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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-05-11 16:31:32 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-05-11 16:31:32 (GMT) |
commit | 099b76c3bd6b3a94ad94d65bb2d7a6cf4d1f062a (patch) | |
tree | 9534c8d30614a735d03eb389d572e409048492c4 /Doc | |
parent | ed3da23e446831076a0dc1b1313d38ee93637513 (diff) | |
download | cpython-099b76c3bd6b3a94ad94d65bb2d7a6cf4d1f062a.zip cpython-099b76c3bd6b3a94ad94d65bb2d7a6cf4d1f062a.tar.gz cpython-099b76c3bd6b3a94ad94d65bb2d7a6cf4d1f062a.tar.bz2 |
Changed some comments.... no longer mention FrameMaker.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/README | 58 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 38 deletions
@@ -4,14 +4,6 @@ Python main documentation -- in LaTeX This directory contains the LaTeX sources to the Python documentation. They now require LaTeX2e (LaTeX 2.09 compatibility is dropped). -The Python Reference Manual is no longer maintained in LaTeX. It is -now a FrameMaker document. The FrameMaker 5.0 files (ref.book, -ref*.doc) as well as PostScript generated (ref.ps) from it are in the -subdirectory ref/. (See <ftp://ftp.adobe.com/pub/adobe/framereader> -for a free reader for FrameMaker documents, for some platforms.) Many -thanks to Robin Friedrich for the conversion of the Reference Manual -to FrameMaker and his work on its index. - If you don't have LaTeX, or if you'd rather not format the documentation yourself, you can ftp a tar file containing HTML, PDF, or PostScript versions of all documents. Additional formats may be @@ -21,10 +13,11 @@ main Python distribution (try <http://www.python.org> or The following are the LaTeX source files: - tut.tex The tutorial - lib.tex, lib*.tex The library reference - ext.tex How to extend Python - api.tex Reference for the Python/C API + api/*.tex Python/C API Reference Manual + ext/*.tex Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter + lib/*.tex Python Library Reference + ref/*.tex Python Reference Manual + tut/*.tex Python Tutorial All use the "manual" document class and "python" package, derived from the old "myformat.sty" style file. These contains many macro @@ -37,9 +30,9 @@ by the same Makefile target that produces the DVI files. This uses the dvips tool. Printing depends on local conventions; at our site, we use lpr. For example: - make lib # create lib.dvi and lib.ps - xdvi lib # preview lib.dvi - lpr lib.ps # print on default printer + make lib # create lib.dvi and lib.ps + xdvi lib # preview lib.dvi + lpr lib.ps # print on default printer What if I find a bug? @@ -67,15 +60,15 @@ You need to install Python; some of the scripts used to produce the documentation are written in Python. The simplest way to get the rest of the tools in the configuration we -used is to install the teTeX TeX distribution, version 0.9. More +used is to install the teTeX TeX distribution, version 0.4 or 0.9. More information is available on teTeX at <http://www.tug.org/tetex/>. This is a UNIX-only TeX distribution at this time. Note that the 0.9 release is still in testing; this documentation release was tested -with the 18 Mar 1998 release. We'll be upgrading to the final version -when it becomes available. +with the 21 Apr 1998 release. We'll be upgrading to the final version +when it becomes available. Except for the PDF generation, it also works +with the (stable) teTeX 0.4 release. -If you don't want to get teTeX, or if you're not using UNIX, here is -what you'll need: +If you don't want to get teTeX, here is what you'll need: To create DVI, PDF, or PostScript files: @@ -88,10 +81,9 @@ To create DVI, PDF, or PostScript files: To create PDF files: - pdflatex. We used the one in the teTeX 0.9 distribution - (version 0.12f at the time of this writing). Versions even - a couple of patchlevels different are highly likely to - fail due to syntax changes for some of the pdftex - primitives. + (version 0.12h at the time of this writing). Versions even + a couple of patchlevels earlier are highly likely to fail + due to syntax changes for some of the pdftex primitives. To create PostScript files: @@ -136,15 +128,9 @@ file. What if I want to use A4 paper? ------------------------------- -Edit the file texinputs/manual.cls. Change the line that reads: - - \LoadClass[twoside,openright]{report} - -to say: - - \LoadClass[a4paper,twoside,openright]{report} - -Now do a "make clean all" to generate PostScript files. +Instead of building the PostScript by giving the command "make", give +the command "make PAPER=a4"; the output will be produced in the +paper-a4/ subdirectory. Making HTML files @@ -154,10 +140,6 @@ The LaTeX documents can be converted to HTML using Nikos Drakos' LaTeX2HTML converter. See the Makefile; after some twiddling, "make l2h" should do the trick. -For the reference manual, we use Harlequin's webmaker. We're not very -happy with it and hope that eventually FrameMaker will be able to -produce HTML without third party help. - What else is in here? --------------------- @@ -165,7 +147,7 @@ What else is in here? There is a new LaTeX document class called "howto". This is used for the new series of Python HOWTO documents which is being coordinated by Andrew Kuchling <amk@acm.org>. The file howto.tex is a commented -template which may be used an example. A script to "do the right +example which may be used a template. A script to "do the right thing" to format a howto document is included as tools/mkhowto.sh. Support for this document class is still new, but is expected to evolve rapidly. Use "mkhowto.sh --help" for information on using the |