mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
23301a9467
* ref3.tex: documented new __init__ and __del__ special methods of class instances. |
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info | ||
lib | ||
ref | ||
templates | ||
tools | ||
tut | ||
.cvsignore | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
fix.el | ||
fix_hack | ||
lib.tex | ||
libtemplate.tex | ||
myformat.sty | ||
partparse.py | ||
qua.tex | ||
quabib.bib | ||
ref.tex | ||
ref1.tex | ||
ref2.tex | ||
ref3.tex | ||
ref4.tex | ||
ref5.tex | ||
ref6.tex | ||
ref7.tex | ||
ref8.tex | ||
texipost.dat | ||
texipre.dat | ||
tut.tex |
README
Python main documentation -- in LaTeX ------------------------------------- This directory contains the LaTeX sources to the Python documentation and a published article about Python. The following are the LaTeX source files: tut.tex The tutorial lib.tex, lib[1-5].tex The library reference ref.tex, ref[1-8].tex The reference manual qua.tex, quabib.bib Article published in CWI Quarterly All except qua.tex use the style option file "myformat.sty". This contains some macro definitions and sets some style parameters. The style parameters are set up for European paper size (21 x 29.7 cm, a.k.a. A4, or roughly 8.27 x 11.7 inch) by default. To use US paper, comment out the line saying \input{a4wide.sty} in myformat.sty (you may want to fiddle with lay-out parameters like \textwidth and \textheight, since the default format uses rather wide margins). You need the makeindex utility to produce the index for ref.tex lib.tex; you need bibtex to produce the references list for qua.tex. There's a Makefile to call latex and the other utilities in the right order and the right number of times. This will produce dvi files for each document made; to preview them, use xdvi. Printing depends on local conventions; at my site, I use dvips and lpr. For example: make ref # creates ref.dvi xdvi ref # preview it dvips -Ppsc ref | lpr -Ppsc # print it on printer "psc". If you don't have latex, you can ftp the pre-formatted PosytScript versions of the documents; see "../misc/FTP" for information about ftp-ing Python files. Making the INFO version of the Library Reference ------------------------------------------------ The Library Reference can now also be read in hypertext form using the Emacs INFO system. This uses Texinfo format as an intermediate step. It requires texinfo version 2 (we have used 2.14). To build the info files (python-lib.info*), say "make libinfo". This takes a while, even on machines with 33 MIPS and 16 Mbytes :-) You can ignore the output. But first you'll have to change a site dependency in fix.el: if texinfo 2.xx is installed by default at your site, comment out the two lines starting with "(setq load-path"; if it isn't, change the path! (I'm afraid that if you don't have texinfo 2.xx this won't work -- use archie to locate a version and ftp to fetch it.) The files used by the conversion process are: partparse.py the dirty-written Python script that converts LaTeX sources to texi files. Output is left in `@out.texi' texi{pre,post}.dat these files will be put before and after the result fix.sh calls emacs in order to update all the nodes and menus. After this, makeinfo will convert the texinfo-source to the info-file(s). Assumption: the texi-source is called `@out.texi' fix.el the elisp-file executed by emacs. Two calls to 'texinfo-all-menus-update are necessary in some cases fix_hack executable shell script that fixes the results of the underscore hack. {\ptt \char'137} is back-translated to a simple underscore. This is needed for the texindex program handy.el some handy Emacs-macro's that helped converting ``old'' documentation to a format that could be understood by the converter scipt (partparse.py). (You don't really need this, but, as the name says, these macros are "handy") A Million thanks for Jan-Hein B\"uhrman for writing and debugging the convertor and related scripts, and for fixing the LaTeX sources and writing new macros for myformat.sty!