contents" name="getting-help" class="backref" - >Getting Help</a></h2> - - <p>Users who have questions or need assistance with Docutils or - reStructuredText should <a - href="mailto:docutils-users@lists.sourceforge.net" >post a - message</a> to the <a - href="http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/docutils-users" - >Docutils-Users mailing list</a>. The <a - href="http://docutils.sourceforge.net/" >Docutils project web - site</a> has more information. - - <p><hr> - <address> - <p>Authors: - <a href="http://www.tibsnjoan.co.uk/">Tibs</a> - (<a href="mailto:tibs@tibsnjoan.co.uk"><tt>tibs@tibsnjoan.co.uk</tt></a>) - and David Goodger - (<a href="mailto:goodger@users.sourceforge.net">goodger@users.sourceforge.net</a>) - </address> - <!-- Created: Fri Aug 03 09:11:57 GMT Daylight Time 2001 --> - </body> -</html> diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickstart.txt b/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickstart.txt deleted file mode 100644 index d936147b0..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/rst/quickstart.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,382 +0,0 @@ -A ReStructuredText Primer -========================= - -:Author: Richard Jones -:Version: $Revision$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. contents:: - - -The text below contains links that look like "(quickref__)". These -are relative links that point to the `Quick reStructuredText`_ user -reference. If these links don't work, please refer to the `master -quick reference`_ document. - -__ -.. _Quick reStructuredText: quickref.html -.. _master quick reference: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/rst/quickref.html - - -Structure ---------- - -From the outset, let me say that "Structured Text" is probably a bit -of a misnomer. It's more like "Relaxed Text" that uses certain -consistent patterns. These patterns are interpreted by a HTML -converter to produce "Very Structured Text" that can be used by a web -browser. - -The most basic pattern recognised is a **paragraph** (quickref__). -That's a chunk of text that is separated by blank lines (one is -enough). Paragraphs must have the same indentation -- that is, line -up at their left edge. Paragraphs that start indented will result in -indented quote paragraphs. For example:: - - This is a paragraph. It's quite - short. - - This paragraph will result in an indented block of - text, typically used for quoting other text. - - This is another one. - -Results in: - - This is a paragraph. It's quite - short. - - This paragraph will result in an indented block of - text, typically used for quoting other text. - - This is another one. - -__ quickref.html#paragraphs - -Text styles ------------ - -(quickref__) - -__ quickref.html#inline-markup - -Inside paragraphs and other bodies of text, you may additionally mark -text for *italics* with "``*italics*``" or **bold** with -"``**bold**``". - -If you want something to appear as a fixed-space literal, use -"````double back-quotes````". Note that no further fiddling is done -inside the double back-quotes -- so asterisks "``*``" etc. are left -alone. - -If you find that you want to use one of the "special" characters in -text, it will generally be OK -- reStructuredText is pretty smart. -For example, this * asterisk is handled just fine. If you actually -want text \*surrounded by asterisks* to **not** be italicised, then -you need to indicate that the asterisk is not special. You do this by -placing a backslash just before it, like so "``\*``" (quickref__), or -by enclosing it in double back-quotes (inline literals), like this:: - - ``\*`` - -__ quickref.html#escaping - -Lists ------ - -Lists of items come in three main flavours: **enumerated**, -**bulleted** and **definitions**. In all list cases, you may have as -many paragraphs, sublists, etc. as you want, as long as the left-hand -side of the paragraph or whatever aligns with the first line of text -in the list item. - -Lists must always start a new paragraph -- that is, they must appear -after a blank line. - -**enumerated** lists (numbers, letters or roman numerals; quickref__) - __ quickref.html#enumerated-lists - - Start a line off with a number or letter followed by a period ".", - right bracket ")" or surrounded by brackets "( )" -- whatever you're - comfortable with. All of the following forms are recognised:: - - 1. numbers - - A. upper-case letters - and it goes over many lines - - with two paragraphs and all! - - a. lower-case letters - - 3. with a sub-list starting at a different number - 4. make sure the numbers are in the correct sequence though! - - I. upper-case roman numerals - - i. lower-case roman numerals - - (1) numbers again - - 1) and again - - Results in (note: the different enumerated list styles are not - always supported by every web browser, so you may not get the full - effect here): - - 1. numbers - - A. upper-case letters - and it goes over many lines - - with two paragraphs and all! - - a. lower-case letters - - 3. with a