Skip to main content

Add python calculations to your LaTeX and Markdown documents.

Project description

CompuDoc

Add the power of python to your LaTeX, Markdown, and more. Why would you want this? Because it is awesome.

Features

Compudoc is a project with similar goals to pythontex, Codebraid, pweave and pyptex. It is most similar to pyptex, and if I had found pyptex earlier, I may not have written Compudoc.

Features include:

  • Like pyptex, CompuDoc is a text preprocessor. A source file is read in and a "rendered" version is written out. That means that Python code is executed and replaced before LaTeX, Pandoc, mdSlides, etc. is ran, so CompuDoc can be added unintrusively to existing projects.
  • As a preprocessor, CompuDoc can be used with all your existing tooling. Just run CompuDoc to produce the source file that would normally go into your pipeline.
  • Since CompuDoc works on plain text files, you can use it to add the power of Python to any tool that processes plain text.
  • Unlike pyptex, CompuDoc is not specific to LaTeX. Any text file can be rendered. LaTeX, Markdown, ReStructuredText, etc. can be rendered with Compudoc.
  • Jinja2 is used for injecting values from Python into the source document. That means you can use Jinja2 filters to make common formatting tasks cleaner.
  • Python code is executed in a separate interactive Python instance incrementally between chunks of document text. That means you can define a variable x in one block of Python code, use that value in a Jinja2 template in your document, change the value of x in a later code block, and use it again in the document. The value inserted into the document will be the value of x at the point it is inserted.
  • If the source file you are rending does not support comments (there is no standard way to put comments in Markdown), you can define your own comment line identifier and have CompuDoc strip them during the render process. This means you can use CompuDoc to render any plain text source file without the final tool knowing anything about it.
  • Add unit support to your scripts that don't have native support for units.

How it works

CompuDoc processes plain text sources files by breaking the file into "chunks" of document text and python code. For example, a document with the text

Some text
% {{{
% import os
% }}}
Some more text
% {{{
% CWD = os.getcwd()
% }}}
The current directory is {{ CWD }}.

would be split into 5 chunks. The first chunk is the document text 'Some text\n', the second chunk is python code and so on.

Chunks are then processed in order. Python code chunks are passed to a separate Python instance. Document text chunks are rendered using a jinja2 instance running in the separate Python instance. Because chunks are processed in order, it means that the value of a variable in a jinja2 template will be determined by the python code chunks that have been processed before it.

x is not defined yet
% {{{
% x = 2
% }}}
x is {{x}}
% {{{
% x = 4
% }}}
Now x is {{x}}

This document will render to

x is not defined yet
% {{{
% x = 2
% }}}
x is 2
% {{{
% x = 4
% }}}
Now x is 4

Usage

For basic usage, create a LaTeX, Markdown, or gnuplot file and add the .cd extension.

  $ cat << EOF > doc.tex.cd
  > text 1
  > text 2
  > % {{{
  > % msg = "HI"
  > % }}}
  > msg = {{msg}}
  > EOF
  $ ls
  doc.tex.cd
  $ compudoc doc.tex.cd --quiet
  $ ls
  doc.tex
  doc.tex.cd
  $ cat doc.tex
  text 1
  text 2
  % {{{
  % msg = "HI"
  % }}}
  msg = HI

More Complex Examples

Python code is embedded in your document's comments. Code blocks within comment blocks are marked with a '{{{' and '}}}' line. Currently, only single-line-style comments are supported.

LaTeX

\documentclass[]{article}

\usepackage{siunitx}
\usepackage{physics}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\usepackage{fullpage}

\author{C.D. Clark III}
\begin{document}
\maketitle

% {{{
% import pint
% ureg = pint.UnitRegistry()
% Q_ = ureg.Quantity
% }}}

Laser exposures are characterized by a power ($\Phi$), energy ($Q$), radiant exposure ($H$),
or irradiance ($E$). Each of these four radiometric quantities are related to each other
through the exposure area and duration.

% {{{
% power = Q_(100,'mW')ljG
% duration = Q_(0.25,'s')
% energy = (power * duration).to("mJ")
% }}}

For example, if a laser outputs a power of {{'{:Lx}'.format(power)}} for a
duration of {{duration | fmt("Lx")}}, then the energy delivered during the
exposure will be {{energy | fmt("Lx")}}.

\end{document}

Save this to a file named main.tex and run

$ compudoc main.tex

This will create a file named main-rendered.tex with the following content

\documentclass[]{article}

\usepackage{siunitx}
\usepackage{physics}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\usepackage{fullpage}

\author{C.D. Clark III}
\begin{document}
\maketitle

% {{{
% import pint
% ureg = pint.UnitRegistry()
% Q_ = ureg.Quantity
% }}}

Laser exposures are characterized by a power ($\Phi$), energy ($Q$), radiant exposure ($H$),
or irradiance ($E$). Each of these four radiometric quantities are related to each other
through the exposure area and duration.

% {{{
% power = Q_(100,'mW')
% duration = Q_(0.25,'s')
% energy = (power * duration).to("mJ")
% }}}

For example, if a laser outputs a power of \SI[]{100}{\milli\watt} for a
duration of \SI[]{0.25}{\second}, then the energy delivered during the
exposure will be \SI[]{25.0}{\milli\joule}.

\end{document}

Gnuplot

Gnuplot is amazing, it really is. But like most programming languages, there is no support for physical units. Variables are just numbers. Wouldn't it be nice to enter all of your variables in whatever units are convenient and not have to convert them by "hand"? With CompuDoc, you can.

# {{{
# import pint
# ureg = pint.UnitRegistry()
# Q_ = ureg.Quantity()
# beam_waist_diameter = Q_(50, 'um')
# beam_waist_divergence = Q_(2,'mrad')
# }}}

# plot the beam diameter of a laser as a function of propagation range.
#
# the range equation:
DL(r) = sqrt( D0**2 + (phi*r)**2 )

# note that D0 and r need to be expressed in the _same_ units,
# and phi needs to be expressed in _radian_.
D0 = {{beam_waist_diameter.to("cm").magnitude}} # convert to cm and get the numerical value
phi = {{beam_divergence.to("rad").magnitude}}

set xlabel "range [cm]"
set xlabel "diameter [cm]"

plot DL(r)

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

compudoc-0.10.1.tar.gz (516.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

compudoc-0.10.1-py3-none-any.whl (15.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file compudoc-0.10.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: compudoc-0.10.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 516.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.5.18

File hashes

Hashes for compudoc-0.10.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ba9be20b77f688fd829196dd3fb2ed82d7bab92b4dada58732b032713b85ac6f
MD5 92d67aa4eb711fa9211767dc01b20a56
BLAKE2b-256 955d90c935be96c27ac51b24e288d38e393710fff0122d185d44e3fb436d8a1f

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file compudoc-0.10.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: compudoc-0.10.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 15.8 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.5.18

File hashes

Hashes for compudoc-0.10.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f230821e1d081fcbfcbef716081adbe1fe367595fcce881c0377d1514bd591f1
MD5 70e27e4c92aceea31c50eceb0498a6ec
BLAKE2b-256 b52f6b807ab70e54e24be4247d41e1523ab7e8decda3f0e376785991a68caf93

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page