File modules/editor/codemirror/mode/rst/index.html

Last commit: Sun Dec 17 01:14:09 2017 +0100	Jan Dankert	Integration eines weiteren Code-Editors: Codemirror. Demnächst müssen wir hier mal aufräumen und andere Editoren rauswerfen.
1 <!doctype html> 2 3 <title>CodeMirror: reStructuredText mode</title> 4 <meta charset="utf-8"/> 5 <link rel=stylesheet href="../../doc/docs.css"> 6 7 <link rel="stylesheet" href="../../lib/codemirror.css"> 8 <script src="../../lib/codemirror.js"></script> 9 <script src="../../addon/mode/overlay.js"></script> 10 <script src="rst.js"></script> 11 <style type="text/css">.CodeMirror {border-top: 1px solid black; border-bottom: 1px solid black;}</style> 12 <div id=nav> 13 <a href="http://codemirror.net"><h1>CodeMirror</h1><img id=logo src="../../doc/logo.png"></a> 14 15 <ul> 16 <li><a href="../../index.html">Home</a> 17 <li><a href="../../doc/manual.html">Manual</a> 18 <li><a href="https://github.com/codemirror/codemirror">Code</a> 19 </ul> 20 <ul> 21 <li><a href="../index.html">Language modes</a> 22 <li><a class=active href="#">reStructuredText</a> 23 </ul> 24 </div> 25 26 <article> 27 <h2>reStructuredText mode</h2> 28 <form><textarea id="code" name="code"> 29 .. This is an excerpt from Sphinx documentation: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/_sources/rest.txt 30 31 .. highlightlang:: rest 32 33 .. _rst-primer: 34 35 reStructuredText Primer 36 ======================= 37 38 This section is a brief introduction to reStructuredText (reST) concepts and 39 syntax, intended to provide authors with enough information to author documents 40 productively. Since reST was designed to be a simple, unobtrusive markup 41 language, this will not take too long. 42 43 .. seealso:: 44 45 The authoritative `reStructuredText User Documentation 46 &lt;http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html&gt;`_. The "ref" links in this 47 document link to the description of the individual constructs in the reST 48 reference. 49 50 51 Paragraphs 52 ---------- 53 54 The paragraph (:duref:`ref &lt;paragraphs&gt;`) is the most basic block in a reST 55 document. Paragraphs are simply chunks of text separated by one or more blank 56 lines. As in Python, indentation is significant in reST, so all lines of the 57 same paragraph must be left-aligned to the same level of indentation. 58 59 60 .. _inlinemarkup: 61 62 Inline markup 63 ------------- 64 65 The standard reST inline markup is quite simple: use 66 67 * one asterisk: ``*text*`` for emphasis (italics), 68 * two asterisks: ``**text**`` for strong emphasis (boldface), and 69 * backquotes: ````text```` for code samples. 70 71 If asterisks or backquotes appear in running text and could be confused with 72 inline markup delimiters, they have to be escaped with a backslash. 73 74 Be aware of some restrictions of this markup: 75 76 * it may not be nested, 77 * content may not start or end with whitespace: ``* text*`` is wrong, 78 * it must be separated from surrounding text by non-word characters. Use a 79 backslash escaped space to work around that: ``thisis\ *one*\ word``. 80 81 These restrictions may be lifted in future versions of the docutils. 82 83 reST also allows for custom "interpreted text roles"', which signify that the 84 enclosed text should be interpreted in a specific way. Sphinx uses this to 85 provide semantic markup and cross-referencing of identifiers, as described in 86 the appropriate section. The general syntax is ``:rolename:`content```. 87 88 Standard reST provides the following roles: 89 90 * :durole:`emphasis` -- alternate spelling for ``*emphasis*`` 91 * :durole:`strong` -- alternate spelling for ``**strong**`` 92 * :durole:`literal` -- alternate spelling for ````literal```` 93 * :durole:`subscript` -- subscript text 94 * :durole:`superscript` -- superscript text 95 * :durole:`title-reference` -- for titles of books, periodicals, and other 96 materials 97 98 See :ref:`inline-markup` for roles added by Sphinx. 99 100 101 Lists and Quote-like blocks 102 --------------------------- 103 104 List markup (:duref:`ref &lt;bullet-lists&gt;`) is natural: just place an asterisk at 105 the start of a paragraph and indent properly. The same goes for numbered lists; 106 they can also be autonumbered using a ``#`` sign:: 107 108 * This is a bulleted list. 109 * It has two items, the second 110 item uses two lines. 111 112 1. This is a numbered list. 113 2. It has two items too. 114 115 #. This is a numbered list. 116 #. It has two items too. 117 118 119 Nested lists are possible, but be aware that they must be separated from the 120 parent list items by blank lines:: 121 122 * this is 123 * a list 124 125 * with a nested list 126 * and some subitems 127 128 * and here the parent list continues 129 130 Definition lists (:duref:`ref &lt;definition-lists&gt;`) are created as follows:: 131 132 term (up to a line of text) 133 Definition of the term, which must be indented 134 135 and can even consist of multiple paragraphs 136 137 next term 138 Description. 