sub-list starting at a different number - 4. make sure the numbers are in the correct sequence though! - - I. upper-case roman numerals - - i. lower-case roman numerals - - (1) numbers again - - 1) and again - -**bulleted** lists (quickref__) - __ quickref.html#bullet-lists - - Just like enumerated lists, start the line off with a bullet point - character - either "-", "+" or "*":: - - * a bullet point using "*" - - - a sub-list using "-" - - + yet another sub-list - - - another item - - Results in: - - * a bullet point using "*" - - - a sub-list using "-" - - + yet another sub-list - - - another item - -**definition** lists (quickref__) - __ quickref.html#definition-lists - - Unlike the other two, the definition lists consist of a term, and - the definition of that term. The format of a definition list is:: - - what - Definition lists associate a term with a definition. - - *how* - The term is a one-line phrase, and the definition is one or more - paragraphs or body elements, indented relative to the term. - Blank lines are not allowed between term and definition. - - Results in: - - what - Definition lists associate a term with a definition. - - *how* - The term is a one-line phrase, and the definition is one or more - paragraphs or body elements, indented relative to the term. - Blank lines are not allowed between term and definition. - -Preformatting (code samples) ----------------------------- -(quickref__) - -__ quickref.html#literal-blocks - -To just include a chunk of preformatted, never-to-be-fiddled-with -text, finish the prior paragraph with "``::``". The preformatted -block is finished when the text falls back to the same indentation -level as a paragraph prior to the preformatted block. For example:: - - An example:: - - Whitespace, newlines, blank lines, and all kinds of markup - (like *this* or \this) is preserved by literal blocks. - Lookie here, I've dropped an indentation level - (but not far enough) - - no more example - -Results in: - - An example:: - - Whitespace, newlines, blank lines, and all kinds of markup - (like *this* or \this) is preserved by literal blocks. - Lookie here, I've dropped an indentation level - (but not far enough) - - no more example - -Note that if a paragraph consists only of "``::``", then it's removed -from the output:: - - :: - - This is preformatted text, and the - last "::" paragraph is removed - -Results in: - -:: - - This is preformatted text, and the - last "::" paragraph is removed - -Sections --------- - -(quickref__) - -__ quickref.html#section-structure - -To break longer text up into sections, you use **section headers**. -These are a single line of text (one or more words) with adornment: an -underline alone, or an overline and an overline together, in dashes -"``-----``", equals "``======``", tildes "``~~~~~~``" or any of the -non-alphanumeric characters ``= - ` : ' " ~ ^ _ * + # < >`` that you -feel comfortable with. An underline-only adornment is distinct from -an overline-and-underline adornment using the same character. The -underline/overline must be at least as long as the title text. Be -consistent, since all sections marked with the same adornment style -are deemed to be at the same level:: - - Chapter 1 Title - =============== - - Section 1.1 Title - ----------------- - - Subsection 1.1.1 Title - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - - Section 1.2 Title - ----------------- - - Chapter 2 Title - =============== - -This results in the following structure, illustrated by simplified -pseudo-XML:: - - <section> - <title> - Chapter 1 Title - <section> - <title> - Section 1.1 Title - <section> - <title> - Subsection 1.1.1 Title - <section> - <title> - Section 1.2 Title - <section> - <title> - Chapter 2 Title - -(Pseudo-XML uses indentation for nesting and has no end-tags. It's -not possible to show actual processed output, as in the other -examples, because sections cannot exist inside block quotes. For a -concrete example, compare the section structure of this document's -source text and processed output.) - -Note that section headers are available as link targets, just using -their name. To link to the Lists_ heading, I write "``Lists_``". If -the heading has a space in it like `text styles`_, we need to quote -the heading "```text styles`_``". - -To indicate the document title, use a unique adornment style at the -beginning of the document. To indicate the document subtitle, use -another unique adornment style immediately after the document title. -For example:: - - ================ - Document Title - ================ - ---------- - Subtitle - ---------- - - Section Title - ============= - - ... - -Note that "Document Title" and "Section Title" both use equals signs, -but are distict and unrelated styles. The text of -overline-and-underlined titles (but not underlined-only) may be inset -for aesthetics. - - -Images ------- - -(quickref__) - -__ quickref.html#directives - -To include an image in your document, you use the the ``image`` directive__. -For example:: - - .. image:: images/biohazard.png - -results in: - -.. image:: images/biohazard.png - -The ``images/biohazard.png`` part indicates the filename of the image -you wish to appear in the document. There's no restriction placed on -the image (format, size etc). If the image is to appear in HTML and -you wish to supply additional information, you may:: - - .. image:: images/biohazard.png - :height: 100 - :width: 200 - :scale: 50 - :alt: alternate text - -See the full image directive documentation__ for more info. - -__ ../../spec/rst/directives.html -__ ../../spec/rst/directives.html#images - - -What Next? ----------- - -This primer introduces the most common features of reStructuredText, -but there are a lot more to explore. The `Quick reStructuredText`_ -user reference is a good place to go next. For complete details, the -`reStructuredText Markup Specification`_ is the place to go [#]_. - -Users who have questions or need assistance with Docutils or -reStructuredText should `post a message`_ to the `Docutils-Users -mailing list`_. The `Docutils project web site`_ has more -information. - -.. [#] If that relative link doesn't work, try the master document: - http://docutils.sourceforge.net/spec/rst/reStructuredText.html. - -.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: - ../../spec/rst/reStructuredText.html -.. _post a message: mailto:docutils-users@lists.sourceforge.net -.. _Docutils-Users mailing list: - http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/docutils-users -.. _Docutils project web site: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ diff --git a/docutils/docs/user/tools.txt b/docutils/docs/user/tools.txt deleted file mode 100644 index b9af291f6..000000000 --- a/docutils/docs/user/tools.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,724 +0,0 @@ -========================== - Docutils Front-End Tools -========================== - -:Author: David Goodger -:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net -:Revision: $Revision$ -:Date: $Date$ -:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. - -.. contents:: - - -Introduction -============ - -Once the Docutils package is unpacked, you will discover a "``tools``" -directory containing several front ends for common Docutils -processing. Rather than a single all-purpose program, Docutils has -many small front ends, each specialized for a specific "Reader" (which -knows how to interpret a file in context), a "Parser" (which -understands the syntax of the text), and a "Writer" (which knows how -to generate a specific data format). Most front ends have common -options and the same command-line usage pattern:: - - toolname [options] [<source> [<destination]] - -The exceptions are buildhtml.py_ and pep2html.py_. See html.py_ for -concrete examples. Each tool has a "``--help``" option which lists -the `command-line options`_ and arguments it supports. Processing can -also be customized with `configuration files`_. - -The two arguments, "source" and "destination", are optional. If only -one argument (source) is specified, the standard output (stdout) is -used for the destination. If no arguments are specified, the standard -input (stdin) is used for the source as well. - - -Getting Help ------------- - -First, try the "``--help``" option each front-end tool has. - -Users who have questions or need assistance with Docutils or -reStructuredText should `post a message`_ to the `Docutils-Users -mailing list`_. The `Docutils project web site`_ has more -information. - -.. _post a message: mailto:docutils-users@lists.sourceforge.net -.. _Docutils-Users mailing list: - http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/docutils-users -.. _Docutils project web site: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ - - -The Tools -========= - -buildhtml.py ------------- - -:Readers: Standalone, PEP -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writers: HTML, PEP/HTML - -Use ``buildhtml.py`` to generate .html from all the .txt files -(including PEPs) in each <directory> given, and their subdirectories -too. (Use the ``--local`` option to skip subdirectories.) - -Usage:: - - buildhtml.py [options] [<directory> ...] - -After unpacking the Docutils package, the following shell commands -will generate HTML for all included documentation:: - - cd docutils/tools - buildhtml.py .. - -For official releases, the directory may be called "docutils-X.Y", -where "X.Y" is the release version. Alternatively:: - - cd docutils - tools/buildhtml.py --config=tools/docutils.conf - -The current directory (and all subdirectories) is chosen by default if -no directory is named. Some files may generate system messages -(tools/test.txt contains intentional errors); use the ``--quiet`` -option to suppress all warnings. The ``--config`` option ensures that -the correct stylesheets, templates, and settings are in place -(``./docutils.conf`` is picked up automatically). Command-line -options may be used to override config file settings or replace them -altogether. - - -html.py -------- - -:Reader: