Python main documentation -- in Latex ------------------------------------- This directory contains the Latex sources to the Python documentation. The Python Reference Manual is no longer maintained in Latex. It is now a FrameMaker document. The FrameMaker 5.0 files (ref.book, ref*.doc) as well as PostScript generated (ref.ps) from it are in the subdirectory ref/. (See ftp://ftp.adobe.com/pub/adobe/framereader for a free reader for FrameMaker documents, for some platforms.) Many thanks to Robin Friedrich for the conversion of the Reference Manual to FrameMaker and his work on its index. If you don't have Latex, you can ftp a tar file containing PostScript of all documents. It should be in the same place where you fetched the main Python distribution (try http://www.python.org or ftp://ftp.python.org). The following are the Latex source files: tut.tex The tutorial lib.tex, lib*.tex The library reference ext.tex How to extend Python api.tex Reference for the Python/C API All use the style option file "myformat.sty". This contains some macro definitions and sets some style parameters. You need the makeindex utility to produce the index for lib.tex. There's a Makefile to call Latex and the other utilities in the right order and the right number of times. This will produce DVI files for each document made; to preview them, use xdvi. PostScript is produced by the same Makefile target that produces the DVI files. This uses the dvips tool. Printing depends on local conventions; at my site, I use lp. For example: make lib # create lib.dvi and lib.ps xdvi lib # preview lib.dvi lp lib.ps # print on default printer Using Times fonts ----------------- As distributed, the Latex documents use the default Tex fonts (CMR). These qre quite ugly. If you have the "PSfont" Latex add-on installed, you can produce versions using Times fonts (and Courier for fixed text) by inserting "times," in the list of options in the documentstyle macro in the first line of the files lib.tex, tut.tex, ext.tex, api.tex, e.g. \documentstyle[twoside,times,myformat]{report} Making HTML files ----------------- The Latex documents can be converted to HTML using Nikos Drakos' Latex2html converter. See the Makefile; after some twiddling, "make l2h" should do the trick. For the reference manual, I use Harlequin's webmaker. I'm not very happy with it and hope that eventually FrameMaker will be able to produce HTML without third party help.