A Python package to create XForms for ODK Collect.
Project description
pyxform is a Python library that simplifies writing forms for ODK Collect and Enketo by converting spreadsheets that follow the XLSForm standard into ODK XForms. The XLSForms format is used in a number of tools.
Project status
pyxform is actively maintained by ODK.
Current goals for the project include:
Enable more complex workflows through sophisticated XPath expressions and entities
Improve error messages and make troubleshooting easier
Improve experience, particularly for multi-language forms
pyxform was started at the Sustainable Engineering Lab at Columbia University, and until 2018 was maintained primarily by Ona.
Using pyxform
For user support, please start by posting to the ODK forum where your question will get the most visibility.
There are 3 main ways that pyxform is used:
Through a form server, such as the pyxform-http service wrapper, or ODK Central.
The command line utility xls2xform, which can be helpful for troubleshooting or as part of a broader form creation pipeline.
As a library, meaning that another python project imports functionality from pyxform.
Running the latest release of pyxform
To convert forms at the command line, the latest official release of pyxform can be installed using pip:
pip install pyxform
The xls2xform command can then be used:
xls2xform path_to_XLSForm [output_path]
The currently supported Python versions for pyxform are 3.10, 3.11 and 3.12.
Running pyxform from local source
Note that you must uninstall any globally installed pyxform instance in order to use local modules. Please install java 8 or newer version.
From the command line, complete the following. These steps use a virtualenv to make dependency management easier, and to keep the global site-packages directory clean:
# Get a copy of the repository. mkdir -P ~/repos/pyxform cd ~/repos/pyxform git clone https://github.com/XLSForm/pyxform.git repo # Create and activate a virtual environment for the install. /usr/local/bin/python3.10 -m venv venv . venv/bin/activate # Install the pyxform and it's production dependencies. (venv)$ cd repo # If this doesn't work, upgrade pip ``pip install --upgrade pip`` and retry. (venv)$ pip install -e . (venv)$ python pyxform/xls2xform.py --help (venv)$ xls2xform --help # same effect as previous line (venv)$ which xls2xform # ~/repos/pyxform/venv/bin/xls2xform
To leave and return to the virtualenv:
(venv)$ deactivate # leave the venv, scripts not on $PATH $ xls2xform --help # -bash: xls2xform: command not found $ . ~/repos/pyxform/venv/bin/activate # reactivate the venv (venv)$ which xls2xform # scripts available on $PATH again ~/repos/pyxform/venv/bin/xls2xform
Installing pyxform from remote source
pip can install from the GitHub repository. Only do this if you want to install from the master branch, which is likely to have pre-release code. To install the latest release, see above.:
pip install git+https://github.com/XLSForm/pyxform.git@master#egg=pyxform
You can then run xls2xform from the commandline:
xls2xform path_to_XLSForm [output_path]
Development
To set up for development / contributing, first complete the above steps for “Running pyxform from local source”. Then repeat the command used to install pyxform, but with [dev] appended to the end, e.g.:
pip install -e .[dev]
You can run tests with:
python -m unittest
Before committing, make sure to format and lint the code using ruff:
ruff format pyxform tests ruff check pyxform tests
If you are using a copy of ruff outside your virtualenv, make sure it is the same version as listed in pyproject.toml. Use the project configuration for ruff in pyproject.toml, which occurs automatically if ruff is run from the project root (where pyproject.toml is).
Contributions
We welcome contributions that have a clearly-stated goal and are tightly focused. In general, successful contributions will first be discussed on the ODK forum or in an issue. We prefer discussion threads on the ODK forum because pyxform issues generally involve considerations for other tools and specifications in ODK and its broader ecosystem. Opening up an issue or a pull request directly may be appropriate if there is a clear bug or an issue that only affects pyxform developers.
Writing tests
Make sure to include tests for the changes you’re working on. When writing new tests you should add them in tests folder. Add to an existing test module, or create a new test module. Test modules are named after the corresponding source file, or if the tests concern many files then module name is the topic or feature under test.
When creating new test cases, where possible use PyxformTestCase as a base class instead of unittest.TestCase. The PyxformTestCase is a toolkit for writing XLSForms as MarkDown tables, compiling example XLSForms, and making assertions on the resulting XForm. This makes code review much easier by putting the XLSForm content inline with the test, instead of in a separate file. A unittest.TestCase may be used if the new tests do not involve compiling an XLSForm (but most will). Do not add new tests using the old style XFormTestCase.
When writing new PyxformTestCase tests that make content assertions, it is strongly recommended that the xml__xpath* matchers are used, in particular xml__xpath_match. Most older tests use matchers like xml__contains and xml__excludes, which are simple string matches of XML snippets against the result XForm. The xml__xpath_match kwarg accepts an XPath expression and expects 1 match. The main benefits of using XPath are 1) it allows specifying a document location, and 2) it does not require a particular document order for elements or attributes or whitespace output. To take full advantage of 1), the XPath expressions should specify the full document path (e.g. /h:html/h:head/x:model) rather than a search (e.g. .//x:model). To take full advantage of 2), the expression should include element predicates that specify the expected attribute values, e.g. /h:html/h:body/x:input[@ref='/trigger-column/a']. To specify the absence of an element, an expression like the following may be used with xml__xpath_match: /h:html[not(descendant::x:input)], or alternatively xml__xpath_count: .//x:input with an expected count of 0 (zero).
Documentation
For developers, pyxform uses docstrings, type annotations, and test cases. Most modern IDEs can display docstrings and type annotations in a easily navigable format, so no additional docs are compiled (e.g. sphinx). In addition to the user documentation, developers should be familiar with the ODK XForms Specification https://getodk.github.io/xforms-spec/.
For users, pyxform has documentation at the following locations: * XLSForm docs * XLSForm template * ODK Docs
Change Log
Releasing pyxform
Make sure the version of ODK Validate in the repo is up-to-date:
pyxform_validator_update odk update ODK-Validate-vx.x.x.jar
Run all tests through Validate by setting the default for run_odk_validate to True in tests/pyxform_test_case.py.
Draft a new GitHub release with the list of merged PRs. Follow the title and description pattern of the previous release.
Checkout a release branch from latest upstream master.
Update CHANGES.txt with the text of the draft release.
Update pyproject.toml, pyxform/__init__.py with the new release version number.
Commit, push the branch, and initiate a pull request. Wait for tests to pass, then merge the PR.
Tag the release and it will automatically be published
Manually releasing
Releases are now automatic. These instructions are provided for forks or for a future change in process.
In a clean new release only directory, check out master.
Create a new virtualenv in this directory to ensure a clean Python environment:
/usr/local/bin/python3.10 -m venv pyxform-release . pyxform-release/bin/activate
Install the production and packaging requirements:
pip install -e . pip install flit==3.9.0
Clean up build and dist folders:
rm -rf build dist pyxform.egg-info
Prepare sdist and bdist_wheel distributions, and publish to PyPI:
flit --debug publish --no-use-vcs
Tag the GitHub release and publish it.
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