diff options
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/tutorial/first-steps.rst | 92 |
1 files changed, 92 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/tutorial/first-steps.rst b/doc/tutorial/first-steps.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fd5c631 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tutorial/first-steps.rst @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ +First steps to document your project using Sphinx +================================================= + +Building your HTML documentation +-------------------------------- + +The ``index.rst`` file that ``sphinx-quickstart`` created has some content +already, and it gets rendered as the front page of your HTML documentation. It +is written in reStructuredText, a powerful markup language. + +Modify the file as follows: + +.. code-block:: rst + :caption: docs/source/index.rst + + Welcome to Lumache's documentation! + =================================== + + **Lumache** (/lu'make/) is a Python library for cooks and food lovers that + creates recipes mixing random ingredients. It pulls data from the `Open Food + Facts database <https://world.openfoodfacts.org/>`_ and offers a *simple* and + *intuitive* API. + + .. note:: + + This project is under active development. + +This showcases several features of the reStructuredText syntax, including: + +- a **section header** using ``===`` for the underline, +- two examples of :ref:`rst-inline-markup`: ``**strong emphasis**`` (typically + bold) and ``*emphasis*`` (typically italics), +- an **inline external link**, +- and a ``note`` **admonition** (one of the available :ref:`directives + <rst-directives>`) + +Now to render it with the new content, you can use the ``sphinx-build`` command +as before, or leverage the convenience script as follows: + +.. code-block:: console + + (.venv) $ cd docs + (.venv) $ make html + +After running this command, you will see that ``index.html`` reflects the new +changes! + +Building your documentation in other formats +-------------------------------------------- + +Sphinx supports a variety of formats apart from HTML, including PDF, EPUB, +:ref:`and more <builders>`. For example, to build your documentation +in EPUB format, run this command from the ``docs`` directory: + +.. code-block:: console + + (.venv) $ make epub + +After that, you will see the files corresponding to the e-book under +``docs/build/epub/``. You can either open ``Lumache.epub`` with an +EPUB-compatible e-book viewer, like `Calibre <https://calibre-ebook.com/>`_, +or preview ``index.xhtml`` on a web browser. + +.. note:: + + To quickly display a complete list of possible output formats, plus some + extra useful commands, you can run :code:`make help`. + +Each output format has some specific configuration options that you can tune, +:ref:`including EPUB <epub-options>`. For instance, the default value of +:confval:`epub_show_urls` is ``inline``, which means that, by default, URLs are +shown right after the corresponding link, in parentheses. You can change that +behavior by adding the following code at the end of your ``conf.py``: + +.. code-block:: python + + # EPUB options + epub_show_urls = 'footnote' + +With this configuration value, and after running ``make epub`` again, you will +notice that URLs appear now as footnotes, which avoids cluttering the text. +Sweet! Read on to explore :doc:`other ways to customize +Sphinx </tutorial/more-sphinx-customization>`. + +.. note:: + + Generating a PDF using Sphinx can be done running ``make latexpdf``, + provided that the system has a working LaTeX installation, + as explained in the documentation of :class:`sphinx.builders.latex.LaTeXBuilder`. + Although this is perfectly feasible, such installations are often big, + and in general LaTeX requires careful configuration in some cases, + so PDF generation is out of scope for this tutorial. |