139 140 Note that the term cannot have more than one line of text. 141 142 Quoted paragraphs (:duref:`ref &lt;block-quotes&gt;`) are created by just indenting 143 them more than the surrounding paragraphs. 144 145 Line blocks (:duref:`ref &lt;line-blocks&gt;`) are a way of preserving line breaks:: 146 147 | These lines are 148 | broken exactly like in 149 | the source file. 150 151 There are also several more special blocks available: 152 153 * field lists (:duref:`ref &lt;field-lists&gt;`) 154 * option lists (:duref:`ref &lt;option-lists&gt;`) 155 * quoted literal blocks (:duref:`ref &lt;quoted-literal-blocks&gt;`) 156 * doctest blocks (:duref:`ref &lt;doctest-blocks&gt;`) 157 158 159 Source Code 160 ----------- 161 162 Literal code blocks (:duref:`ref &lt;literal-blocks&gt;`) are introduced by ending a 163 paragraph with the special marker ``::``. The literal block must be indented 164 (and, like all paragraphs, separated from the surrounding ones by blank lines):: 165 166 This is a normal text paragraph. The next paragraph is a code sample:: 167 168 It is not processed in any way, except 169 that the indentation is removed. 170 171 It can span multiple lines. 172 173 This is a normal text paragraph again. 174 175 The handling of the ``::`` marker is smart: 176 177 * If it occurs as a paragraph of its own, that paragraph is completely left 178 out of the document. 179 * If it is preceded by whitespace, the marker is removed. 180 * If it is preceded by non-whitespace, the marker is replaced by a single 181 colon. 182 183 That way, the second sentence in the above example's first paragraph would be 184 rendered as "The next paragraph is a code sample:". 185 186 187 .. _rst-tables: 188 189 Tables 190 ------ 191 192 Two forms of tables are supported. For *grid tables* (:duref:`ref 193 &lt;grid-tables&gt;`), you have to "paint" the cell grid yourself. They look like 194 this:: 195 196 +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+ 197 | Header row, column 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 | Header 4 | 198 | (header rows optional) | | | | 199 +========================+============+==========+==========+ 200 | body row 1, column 1 | column 2 | column 3 | column 4 | 201 +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+ 202 | body row 2 | ... | ... | | 203 +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+ 204 205 *Simple tables* (:duref:`ref &lt;simple-tables&gt;`) are easier to write, but 206 limited: they must contain more than one row, and the first column cannot 207 contain multiple lines. They look like this:: 208 209 ===== ===== ======= 210 A B A and B 211 ===== ===== ======= 212 False False False 213 True False False 214 False True False 215 True True True 216 ===== ===== ======= 217 218 219 Hyperlinks 220 ---------- 221 222 External links 223 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 224 225 Use ```Link text &lt;http://example.com/&gt;`_`` for inline web links. If the link 226 text should be the web address, you don't need special markup at all, the parser 227 finds links and mail addresses in ordinary text. 228 229 You can also separate the link and the target definition (:duref:`ref 230 &lt;hyperlink-targets&gt;`), like this:: 231 232 This is a paragraph that contains `a link`_. 233 234 .. _a link: http://example.com/ 235 236 237 Internal links 238 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 239 240 Internal linking is done via a special reST role provided by Sphinx, see the 241 section on specific markup, :ref:`ref-role`. 242 243 244 Sections 245 -------- 246 247 Section headers (:duref:`ref &lt;sections&gt;`) are created by underlining (and 248 optionally overlining) the section title with a punctuation character, at least 249 as long as the text:: 250 251 ================= 252 This is a heading 253 ================= 254 255 Normally, there are no heading levels assigned to certain characters as the 256 structure is determined from the succession of headings. However, for the 257 Python documentation, this convention is used which you may follow: 258 259 * ``#`` with overline, for parts 260 * ``*`` with overline, for chapters 261 * ``=``, for sections 262 * ``-``, for subsections 263 * ``^``, for subsubsections 264 * ``"``, for paragraphs 265 266 Of course, you are free to use your own marker characters (see the reST 267 documentation), and use a deeper nesting level, but keep in mind that most 268 target formats (HTML, LaTeX) have a limited supported nesting depth. 269 270 271 Explicit Markup 272 --------------- 273 274 "Explicit markup" (:duref:`ref &lt;explicit-markup-blocks&gt;`) is used in reST for 275 most constructs that need special handling, such as footnotes, 276 specially-highlighted paragraphs, comments, and generic directives. 