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authorFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>1998-04-03 21:25:16 (GMT)
committerFred Drake <fdrake@acm.org>1998-04-03 21:25:16 (GMT)
commit07bcd99873c6a481180ce2e6ccc8aff154f5383c (patch)
tree47d63d2c63411c182fea7211baa4df7ea44aeb42 /Doc/templates
parent47cfd03dfff998df6c39184b6f122a8c089eaf78 (diff)
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Start at updating the template a little bit. There's a lot of stuff that's
just not here yet.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/templates')
-rw-r--r--Doc/templates/module.tex73
1 files changed, 43 insertions, 30 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/templates/module.tex b/Doc/templates/module.tex
index 3fb4f51..d190506 100644
--- a/Doc/templates/module.tex
+++ b/Doc/templates/module.tex
@@ -4,18 +4,27 @@
% ==== 1. ====
% Choose one of the following section headers and index entries;
-% \section{} generates the section header,
-% \bimodindex{} or \stmodindex{} generates an index entry for this
+% \section generates the section header,
+% \bimodindex or \stmodindex generates an index entry for this
% module. Note that these should only be used for the defining entry
% for the module. Other references to the module should use
-% \refbimodindex{} or \refstmodindex{}.
-% The \label{module-spam} line is for the \seealso{} command.
+% \refbimodindex, \refstmodindex, \refexmodindex or \refmodindex, as
+% appropriate. (Just prepend "ref" to the csname of the \*modindex
+% macro used in the module definition.)
+%
+% The \label{module-spam} line is for the \seealso command.
+
+\section{Built-in Module \module{spam}} % If implemented in C, in
+\bimodindex{spam} % standard library
+
+\section{Standard Module \module{spam}} % If implemented in Python, in
+\stmodindex{spam} % standard library
-\section{Built-in Module \sectcode{spam}} % If implemented in C
-\bimodindex{spam}
+\section{Extension Module \module{spam}}% If implemented in C, but not
+\exmodindex{spam} % in standard library
-\section{Standard Module \sectcode{spam}} % If implemented in Python
-\stmodindex{spam}
+\section{Module \module{spam}} % If implemented in Python, but not
+\modindex{spam} % in standard library
\label{module-spam}
@@ -42,12 +51,6 @@ is only available on genuine \UNIX{} systems.
The \module{spam} module defines the following functions:
% ---- 3.1. ----
-% Redefine the ``indexsubitem'' macro to point to this module
-% (alternatively, you can put this at the top of the file):
-
-\setindexsubitem{(in module spam)}
-
-% ---- 3.2. ----
% For each function, use a ``funcdesc'' block. This has exactly two
% parameters (each parameters is contained in a set of curly braces):
% the first parameter is the function name (this automatically
@@ -61,14 +64,14 @@ The \module{spam} module defines the following functions:
% least once in the description; each usage (even inside \code{...})
% should be enclosed in \var{...}.
-\begin{funcdesc}{open}{filename\optional{, mode, buffersize}}
+\begin{funcdesc}{open}{filename\optional{, mode\optional{, buffersize}}}
Open the file \var{filename} as a can of Spam. The optional
\var{mode} and \var{buffersize} arguments specify the read-write mode
(\code{'r'} (default) or \code{'w'}) and the buffer size (default:
system dependent).
\end{funcdesc}
-% ---- 3.3. ----
+% ---- 3.2. ----
% Data items are described using a ``datadesc'' block. This has only
% one parameter: the item's name.
@@ -78,7 +81,7 @@ default varies per supermarket. This variable should not be changed
once the \function{open()} function has been called.
\end{datadesc}
-% --- 3.4. ---
+% --- 3.3. ---
% Exceptions are described using a ``excdesc'' block. This has only
% one parameter: the exception name.
@@ -88,10 +91,19 @@ The exception argument is a string describing the reason of the
failure.
\end{excdesc}
-% ---- 3.5. ----
-% There is no standard block type for classes. I generally use
-% ``funcdesc'' blocks, since class instantiation looks very much like
-% a function call.
+% ---- 3.4. ----
+% Other standard environments:
+%
+% classdesc - Python classes; same arguments are funcdesc
+% methoddesc - methods, like funcdesc but has an optional parameter
+% to give the type name: \begin{methoddesc}[mytype]{name}{args}
+% By default, the type name will be the name of the
+% last class defined using classdesc. The type name
+% is required if the type is implemented in C (because
+% there's no classdesc) or if the class isn't directly
+% documented (if it's private).
+% memberdesc - data members, like datadesc, but with an optional
+% type name like methoddesc.
% ==== 4. ====
@@ -107,21 +119,22 @@ Example:
>>> can.empty()
>>> can.close()
\end{verbatim}
-%
+% Note that there is no trailing ">>> " prompt shown.
+
% ==== 5. ====
% If your module defines new object types (for a built-in module) or
% classes (for a module written in Python), you should list the
% methods and instance variables (if any) of each type or class in a
-% separate subsection. It is important to redefine ``indexsubitem''
-% for each subsection.
+% separate subsection.
\subsection{Spam Objects}
+\label{spam-objects}
+% This label is generally useful for referencing this section, but is
+% also used to give a filename when generating HTML.
-Spam objects (returned by \function{open()} above) have the following
-methods.
-
-\setindexsubitem{(spam method)}
+Spam objects, as returned by \function{open()} above, have the
+following methods:
-\begin{funcdesc}{empty}{}
+\begin{methoddesc}[spam]{empty}{}
Empty the can into the trash.
-\end{funcdesc}
+\end{methoddesc}