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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2001-12-18 16:31:44 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2001-12-18 16:31:44 (GMT) |
commit | 96be564027c2256699023e4430c199a147eb1b66 (patch) | |
tree | 36121f925683362132aa97d80e4c1bc4d8916399 /Doc/lib | |
parent | 732299ff63d74318c1ee39ce50c9387b91439bda (diff) | |
download | cpython-96be564027c2256699023e4430c199a147eb1b66.zip cpython-96be564027c2256699023e4430c199a147eb1b66.tar.gz cpython-96be564027c2256699023e4430c199a147eb1b66.tar.bz2 |
Add documentation for the pydoc module; contributed by Ka-Ping Yee.
This closes SF patch #494622.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libpydoc.tex | 62 |
1 files changed, 62 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libpydoc.tex b/Doc/lib/libpydoc.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0108d79 --- /dev/null +++ b/Doc/lib/libpydoc.tex @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +\section{\module{pydoc} --- + Documentation generator and online help system} + +\declaremodule{standard}{pydoc} +\modulesynopsis{Documentation generator and online help system.} +\moduleauthor{Ka-Ping Yee}{ping@lfw.org} +\sectionauthor{Ka-Ping Yee}{ping@lfw.org} + +\versionadded{2.1} +\index{documentation!generation} +\index{documentation!online} +\index{help!online} + +The \module{pydoc} module automatically generates documentation from +Python modules. The documentation can be presented as pages of text +on the console, served to a Web browser, or saved to HTML files. + +The built-in function \function{help()} invokes the online help system +in the interactive interpreter, which uses \module{pydoc} to generate +its documentation as text on the console. The same text documentation +can also be viewed from outside the Python interpreter by running +\program{pydoc} as a script at the operating system's command prompt. +For example, running + +\begin{verbatim} +pydoc sys +\end{verbatim} + +at a shell prompt will display documentation on the \refmodule{sys} +module, in a style similar to the manual pages shown by the \UNIX{} +\program{man} command. The argument to \program{pydoc} can be the name +of a function, module, or package, or a dotted reference to a class, +method, or function within a module or module in a package. If the +argument to \program{pydoc} looks like a path (that is, it contains the +path separator for your operating system, such as a slash in \UNIX), +and refers to an existing Python source file, then documentation is +produced for that file. + +Specifying a \programopt{-w} flag before the argument will cause HTML +documentation to be written out to a file in the current directory, +instead of displaying text on the console. + +Specifying a \programopt{-k} flag before the argument will search the +synopsis lines of all available modules for the keyword given as the +argument, again in a manner similar to the \UNIX{} \program{man} +command. The synopsis line of a module is the first line of its +documentation string. + +You can also use \program{pydoc} to start an HTTP server on the local +machine that will serve documentation to visiting Web browsers. +\program{pydoc} \programopt{-p 1234} will start a HTTP server on port +1234, allowing you to browse the documentation at +\code{http://localhost:1234/} in your preferred Web browser. +\program{pydoc} \programopt{-g} will start the server and additionally +bring up a small \refmodule{Tkinter}-based graphical interface to help +you search for documentation pages. + +When \program{pydoc} generates documentation, it uses the current +environment and path to locate modules. Thus, invoking +\program{pydoc} \programopt{spam} documents precisely the version of +the module you would get if you started the Python interpreter and +typed \samp{import spam}. |