277 278 An explicit markup block begins with a line starting with ``..`` followed by 279 whitespace and is terminated by the next paragraph at the same level of 280 indentation. (There needs to be a blank line between explicit markup and normal 281 paragraphs. This may all sound a bit complicated, but it is intuitive enough 282 when you write it.) 283 284 285 .. _directives: 286 287 Directives 288 ---------- 289 290 A directive (:duref:`ref &lt;directives&gt;`) is a generic block of explicit markup. 291 Besides roles, it is one of the extension mechanisms of reST, and Sphinx makes 292 heavy use of it. 293 294 Docutils supports the following directives: 295 296 * Admonitions: :dudir:`attention`, :dudir:`caution`, :dudir:`danger`, 297 :dudir:`error`, :dudir:`hint`, :dudir:`important`, :dudir:`note`, 298 :dudir:`tip`, :dudir:`warning` and the generic :dudir:`admonition`. 299 (Most themes style only "note" and "warning" specially.) 300 301 * Images: 302 303 - :dudir:`image` (see also Images_ below) 304 - :dudir:`figure` (an image with caption and optional legend) 305 306 * Additional body elements: 307 308 - :dudir:`contents` (a local, i.e. for the current file only, table of 309 contents) 310 - :dudir:`container` (a container with a custom class, useful to generate an 311 outer ``&lt;div&gt;`` in HTML) 312 - :dudir:`rubric` (a heading without relation to the document sectioning) 313 - :dudir:`topic`, :dudir:`sidebar` (special highlighted body elements) 314 - :dudir:`parsed-literal` (literal block that supports inline markup) 315 - :dudir:`epigraph` (a block quote with optional attribution line) 316 - :dudir:`highlights`, :dudir:`pull-quote` (block quotes with their own 317 class attribute) 318 - :dudir:`compound` (a compound paragraph) 319 320 * Special tables: 321 322 - :dudir:`table` (a table with title) 323 - :dudir:`csv-table` (a table generated from comma-separated values) 324 - :dudir:`list-table` (a table generated from a list of lists) 325 326 * Special directives: 327 328 - :dudir:`raw` (include raw target-format markup) 329 - :dudir:`include` (include reStructuredText from another file) 330 -- in Sphinx, when given an absolute include file path, this directive takes 331 it as relative to the source directory 332 - :dudir:`class` (assign a class attribute to the next element) [1]_ 333 334 * HTML specifics: 335 336 - :dudir:`meta` (generation of HTML ``&lt;meta&gt;`` tags) 337 - :dudir:`title` (override document title) 338 339 * Influencing markup: 340 341 - :dudir:`default-role` (set a new default role) 342 - :dudir:`role` (create a new role) 343 344 Since these are only per-file, better use Sphinx' facilities for setting the 345 :confval:`default_role`. 346 347 Do *not* use the directives :dudir:`sectnum`, :dudir:`header` and 348 :dudir:`footer`. 349 350 Directives added by Sphinx are described in :ref:`sphinxmarkup`. 351 352 Basically, a directive consists of a name, arguments, options and content. (Keep 353 this terminology in mind, it is used in the next chapter describing custom 354 directives.) Looking at this example, :: 355 356 .. function:: foo(x) 357 foo(y, z) 358 :module: some.module.name 359 360 Return a line of text input from the user. 361 362 ``function`` is the directive name. It is given two arguments here, the 363 remainder of the first line and the second line, as well as one option 364 ``module`` (as you can see, options are given in the lines immediately following 365 the arguments and indicated by the colons). Options must be indented to the 366 same level as the directive content. 367 368 The directive content follows after a blank line and is indented relative to the 369 directive start. 370 371 372 Images 373 ------ 374 375 reST supports an image directive (:dudir:`ref &lt;image&gt;`), used like so:: 376 377 .. image:: gnu.png 378 (options) 379 380 When used within Sphinx, the file name given (here ``gnu.png``) must either be 381 relative to the source file, or absolute which means that they are relative to 382 the top source directory. For example, the file ``sketch/spam.rst`` could refer 383 to the image ``images/spam.png`` as ``../images/spam.png`` or 384 ``/images/spam.png``. 385 386 Sphinx will automatically copy image files over to a subdirectory of the output 387 directory on building (e.g. the ``_static`` directory for HTML output.) 388 389 Interpretation of image size options (``width`` and ``height``) is as follows: 390 if the size has no unit or the unit is pixels, the given size will only be 391 respected for output channels that support pixels (i.e. not in LaTeX output). 392 Other units (like ``pt`` for points) will be used for HTML and LaTeX output. 393 394 Sphinx extends the standard docutils behavior by allowing an asterisk for the 395 extension:: 396 397 .. image:: gnu.* 398 399 Sphinx then searches for all images matching the provided pattern and determines 400 their type. Each builder then chooses the best image out of these candidates. 