A package to author, build, and deploy PreTeXt projects.
Project description
PreTeXt-CLI
A package for authoring and building PreTeXt documents.
Documentation and examples for authors/publishers
Most documentation for PreTeXt authors and publishers is available at:
Authors and publishers may also find the examples catalog useful as well:
We have a few notes below (TODO: publish these in the Guide).
Installation
Installing Python
PreTeXt-CLI requires the Python version specified in pyproject.toml
.
To check your version, type this into your terminal or command prompt:
python -V
If your version is 2.x, try this instead
(and if so, replace all future references to python
in these instructions with python3
).
python3 -V
If you don't have a compatible Python available, try one of these:
- https://www.python.org/downloads/
- Windows warning: Be sure to select the option adding Python to your Path.
- https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv#installation (Mac/Linux)
- https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win#installation (Windows)
Installing PreTeXt-CLI
Once you've confirmed that you're using a valid version of Python, just
run (replacing python
with python3
if necessary):
python -m pip install --user pretext
(It's possible you will get an error like
error: invalid command 'bdist_wheel'
— good news, you can ignore it!)
After installation, try to run:
pretext --help
If that works, great! Otherwise, it likely means that Python packages
aren't available on your “PATH”. In that case, replace all pretext
commands with python -m pretext
instead:
python -m pretext --help
Either way, you're now ready to use the CLI, the --help
option will explain how to use all the different
subcommands like pretext new
and pretext build
.
External dependencies
We install as much as we can with the pip install
command, but depending on your machine
you may require some extra software:
Upgrading PreTeXt-CLI
If you have an existing installation and you want to upgrade to a more recent version, you can run:
python -m pip install --upgrade pretext
Custom XSL
Custom XSL is not encouraged for most authors, but (for example) developers working
bleeding-edge XSL from core PreTeXt may want to call XSL different from that
which is shipped with a fixed version of the CLI. This may be accomplished by
adding an <xsl/>
element to your target with a relative (to project.ptx
) or
absolute path to the desired XSL. (Note: this XSL must only import
other XSL files in the same directory or within subdirectories.)
For example:
<target name="html">
<format>html</format>
<source>source/main.ptx</source>
<publication>publication/publication.ptx</publication>
<output-dir>output/html</output-dir>
<xsl>../pretext/xsl/pretext-html.xsl</xsl>
</target>
If your custom XSL file needs to import the XSL
shipped with the CLI (e.g. pretext-common.xsl
), then use a ./core/
prefix in your custom XSL's xsl:import@href
as follows:
<xsl:import href="./core/pretext-common.xsl"/>
Similarly, entities.ent
may be used:
<!DOCTYPE xsl:stylesheet [
<!ENTITY % entities SYSTEM "./core/entities.ent">
%entities;
]>
Note: previously this was achieved with a pretext-href
attribute - this is now deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
Development
Note. The remainder of this documentation is intended only for those interested in contributing to the development of this project. Anyone who simply wishes to use the PreTeXt-CLI can stop reading here.
From the "Clone or Download" button on GitHub, copy the REPO_URL
into the below
command to clone the project.
git clone [REPO_URL]
cd pretext-cli
Using a valid Python installation
Developers and contributors must install a
version of Python that matching the requirements in pyproject.toml
.
Installing dependencies
Optional: use pyenv as a virtual environment
The pyenv
tool for Linux automates the process of running the correct
version of Python when working on this project (even if you have
other versions of Python installed on your system).
Run the following, replacing PYTHON_VERSION
with your desired version.
pyenv install PYTHON_VERSION
Steps on Windows
In windows, you can either use the bash shell and follow the directions above,
or try pyenv-win. In
the latter case, make sure to follow all the installation instructions, including
the Finish the installation. Then proceed to follow the directions above to
install a version of python matching pyproject.toml
. Finally, you may then need
to manually add that version of python to your path.
The first time you set up your development environment, you should follow these steps:
-
Follow these instructions to install
poetry
.- https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation
- Note 2022/06/21: you may ignore "This installer is deprecated". See python-poetry/poetry/issues/4128
- https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation
-
Install dependencies into a virtual environment with this command.
poetry install
-
Fetch a copy of the core pretext library and bundle templates by running
poetry run python scripts/fetch_core.py
The last command above should also be run when returning to development after some time, since the core commit you develop against might have changed.
Make sure you are in a poetry shell
during development mode so that you
execute the development version of pretext-cli
rather than the system-installed
version.
pretext --version # returns system version
poetry shell
pretext --version # returns version being developed
When inside a poetry shell
you can navegate to other folders and run pretext commands. Doing so will use the current development environment version of pretext.
Updating dependencies
Show instructions
To add dependencies for the package, runpoetry add DEPENDENCY-NAME
If someone else has added a dependency:
poetry install
Using a local copy of PreTeXtBook/pretext
Formatting code before a commit
All .py
files are formatted with the black
python formatter and checked by flake8.
Proper formatting is enforced by checks in the Continuous Integration framework.
Before you commit code, you should make sure it is formatted with black
and
passes flake8
by running the following commands (on linux or mac)
from the root project folder (most likely pretext-cli
).
poetry run black .
poetry run flake8
Testing
Sets are contained in tests/
. To run all tests:
poetry run pytest
To run a specific test, say test_name
inside test_file.py
:
poetry run pytest -k name
Tests are automatically run by GitHub Actions when pushing to identify regressions.
Packaging
To check if a successful build is possible:
poetry run python scripts/build_package.py
To publish a new alpha release, first add/commit any changes. Then the following handles bumping versions, publishing to PyPI, and associated Git management.
poetry run python scripts/release_alpha.py
Publishing a stable release is similar:
poetry run python scripts/release_stable.py # patch +0.+0.+1
poetry run python scripts/release_stable.py minor # +0.+1.0
poetry run python scripts/release_stable.py major # +1.0.0
About
PreTeXt-CLI Team
- Oscar Levin is co-creator and lead developer of PreTeXt-CLI.
- Steven Clontz is co-creator and a regular contributor of PreTeXt-CLI.
- Development of PreTeXt-CLI would not be possible without the frequent contributions of the wider PreTeXt-Runestone Open Source Ecosystem.
A note and special thanks
A pretext
package unrelated to the PreTeXtBook.org project was released on PyPI
several years ago by Alex Willmer. We are grateful for his willingness to transfer
this namespace to us.
As such, versions of this project before 1.0 are released on PyPI under the
name pretextbook
, while versions 1.0 and later are released as pretext
.
About PreTeXt
The development of PreTeXt's core is led by Rob Beezer.
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