pysource
- Date:
- 2011-12-28
- Revision:
- 7286
- Version:
- 0.1
Ahem
This file needs updating - unless this notice has disappeared, treat the rest of the file as out-of-date...
History
2002-04:
Name changed from 'pydps' to 'pysource' (in line with a suggestion made a while back on the Doc-SIG by David Goodger).
It's not that that's a great name, just that it's better than 'pydps' (especially now that 'dps' has become 'docutils'), and the rather more obvious 'pydoc' is already taken. Any suggestions for a better name will be gratefully received!
Converted from the old 'dps' and 'restructuredtext' packages to the new 'docutils' package.
All previous history is elided with the change of name and first release...
Obtaining the package
The latest version of 'pysource' may be found in the Docutils sandbox (tarball and browsable).
I hope to keep a copy of the current "released" version at
Purpose
This module provides code to
parse a Python file using the Python Compiler module, which is standard with Python 2.2 and later, and available in the Tools directory in earlier versions,
extract relevant information, including docstrings,
and ultimately produce (in the first instance) HTML documentation therefrom.
As a subsidiary capability, it can read a restructuredtext file and produce HTML from that.
There are obviously other tools which perform similar tasks - see the accompanying file whythis.rtxt for some comparisons, and an explanation of why I think it is worth developing this tool independently.
* TO HERE *
Usage
The command python pysource/pysource.py --help gives the following information:
"""The command line interface to docutil's Python documentation extractor. Usage: ``pysource.py <switches> <inpath> [<outfile>]`` <inpath> is the path to a package or module. <outfile> is the path to the output file. If it's not given, then output will be written to a file with the same name as the input file, but defaulting to the current directory, and with extension derived from the type of output: - show -> ``.show`` - ast -> ``.ast`` - xml -> ``.xml`` - html -> ``.html`` - pretty -> ``.pretty`` (unless --stdout is requested). The default is --html. Note that progress messages (and ``verb`` information) are written to ``sys.stderr``. """ <switches> are: -v, --verbose Report on progress in more detail -q, --quiet Suppress normal progress messages -t, --text The input file is a plain (text) reST file -s, --show Output basic information about the input -a, --ast Output a representation of the AST -x, --xml Output an XML representation of the input -h, --html Output an HTML representation of the input [default] -p, --pretty Output a 'pretty' representation of the input -d, --doctest Treat a reST file as doctest input. -h, --help Show 'help' information -n, --new Use David Goodger's HTML Writer (sort of) --stdout Write output to stdout, instead of a file
I recommend use of the --pretty option for gaining an understanding of the DPS tree itself.
Limitations and dependencies
This is beta software, and is still, to some extent, a proof and exploration of concept.
The following limitations are obvious:
Its concept of a "package" is rather limited - it doesn't understand sub-packages (i.e., it only copes with a "flat" directory structure).
It only produces a single HTML file - a more sophisticated approach is clearly needed, particularly for large packages (or even large modules).
It is not fully integrated with the Docutils HTML Writer, which it should be using in preference to my own home-grown approach.
The Docutils tree that it produces could use some improvement - in particular the Python specific nodes need various design decisions to be made.
Also:
It doesn't throw away as much information as it should.
It doesn't check all assignments for use of global values.
It doesn't handle all Python entities that it should.
The HTML it produces is pretty yuck, and is designed not to look terribly nice (although you should remember not to ask my opinion of the HTML output by pydoc).
Autonumbered footnote resolution is done by the HTML writer, which means that it will likely go wrong if it needs to do anything with Python source that contains autonumbered footnotes in docstrings(!). But it does work (I believe) for .rtxt files.
Various other Docutils tree transforms that should be applied are not yet performed.
Subtler things:
The --doctest mode just pretends that the whole file is a single doctest string (i.e., just as if doctest had found it as a docstring in a Python file).
That's quite sensible, except that the current doctest doesn't know that it should ignore literal blocks, and thus may find apparent Python code where it shouldn't.
It depends on:
The latest versions of Docutils, as of the time it was uploaded (I generally track these fairly well, so am normally using the latest versions whilst developing). These should have been installed (using the setup scripts they provide).
Python 2.0 or above
Tools/compiler for the current Python. For Pythons before 2.2a4 (I think it was) this should be installed using the setup script it provides (after that it comes as standard).
I develop it with Python 2.1 on Windows/NT and with Python 2.2 on Debian GNU/Linux.
Refactoring warning
It is my aim to refactor this code to follow David Goodger's
Reader - Transformer - Writer
model more closely than it currently does. And there is also lots of tidying up to do (especially in visit.py).
Interesting things to do
Run it over docutils/spec/reStructuredText.txt.
Run it over docutils/docutils.
Run it over pysource/visit.py.
Run it over the standard string module, and compare the result with that of pydoc.