401 For instance, if the file name ``gnu.*`` was given and two files :file:`gnu.pdf` 402 and :file:`gnu.png` existed in the source tree, the LaTeX builder would choose 403 the former, while the HTML builder would prefer the latter. 404 405 .. versionchanged:: 0.4 406 Added the support for file names ending in an asterisk. 407 408 .. versionchanged:: 0.6 409 Image paths can now be absolute. 410 411 412 Footnotes 413 --------- 414 415 For footnotes (:duref:`ref &lt;footnotes&gt;`), use ``[#name]_`` to mark the footnote 416 location, and add the footnote body at the bottom of the document after a 417 "Footnotes" rubric heading, like so:: 418 419 Lorem ipsum [#f1]_ dolor sit amet ... [#f2]_ 420 421 .. rubric:: Footnotes 422 423 .. [#f1] Text of the first footnote. 424 .. [#f2] Text of the second footnote. 425 426 You can also explicitly number the footnotes (``[1]_``) or use auto-numbered 427 footnotes without names (``[#]_``). 428 429 430 Citations 431 --------- 432 433 Standard reST citations (:duref:`ref &lt;citations&gt;`) are supported, with the 434 additional feature that they are "global", i.e. all citations can be referenced 435 from all files. Use them like so:: 436 437 Lorem ipsum [Ref]_ dolor sit amet. 438 439 .. [Ref] Book or article reference, URL or whatever. 440 441 Citation usage is similar to footnote usage, but with a label that is not 442 numeric or begins with ``#``. 443 444 445 Substitutions 446 ------------- 447 448 reST supports "substitutions" (:duref:`ref &lt;substitution-definitions&gt;`), which 449 are pieces of text and/or markup referred to in the text by ``|name|``. They 450 are defined like footnotes with explicit markup blocks, like this:: 451 452 .. |name| replace:: replacement *text* 453 454 or this:: 455 456 .. |caution| image:: warning.png 457 :alt: Warning! 458 459 See the :duref:`reST reference for substitutions &lt;substitution-definitions&gt;` 460 for details. 461 462 If you want to use some substitutions for all documents, put them into 463 :confval:`rst_prolog` or put them into a separate file and include it into all 464 documents you want to use them in, using the :rst:dir:`include` directive. (Be 465 sure to give the include file a file name extension differing from that of other 466 source files, to avoid Sphinx finding it as a standalone document.) 467 468 Sphinx defines some default substitutions, see :ref:`default-substitutions`. 469 470 471 Comments 472 -------- 473 474 Every explicit markup block which isn't a valid markup construct (like the 475 footnotes above) is regarded as a comment (:duref:`ref &lt;comments&gt;`). For 476 example:: 477 478 .. This is a comment. 479 480 You can indent text after a comment start to form multiline comments:: 481 482 .. 483 This whole indented block 484 is a comment. 485 486 Still in the comment. 487 488 489 Source encoding 490 --------------- 491 492 Since the easiest way to include special characters like em dashes or copyright 493 signs in reST is to directly write them as Unicode characters, one has to 494 specify an encoding. Sphinx assumes source files to be encoded in UTF-8 by 495 default; you can change this with the :confval:`source_encoding` config value. 496 497 498 Gotchas 499 ------- 500 501 There are some problems one commonly runs into while authoring reST documents: 502 503 * **Separation of inline markup:** As said above, inline markup spans must be 504 separated from the surrounding text by non-word characters, you have to use a 505 backslash-escaped space to get around that. See `the reference 506 &lt;http://docutils.sf.net/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.html#inline-markup&gt;`_ 507 for the details. 508 509 * **No nested inline markup:** Something like ``*see :func:`foo`*`` is not 510 possible. 511 512 513 .. rubric:: Footnotes 514 515 .. [1] When the default domain contains a :rst:dir:`class` directive, this directive 516 will be shadowed. Therefore, Sphinx re-exports it as :rst:dir:`rst-class`. 517 </textarea></form> 518 519 <script> 520 var editor = CodeMirror.fromTextArea(document.getElementById("code"), { 521 lineNumbers: true, 522 }); 523 </script> 524 <p> 525 The <code>python</code> mode will be used for highlighting blocks 526 containing Python/IPython terminal sessions: blocks starting with 527 <code>&gt;&gt;&gt;</code> (for Python) or <code>In [num]:</code> (for 528 IPython). 529 530 Further, the <code>stex</code> mode will be used for highlighting 531 blocks containing LaTex code. 532 </p> 533 534 <p><strong>MIME types defined:</strong> <code>text/x-rst</code>.</p> 535 </article>
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History Sun, 17 Dec 2017 01:14:09 +0100 Jan Dankert Integration eines weiteren Code-Editors: Codemirror. Demnächst müssen wir hier mal aufräumen und andere Editoren rauswerfen.