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Project description

# project_sketch

A nerd’s boilerplate for your Python project.

## Usage

`bash $ cp -r project_sketch <your_projects_name> $ cd <your_projects_name> $ mv project_sketch <your_projects_name> `

And change every project_sketch word into <your_projects_name>.

## Hierarchy

` project_sketch ├── project_sketch │   ├── _module │   │   └── __init__.py │   └── __init__.py ├── .gitignore ├── setup.py ├── Makefile ├── manage.py ├── requirements.txt ├── dev-requirements.txt └── README.md `

## Explanation

  • project_sketch/

    The Python package of this project, mostly has the same name with root folder

  • project_sketch/__init__.py

    Essential file to claim a package, contains __version__ variable.

  • project_sketch/_module/

    A submodule of the project, there’s also a necessary __init__.py under it.

    you can cp _module whatever-you-like to create a new submodule.

  • .gitignore

    Simple, effective gitignore, much less verbose than [this windbag](https://github.com/github/gitignore/blob/master/Python.gitignore)

  • setup.py

    You may hate it, but you can’t ignore it. This setup.py does just what you want, and it automatically involves requirements.txt and README.md.

    If you rock, go and dig [this](https://pinboard.in/u:reorx/t:python/t:packaging).

  • Makefile

    We love Makefile, not Rakefile nor Gruntfile nor whatever requires extra program. This awesome Makefile contains three commands at your service:

    • make build

      Build Python package with setup.py.

    • make clean

      Clean files & folders generated by build.

    • make test

      Run tests (if you have any) with nose.

  • manage.py

    Try pip install click & ./manage.py ping to see how it works.

    If you are writing something that needs to run in a complicated way, and you realize that this sort of code should not be put in the package, this is what you need. manage.py is an entrance script which you can customize your own command in it. By default, it uses [click](http://click.pocoo.org/3/) to define commands & options, you can replace it by other things like [docopt](http://docopt.org/), or [fabric](http://www.fabfile.org/) (the file should be named fabfile.py then), if you prefer.

    If you are writing a pure import-only package, feel free to remove it.

  • requirements.txt

    Includes a click by default, this file contains packages your project depends on.

  • dev-requirements.txt

    Includes a nose by default, this file contains packages you need in developing environment, which are not necessary in production.

  • README.md

    A cute, well formatted README.md makes people happy. (True heros love README.rst :).

## Questions and Answers

Q: Why there’s no MANIFEST.in file in the directory?

Q: Why there’s no setup.cfg file in the directory?

Q: How to build and publish a distribution?

Q: Should I use wheel as my distribution format?

> Could be answered from http://python-packaging-user-guide.readthedocs.org/en/latest/distributing/

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