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+Developing a "TODO" extension
+=============================
+
+The objective of this tutorial is to create a more comprehensive extension than
+that created in :doc:`helloworld`. Whereas that guide just covered writing a
+custom :term:`directive`, this guide adds multiple directives, along with custom
+nodes, additional config values and custom event handlers. To this end, we will
+cover a ``todo`` extension that adds capabilities to include todo entries in the
+documentation, and to collect these in a central place. This is similar the
+``sphinxext.todo`` extension distributed with Sphinx.
+
+
+Overview
+--------
+
+.. note::
+ To understand the design of this extension, refer to
+ :ref:`important-objects` and :ref:`build-phases`.
+
+We want the extension to add the following to Sphinx:
+
+* A ``todo`` directive, containing some content that is marked with "TODO" and
+ only shown in the output if a new config value is set. Todo entries should not
+ be in the output by default.
+
+* A ``todolist`` directive that creates a list of all todo entries throughout
+ the documentation.
+
+For that, we will need to add the following elements to Sphinx:
+
+* New directives, called ``todo`` and ``todolist``.
+
+* New document tree nodes to represent these directives, conventionally also
+ called ``todo`` and ``todolist``. We wouldn't need new nodes if the new
+ directives only produced some content representable by existing nodes.
+
+* A new config value ``todo_include_todos`` (config value names should start
+ with the extension name, in order to stay unique) that controls whether todo
+ entries make it into the output.
+
+* New event handlers: one for the :event:`doctree-resolved` event, to
+ replace the todo and todolist nodes, one for :event:`env-merge-info`
+ to merge intermediate results from parallel builds, and one for
+ :event:`env-purge-doc` (the reason for that will be covered later).
+
+
+Prerequisites
+-------------
+
+As with :doc:`helloworld`, we will not be distributing this plugin via PyPI so
+once again we need a Sphinx project to call this from. You can use an existing
+project or create a new one using :program:`sphinx-quickstart`.
+
+We assume you are using separate source (:file:`source`) and build
+(:file:`build`) folders. Your extension file could be in any folder of your
+project. In our case, let's do the following:
+
+#. Create an :file:`_ext` folder in :file:`source`
+#. Create a new Python file in the :file:`_ext` folder called :file:`todo.py`
+
+Here is an example of the folder structure you might obtain:
+
+.. code-block:: text
+
+ └── source
+    ├── _ext
+ │   └── todo.py
+    ├── _static
+    ├── conf.py
+    ├── somefolder
+    ├── index.rst
+    ├── somefile.rst
+    └── someotherfile.rst
+
+
+Writing the extension
+---------------------
+
+Open :file:`todo.py` and paste the following code in it, all of which we will
+explain in detail shortly:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+
+This is far more extensive extension than the one detailed in :doc:`helloworld`,
+however, we will will look at each piece step-by-step to explain what's
+happening.
+
+.. rubric:: The node classes
+
+Let's start with the node classes:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 8-21
+
+Node classes usually don't have to do anything except inherit from the standard
+docutils classes defined in :mod:`docutils.nodes`. ``todo`` inherits from
+``Admonition`` because it should be handled like a note or warning, ``todolist``
+is just a "general" node.
+
+.. note::
+
+ Many extensions will not have to create their own node classes and work fine
+ with the nodes already provided by `docutils
+ <https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/doctree.html>`__ and :ref:`Sphinx
+ <nodes>`.
+
+.. attention::
+
+ It is important to know that while you can extend Sphinx without
+ leaving your ``conf.py``, if you declare an inherited node right
+ there, you'll hit an unobvious :py:class:`~pickle.PickleError`. So if
+ something goes wrong, please make sure that you put inherited nodes
+ into a separate Python module.