Standalone -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: HTML - -The ``html.py`` front end reads standalone reStructuredText source -files and produces HTML 4 (XHTML 1) output compatible with modern -browsers. For example, to process a reStructuredText file -"``test.txt``" into HTML:: - - html.py test.txt test.html - -In fact, there *is* a "``test.txt``" file in the "``tools``" -directory. It contains "at least one example of each reStructuredText -construct", including intentional errors. Use it to put the system -through its paces and compare input to output. - -Now open the "``test.html``" file in your favorite browser to see the -results. To get a footer with a link to the source file, date & time -of processing, and links to the Docutils projects, add some options:: - - html.py -stg test.txt test.html - - -Stylesheets -``````````` - -``html.py`` inserts into the generated HTML a link to a cascading -stylesheet, defaulting to "``default.css``" (override with a -"``--stylesheet``" or "``--stylesheet-path``" command-line option or -with configuration file settings). The -"``tools/stylesheets/default.css``" stylesheet is provided for basic -use. To experiment with styles, rather than editing the default -stylesheet (which will be updated as the project evolves), it is -recommended to use an "``@import``" statement to create a "wrapper" -stylesheet. For example, a "``my.css``" stylesheet could contain the -following:: - - @import url(default.css); - - h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, p.topic-title { - font-family: sans-serif } - -Generate HTML with the following command:: - - html.py -stg --stylesheet my.css test.txt test.html - -When viewed in a browser, the new "wrapper" stylesheet will change the -typeface family of titles to "sans serif", typically Helvetica or -Arial. Other styles will not be affected. Styles in wrapper -stylesheets override styles in imported stylesheets, enabling -incremental experimentation. - - -pep.py ------- - -:Reader: PEP -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: PEP/HTML - -``pep.py`` reads a new-style PEP (marked up with reStructuredText) and -produces HTML. It requires a template file and a stylesheet. By -default, it makes use of a "``pep-html-template``" file and a -"``default.css``" stylesheet in the current directory, but these can -be overridden by command-line options or configuration files. The -"``tools/stylesheets/pep.css``" stylesheet is intended specifically -for PEP use. - -The "``docutils.conf``" `configuration file`_ in the "``spec``" -directory of Docutils contains a default setup for use in processing -the PEP files there (``spec/pep-*.txt``) into HTML. It specifies a -default template (``tools/pep-html-template``) and a default -stylesheet (``tools/stylesheets/pep.css``). See Stylesheets_ above -for more information. - - -pep2html.py ------------ - -:Reader: PEP -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: PEP/HTML - -``pep2html.py`` is a modified version of the original script by -Fredrik Lundh, with support for Docutils added. It reads the -beginning of a PEP text file to determine the format (old-style -indented or new-style reStructuredText) and processes accordingly. -Since it does not use the Docutils front end mechanism (the common -command-line options are not supported), it must be configured using -`configuration files`_. The template and stylesheet requirements of -``pep2html.py`` are the same as those of `pep.py`_ above. - -Arguments to ``pep2html.py`` may be a list of PEP numbers or .txt -files. If no arguments are given, all files of the form -"``pep-*.txt``" are processed. - - -rst2latex.py ------------- - -:Reader: Standalone -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: LaTeX2e - -The ``rst2latex.py`` front end reads standalone reStructuredText -source files and produces LaTeX2e output. For example, to process a -reStructuredText file "``test.txt``" into LaTeX:: - - rst2latex.py test.txt test.tex - -The output file "``test.tex``" should then be processed with ``latex`` -or ``pdflatex`` to get a typeset document. - -Some limitations and difference apply: - -- Gif,jpg or png images are not handled, when processed with - ``latex``, use ``pdflatex`` instead. -- Only Latin-1 is tested up to now. -- The generated file includes a file ``style.tex``, which allows the - inclusion of special packages or changes to settings made in the - header. -- Not all constructs are possible (e.g. multirow/multicoumn entries in - tables are not). - - -docutils-xml.py ---------------- - -:Reader: Standalone -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: XML (Docutils native) - -The ``docutils-xml.py`` front end produces Docutils-native XML output. -This can be transformed with standard XML tools such as XSLT -processors into arbitrary final forms. - - -publish.py ----------- - -:Reader: Standalone -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: Pseudo-XML - -``publish.py`` is used for debugging the Docutils Reader to Transform -to Writer pipeline. It produces a compact pretty-printed -"pseudo-XML", where nesting is indicated by indentation (no end-tags). -External attributes for all elements are output, and internal -attributes for any leftover "pending" elements are also given. - - -quicktest.py ------------- - -:Reader: N/A -:Parser: reStructuredText -:Writer: N/A - -The ``quicktest.py`` tool is used for testing the reStructuredText -parser. It does not use a Docutils Reader or Writer or the standard -Docutils command-line options. Rather, it does its own I/O and calls -the parser directly. No transforms are applied to the parsed -document. Various forms output are possible: - -- Pretty-printed pseudo-XML (default) -- Test data (Python list of input and pseudo-XML output strings; - useful for creating new test cases) -- Pretty-printed native XML -- Raw native XML (with or without a stylesheet reference) - - - -Customization -============= - -Command-Line Options --------------------- - -Each front-end tool supports command-line options for one-off -customization. For persistent customization, use `configuration -files`_. - -Use the "--help" option on each of the front ends to list the -command-line options it supports. Command-line options and their -corresponding configuration file entry names are listed in -`Configuration File Entries`_ below. - - -.. _configuration file: - -Configuration Files -------------------- - -Configuration files are used for persistent customization; they can be -set once and take effect every time you use a front-end tool. - -By default, Docutils checks the following places for configuration -files, in the following order: - -1. ``/etc/docutils.conf``: This is a system-wide configuration file, - applicable to all Docutils processing on the system. - -2. ``./docutils.conf``: This is a project-specific configuration file, - located in the current directory. The Docutils front end has to be - executed from the directory containing this configuration file for - it to take effect (note that this may have nothing to do with the - location of the source files). Settings in the project-specific - configuration file will override corresponding settings in the - system-wide file. - -3. ``~/.docutils``: This is a user-specific configuration file, - located in the user's home directory. Settings in this file will - override corresponding settings in both the system-wide and - project-specific configuration files. - -If more than one configuration file is found, all will be read but -later entries will override earlier ones. For example, a "stylesheet" -entry in a user-specific configuration file will override a -"stylesheet" entry in the system-wide file. - -In addition, a configuration file may be explicitly specified with the -"--config" command-line option. This configuration file is read after -the three implicit ones listed above. - -Configuration files use the standard ConfigParser.py_ Python_ module. -From its documentation: - - The configuration file consists of sections, lead by a "[section]" - header and followed by "name: value" entries, with continuations - in the style of `RFC 822`_; "name=value" is also accepted. Note - that leading whitespace is removed from values. The optional - values can contain format strings which refer to other values in - the same section, or values in a special DEFAULT section. - Additional defaults can be provided upon initialization and - retrieval. Lines beginning with "#" or ";" are ignored and may be - used to provide comments. - -Docutils currently only uses an "[options]" section; all other -sections are ignored. - -.. Note:: The configuration file format may change in the future. - -Configuration entry names correspond to internal option attributes. -Underscores ("_") and hyphens ("-") can be used interchangably in -entry names. The correspondence between entry names and command-line -options is listed in `Configuration File Entries`_ below. - -.. _ConfigParser.py: - http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-ConfigParser.html -.. _Python: http://www.python.org/ -.. _RFC 822: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt - - -Configuration File Entries --------------------------- - -Listed below are the Docutils runtime settings. Most may be specified -in `configuration files`_, where hyphens may be used in place of -underscores. Some knowledge of Python_ is assumed for some -attributes. - -attribution - (HTML Writer.) Format for block quote attributions: one of "dash" - (em-dash prefix), "parentheses"/"parens", or "none". - - Default: "dash". Options: ``--attribution``. - -compact_lists - (HTML Writer.) Remove extra vertical whitespace between items of - bullet lists and enumerated lists, when list items are "simple" - (i.e., all items each contain one paragraph and/or one "simple" - sublist only). - - Default: enabled (1). Options: ``--compact-lists, - --no-compact-lists``. - -config - Path to a configuration file to read (if it exists) - [#pwd]_. Settings may override defaults and earlier settings. - This is only effective as a command-line option; setting it in a - config file has no effect. - - Filesystem path settings contained within the config file will be - interpreted relative to the config file's location (*not* relative - to the current working directory). - - Default: None. Options: ``--config``. - -datestamp - Include a time/datestamp in the document footer. Contains a - format string for Python's ``time.strftime``. See the `time - module documentation`__. - - Default: None. Options: ``--date, -d, --time, -t, - --no-datestamp``. - - __ http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-time.html - -debug - Report debug-level system messages. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--debug, --no-debug``. - -docinfo_xform - (Standalone Reader.) Enable or disable the bibliographic field - list transform (docutils.transforms.frontmatter.DocInfo). - - Default: enabled (1). Options: ``--no-doc-info``. - -doctitle_xform - - (Standalone Reader.) Enable or disable the promotion of a lone - top-level section title to document title (and subsequent section - title to document subtitle promotion; - docutils.transforms.frontmatter.DocTitle). - - Default: enabled (). Options: ``--no-doc-title``. - -doctype_declaration - (XML Writer.) Generate XML with a DOCTYPE declaration. - - Default: do (1). Options: ``--no-doctype``. - -dump_internals - At the end of processing, write all internal attributes of the - document (``document.__dict__``) to stderr. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--dump-internals`` (hidden, for - development use only). - -dump_pseudo_xml - At the end of processing, write the pseudo-XML representation of - the document to stderr. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--dump-pseudo-xml`` (hidden, - for development use only). - -dump_settings - At the end of processing, write all Docutils settings to stderr. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--dump-settings`` (hidden, for - development use only). - -dump_transforms - At the end of processing, write a list of all transforms applied - to the document to stderr. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--dump-transforms`` (hidden, - for development use only). - -embed_stylesheet - (HTML Writer.) Embed the stylesheet in the output HTML file. The - stylesheet file must be accessible during processing. The - stylesheet is embedded inside a comment, so it must not contain - the text "``--``" (two hyphens). - - Default: link, don't embed (None). Options: ``--embed-stylesheet, - --link-stylesheet``. - -error_encoding - The text encoding for error output. - - Default: "ascii". Options: ``--error-encoding, -e``. - -error_encoding_error_handler - The encoding error handler for unencodable characters in error - output. Acceptable values are the same as for the "error" - parameter of Python's ``encode`` string method. - - Default: "backslashreplace" for Python 2.3 and later; "replace" - otherwise. Options: ``--error-encoding-error-handler, - --error-encoding, -e``. - -exit_level - A system message level threshold; non-halting system messages at - or above this level will produce a non-zero exit status at normal - exit. Exit status is the maximum system message level plus 10 (11 - for INFO, etc.). - - Default: disabled (5). Options: ``--exit``. - -expose_internals - List of internal attribues to expose as external attributes (with - "internal:" namespace prefix). - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--expose-internal-attribute`` - (hidden, for development use only). - -footnote_backlinks - Enable or disable backlinks from footnotes and citations to their - references. - - Default: enabled (1). Options: ``--footnote-backlinks, - --no-footnote-backlinks``. - -footnote_references - (HTML Writer.) Format for footnote references, one of - "superscript" or "brackets". - - Default: "superscript"; "brackets" in PEP/HTML Writer. Options: - ``--footnote-references``. - -generator - Include a "Generated by Docutils" credit and link in the document - footer. - - Default: off (None). Options: ``--generator, -g, - --no-generator``. - -halt_level - The threshold at or above which system messages are converted to - exceptions, halting execution immediately. - - Default: severe (4). Options: ``--halt, --strict``. - -indents - (XML Writer.) Generate XML with indents and newlines. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--indents``. - -input_encoding - The text encoding for input. - - Default: auto-detect (None). Options: ``--input-encoding, -i``. - -language_code - `ISO 639`_ 2-letter language code (3-letter codes used only if no - 2-letter code exists). - - Default: English ("en"). Options: ``--language, -l``. - -newlines - (XML Writer.) Generate XML with newlines before and after tags. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--newlines``. - -no_random - (PEP/HTML Writer.) Workaround for platforms which core-dump on - "``import random``". - - Default: random enabled (None). Options: ``--no-random`` - (hidden). - -output_encoding - The text encoding for output. - - Default: "UTF-8". Options: ``--output-encoding, -o``. - -output_encoding_error_handler - The encoding error handler for unencodable characters in output. - Acceptable values are the same as for the "error" parameter of - Python's ``encode`` string method. - - Default: "strict". Options: ``--output-encoding-error-handler, - --output-encoding, -o``. - -pep_home - (PEP/HTML Writer.) Home URL prefix for PEPs. - - Default: current directory ("."). Options: ``--pep-home``. - -pep_references - (reStructuredText Parser.) Recognize and link to PEP references - (like "PEP 258"). - - Default: disabled (None); enabled (1) in PEP Reader. Options: - ``--pep-references``. - -pep_stylesheet - (PEP/HTML Writer.) CSS stylesheet URL, used verbatim. Overrides - HTML stylesheet (``--stylesheet``). - - Default: None. Options: ``--pep-stylesheet``. - -pep_stylesheet_path - (PEP/HTML Writer.) Path to CSS stylesheet [#pwd]_. Path is - adjusted relative to the output HTML file. Overrides HTML - stylesheet (``--stylesheet``) and PEP stylesheet - (``--pep-stylesheet``). - - Default: None. Options: ``--pep-stylesheet-path``. - -pep_template - (PEP/HTML Writer.) Path to PEP template file [#pwd]_. - - Default: "pep-html-template" (in current directory). Options: - ``--pep-template``. - -python_home - (PEP/HTML Writer.) Python's home URL. - - Default: parent directory (".."). Options: ``--python-home``. - -recurse - (``buildhtml.py`` front end.) Recursively scan subdirectories. - - Default: recurse (1). Options: ``--recurse, --local``. - -report_level - Verbosity threshold at or above which system messages are - reported. - - Default: warning (2). Options: ``--report, -r, --verbose, -v, - --quiet, -q``. - -rfc_references - (reStructuredText Parser.) Recognize and link to RFC references - (like "RFC 822"). - - Default: disabled (None); enabled (1) in PEP Reader. Options: - ``--rfc-references``. - -silent - (``buildhtml.py`` front end.) Work silently (no progress - messages). Independent of "report_level". - - Default: show progress (None). Options: ``--silent``. - -source_link - Include a "View document source" link in the document footer. URL - will be relative to the destination. - - Default: don't (None). Options: ``--source-link, -s, - --no-source-link``. - -source_url - An explicit URL for a "View document source" link, used verbatim. - - Default: compute if source_link (None). Options: ``--source-uri, - --no-source-link``. - -stylesheet - (HTML Writer.) CSS stylesheet URL, used verbatim. Overridden by - "stylesheet_path" URL option (``--stylesheet-path``). - - Default: "default.css". Options: ``--stylesheet``. - -stylesheet_path - (HTML Writer.) Path to CSS stylesheet [#pwd]_. Overrides - "stylesheet" URL option (``--stylesheet``). Path is adjusted - relative to the output HTML file. - - Default: None. Options: ``--stylesheet``. - -tab_width - (reStructuredText Parser.) Number of spaces for hard tab - expansion. - - Default: 8. Options: ``--tab-width``. - -toc_backlinks - Enable backlinks from section titles to table of contents entries - ("entry"), to the top of the TOC ("top"), or disable ("none"). - - Default: "entry". Options: ``--toc-entry-backlinks, - --toc-top-backlinks, --no-toc-backlinks``. - -traceback - Enable Python tracebacks when an error occurs. - - Default: disabled (None). Options: ``--traceback, - --no-traceback``. - -trim-footnote-reference-space - (reStructuredText Parser.) Remove spaces before footnote - references. - - Default: don't (None). Options: - ``--trim-footnote-reference-space``. - -warning_stream - Path to a file for the output of system messages (warnings) - [#pwd]_. - - Default: stderr (None). Options: ``--warnings``. - -xml_declaration - (XML and HTML Writers.) Generate XML with an XML declaration. - - .. Caution:: The XML declaration carries text encoding - information, without which standard tools may be unable to read - the generated XML. - - Default: do (1). Options: ``--no-xml-declaration``. - - -For Internal Use Only -````````````````````` - -Setting these in a config file has no effect. - - -_directories - (``buildhtml.py`` front end.) List of paths to source - directories, set from positional arguments. - - Default: current working directory (None). No command-line - options. - -_disable_config - Prevent standard configuration files from being read. - - Default: config files enabled (None). No command-line options. - -_destination - Path to output destination, set from positional arguments. - - Default: stdout (None). No command-line options. - -_source - Path to input source, set from positional arguments. - - Default: stdin (None). No command-line options. - -.. _ISO 639: http://lcweb.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/englangn.html - -.. [#pwd] Path relative to the working directory of the process at - launch. - - -.. - Local Variables: - mode: indented-text - indent-tabs-mode: nil - sentence-end-double-space: t - fill-column: 70 - End: |
