Cookiecutter utilities for jcook3701's cookiecutter templates.
Project description
Nutri-Matic
Author: Jared Cook
Version: 0.1.6
Overview
Cookiecutter utilities for streamlining development and utilization of Cookiecutter templates.
📦 Package Information:
GitHub: Source Code
GitDocs: Api Documentation
📦 Package Installation:
PyPi: (stable)
$ python -m pip install nutri-matic
TestPyPi: (development)
$ python -m pip install -i https://test.pypi.org/simple/ nutri-matic
Command Examples:
🔧 nutrimatic (add_docs, extract, run, list)
Add Docs:
Description: Add GitHub docs to an existing project using the github-docs-cookiecutter template.
$ nutrimatic add-docs $(target_dir)
Extract:
Description: Clone a repo, extract cookiecutter.json, remove Jinja placeholders, save locally.
Run extract command to local cookiecutter repository:
$ nutrimatic extract ./python3-cookiecutter
OR: Run extract command to from github cookiecutter repository:
$ nutrimatic extract \
--repo git@github.com:jcook3701/python3-cookiecutter.git \
--branch develop \
--output clean_cookiecutter.json
AFTER: Modify extracted json to meet you new projects requirements.
Run:
Description: Run a cookiecutter template using a pre-supplied JSON configuration file.
$ nutrimatic run $(template) $(config)
List:
Description: List available cookiecutter templates under a namespace.
$ nutrimatic list
⚙️ Config (nm-config)
Description: nutrimatic configuration tools.
Note: These are tools that are used to manage package configuration file.
Sub-commands: (show)
Show:
Description:
$ nm-config show
🔨 Build (nm-build)
Description: Cookiecutter build automation utilities.
Note: These commands are intended to be used within project Makefiles as build tools. Examples will assume for use in Makefile.
Sub-commands: (readme, add-yaml-front-matter)
Readme:
Description: Generates project readme from projects github-docs jekyll project. The intention is keep the readme within ./docs/jekyll as the project’s single source of truth.
Note: Intended for use within project Makefile as shown below.
PROJECT_ROOT := $(PWD)
DOCS_DIR := $(PROJECT_ROOT)/docs
JEKYLL_DIR := $(DOCS_DIR)/jekyll
JEKYLL_BUILD := bundle exec jekyll build --quiet
README_GEN_DIR := $(JEKYLL_DIR)/tmp_readme
README_FILE := $(PROJECT_ROOT)/README.md
readme:
nm-build readme $(JEKYLL_DIR) $(README_FILE) </span>
--tmp-dir $(README_GEN_DIR) --jekyll-cmd '$(JEKYLL_BUILD)'
add-yaml-front-matter:
Description: This adds yaml-front-matter to the head of (md, yml, & yaml) files to help beautify github docs. Intended to be used with github-docs-cookiecutter
$ nm-build add-yaml-front-matter < Directory > --project < Project Name >
🍪 Template (nm-templates)
Description: nm-templates tools.
Note: github-docs-cookiecutter will either be moved to cc-templates or be added to cc-templates as a submodule.
Sub-commands: (generate)
Generate:
Description: This is for custom Cookiecutter template (cc-templates) that utilizes ccmeta.toml files to organize projects.
Note: This feature is still in development. (Use at your own risk!!!)
Arguments:
- repo: Path to the template repository to generate README.md and Makefile
$ nm-templates generate $(repo)
Development Strategy:
🐍️ Build environment (.venv)
Description: This creates python virtual environment and installs all necessary packages.
$ make install
CI/CD Checklist: 🧬 + 🛡️ + 🎨 + 🔍 + 🎓 + 🧠 + 🧪
Description: Runs all checks that are used for CI/CD. This should pass without error before attempting a pull-request.
Note: All Makefile commands are used in CI/CD to ensure that if they pass locally they should also pass once pushed to github.
$ make pre-commit
🧪 📢 Test Release Project (Test PyPi):
Description: This runs the entire build cycle and results in a new test release to test.pypi.
$ make test-release
📢 Release Project (Github & PyPi):
Description: This runs the entire build cycle and results in a new release to Github and Pypi. Project is also versioned up after release has been published.
$ make release
Make Toolkit (Individual Commands):
🧬 Dependency Management (deptry)
$ make dependency-check
🛡️ Security Audit (pip-audit)
$ make security
🎨 Formatting (black)
$ make format-check
$ make format-fix
🔍 Linting (ruff, toml, & yaml-lint)
$ make lint-check
$ make lint-fix
🎓 Spellchecking (codespell)
$ make spellcheck
🧠 Typechecking (mypy)
$ make typecheck
🧪 Testing (pytest)
$ make test
📦 Building (build)
$ make build
🚀 Publishing (Twine + Github)
$ make publish
🔖 Version Bumping (bumpy-my-version)
$ make bump-version-patch
❓ Build Help
$ make help
Commit Help:
Note: Commits are required to be conventional git commit message. This helps with the auto-generation of the changelog files and is enforced by pre-commit.
example:
<type>[optional scope]: <description>
[optional body]
[optional footer(s)]
<type>: A required noun that describes the nature of the change.[optional scope]: An optional phrase within parentheses that specifies the part of the codebase being affected (e.g., fix(parser):).<description>: A required short, imperative-mood summary of the changes.[optional body]: A longer description providing additional context and “what and why” details.[optional footer(s)]: Used for adding meta-information, such as issue references (Fixes #123) or indicating breaking changes.
Requirements:
Python 3.11
$ sudo apt install python3.11
Note: I found that it is easiest to use rustup to manage rustc and cargo but this is not required.
Example: Install rustup with the following:
$ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
Note: git-cliff can generate changelog files from the Git history by utilizing conventional commits as well as regex-powered custom parsers.
$ cargo install git-cliff
🍹Authors Notes:
Their fundamental design flaws are completely hidden by their superficial design flaws.
TODO’s:
- cc-templates/ccindex.toml
- create/update this file using the individual ccmeta.toml files in cc-templates
- Finish updating this.readme with command usage.
- Readme
make readmeshould end up being a ci/cd process to ensure it is always up to date. - Thinking about adding a ci/cd process for version bumping. To create a git tag.
Future Design Decisions:
- I need to decide whether to change all my current Cookiecutter projects to use the prefix
cc-and use them as submodules within the cc-templates repository. Or to just move the code directly into the cc-templates repository and use it as a monolithic repo.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Filter files by name, interpreter, ABI, and platform.
If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.
Copy a direct link to the current filters
File details
Details for the file nutri_matic-0.1.6.tar.gz.
File metadata
- Download URL: nutri_matic-0.1.6.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 34.6 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.11.0rc1
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
da67a0e60ff289bd28d7fd35dd5440ec6c750b62687dc7e55e6833c761d40ed9
|
|
| MD5 |
571c9b9c22f6c5534450ffe99593a713
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
3953d0b4a0f5e04c9fb7d681ba9f2688cf5fee8e2de4e9277ba5a9634e88f680
|
File details
Details for the file nutri_matic-0.1.6-py3-none-any.whl.
File metadata
- Download URL: nutri_matic-0.1.6-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 47.7 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.11.0rc1
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
1f30a7d9e11c5bb3cc808120313a4f63a3e952cca31058fc8fe9abd103aab498
|
|
| MD5 |
b382850a4c6bc920fb4c39596235bcbf
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
b77e43f88dda548bf317852ec3114039c07f31caa59c544b1c349e59b90f2f18
|