+
+ For more details, see:
+
+ - https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/issues/6751
+ - https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/issues/1493
+ - https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/issues/1424
+
+.. rubric:: The directive classes
+
+A directive class is a class deriving usually from
+:class:`docutils.parsers.rst.Directive`. The directive interface is also
+covered in detail in the `docutils documentation`_; the important thing is that
+the class should have attributes that configure the allowed markup, and a
+``run`` method that returns a list of nodes.
+
+Looking first at the ``TodolistDirective`` directive:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 24-27
+
+It's very simple, creating and returning an instance of our ``todolist`` node
+class. The ``TodolistDirective`` directive itself has neither content nor
+arguments that need to be handled. That brings us to the ``TodoDirective``
+directive:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 30-53
+
+Several important things are covered here. First, as you can see, we're now
+subclassing the :class:`~sphinx.util.docutils.SphinxDirective` helper class
+instead of the usual :class:`~docutils.parsers.rst.Directive` class. This
+gives us access to the :ref:`build environment instance <important-objects>`
+using the ``self.env`` property. Without this, we'd have to use the rather
+convoluted ``self.state.document.settings.env``. Then, to act as a link target
+(from ``TodolistDirective``), the ``TodoDirective`` directive needs to return a
+target node in addition to the ``todo`` node. The target ID (in HTML, this will
+be the anchor name) is generated by using ``env.new_serialno`` which returns a
+new unique integer on each call and therefore leads to unique target names. The
+target node is instantiated without any text (the first two arguments).
+
+On creating admonition node, the content body of the directive are parsed using
+``self.state.nested_parse``. The first argument gives the content body, and
+the second one gives content offset. The third argument gives the parent node
+of parsed result, in our case the ``todo`` node. Following this, the ``todo``
+node is added to the environment. This is needed to be able to create a list of
+all todo entries throughout the documentation, in the place where the author
+puts a ``todolist`` directive. For this case, the environment attribute
+``todo_all_todos`` is used (again, the name should be unique, so it is prefixed
+by the extension name). It does not exist when a new environment is created, so
+the directive must check and create it if necessary. Various information about
+the todo entry's location are stored along with a copy of the node.
+
+In the last line, the nodes that should be put into the doctree are returned:
+the target node and the admonition node.
+
+The node structure that the directive returns looks like this::
+
+ +--------------------+
+ | target node |
+ +--------------------+
+ +--------------------+
+ | todo node |
+ +--------------------+
+ \__+--------------------+
+ | admonition title |
+ +--------------------+
+ | paragraph |
+ +--------------------+
+ | ... |
+ +--------------------+
+
+.. rubric:: The event handlers
+
+Event handlers are one of Sphinx's most powerful features, providing a way to
+do hook into any part of the documentation process. There are many events
+provided by Sphinx itself, as detailed in :ref:`the API guide <events>`, and
+we're going to use a subset of them here.
+
+Let's look at the event handlers used in the above example. First, the one for
+the :event:`env-purge-doc` event:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 56-61
+
+Since we store information from source files in the environment, which is
+persistent, it may become out of date when the source file changes. Therefore,
+before each source file is read, the environment's records of it are cleared,
+and the :event:`env-purge-doc` event gives extensions a chance to do the same.
+Here we clear out all todos whose docname matches the given one from the
+``todo_all_todos`` list. If there are todos left in the document, they will be
+added again during parsing.
+
+The next handler, for the :event:`env-merge-info` event, is used
+during parallel builds. As during parallel builds all threads have
+their own ``env``, there's multiple ``todo_all_todos`` lists that need
+to be merged:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 64-68
+
+
+The other handler belongs to the :event:`doctree-resolved` event:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 71-113
+
+The :event:`doctree-resolved` event is emitted at the end of :ref:`phase 3
+(resolving) <build-phases>` and allows custom resolving to be done. The handler
+we have written for this event is a bit more involved. If the
+``todo_include_todos`` config value (which we'll describe shortly) is false,
+all ``todo`` and ``todolist`` nodes are removed from the documents. If not,
+``todo`` nodes just stay where and how they are. ``todolist`` nodes are
+replaced by a list of todo entries, complete with backlinks to the location
+where they come from. The list items are composed of the nodes from the
+``todo`` entry and docutils nodes created on the fly: a paragraph for each
+entry, containing text that gives the location, and a link (reference node
+containing an italic node) with the backreference. The reference URI is built
+by :meth:`sphinx.builders.Builder.get_relative_uri` which creates a suitable
+URI depending on the used builder, and appending the todo node's (the target's)
+ID as the anchor name.
+
+.. rubric:: The ``setup`` function
+
+.. currentmodule:: sphinx.application
+
+As noted :doc:`previously <helloworld>`, the ``setup`` function is a requirement
+and is used to plug directives into Sphinx. However, we also use it to hook up
+the other parts of our extension. Let's look at our ``setup`` function:
+
+.. literalinclude:: examples/todo.py
+ :language: python
+ :linenos:
+ :lines: 116-
+
+The calls in this function refer to the classes and functions we added earlier.
+What the individual calls do is the following:
+
+* :meth:`~Sphinx.add_config_value` lets Sphinx know that it should recognize the
+ new *config value* ``todo_include_todos``, whose default value should be
+ ``False`` (this also tells Sphinx that it is a boolean value).
+
+ If the third argument was ``'html'``, HTML documents would be full rebuild if the
+ config value changed its value. This is needed for config values that
+ influence reading (build :ref:`phase 1 (reading) <build-phases>`).
+
+* :meth:`~Sphinx.add_node` adds a new *node class* to the build system. It also
+ can specify visitor functions for each supported output format. These visitor
+ functions are needed when the new nodes stay until :ref:`phase 4 (writing)
+ <build-phases>`. Since the ``todolist`` node is always replaced in
+ :ref:`phase 3 (resolving) <build-phases>`, it doesn't need any.
+
+* :meth:`~Sphinx.add_directive` adds a new *directive*, given by name and class.
+
+* Finally, :meth:`~Sphinx.connect` adds an *event handler* to the event whose
+ name is given by the first argument. The event handler function is called
+ with several arguments which are documented with the event.
+
+With this, our extension is complete.
+
+
+Using the extension
+-------------------
+
+As before, we need to enable the extension by declaring it in our
+:file:`conf.py` file. There are two steps necessary here:
+
+#. Add the :file:`_ext` directory to the `Python path`_ using
+ ``sys.path.append``. This should be placed at the top of the file.
+
+#. Update or create the :confval:`extensions` list and add the extension file
+ name to the list
+
+In addition, we may wish to set the ``todo_include_todos`` config value. As
+noted above, this defaults to ``False`` but we can set it explicitly.
+
+For example:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ import os
+ import sys
+
+ sys.path.append(os.path.abspath("./_ext"))
+
+ extensions = ['todo']
+
+ todo_include_todos = False
+
+You can now use the extension throughout your project. For example:
+
+.. code-block:: rst
+ :caption: index.rst
+
+ Hello, world
+ ============
+
+ .. toctree::
+ somefile.rst
+ someotherfile.rst
+
+ Hello world. Below is the list of TODOs.
+
+ .. todolist::
+
+.. code-block:: rst
+ :caption: somefile.rst
+
+ foo
+ ===
+
+ Some intro text here...
+
+ .. todo:: Fix this
+
+.. code-block:: rst
+ :caption: someotherfile.rst
+
+ bar
+ ===
+
+ Some more text here...
+
+ .. todo:: Fix that
+
+Because we have configured ``todo_include_todos`` to ``False``, we won't
+actually see anything rendered for the ``todo`` and ``todolist`` directives.
+However, if we toggle this to true, we will see the output described
+previously.
+
+
+Further reading
+---------------
+
+For more information, refer to the `docutils`_ documentation and
+:doc:`/extdev/index`.
+
+
+.. _docutils: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/
+.. _Python path: https://docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html#envvar-PYTHONPATH
+.. _docutils documentation: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/rst/directives.html