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This commit make it clearer, from the filenames and titles, what the extension tutorials are intended to teach.
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238 lines
8.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _tutorial-adding-domain:
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Adding a reference domain
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=========================
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The objective of this tutorial is to illustrate roles, directives and domains.
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Once complete, we will be able to use this extension to describe a recipe and
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reference that recipe from elsewhere in our documentation.
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.. note::
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This tutorial is based on a guide first published on `opensource.com`_ and
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is provided here with the original author's permission.
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.. _opensource.com: https://opensource.com/article/18/11/building-custom-workflows-sphinx
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Overview
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--------
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We want the extension to add the following to Sphinx:
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* A ``recipe`` :term:`directive`, containing some content describing the recipe
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steps, along with a ``:contains:`` option highlighting the main ingredients
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of the recipe.
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* A ``ref`` :term:`role`, which provides a cross-reference to the recipe
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itself.
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* A ``recipe`` :term:`domain`, which allows us to tie together the above role
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and domain, along with things like indices.
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For that, we will need to add the following elements to Sphinx:
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* A new directive called ``recipe``
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* New indexes to allow us to reference ingredient and recipes
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* A new domain called ``recipe``, which will contain the ``recipe`` directive
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and ``ref`` role
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Prerequisites
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-------------
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We need the same setup as in
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:ref:`the previous extensions <tutorial-extend-build>`.
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This time,
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we will be putting out extension in a file called :file:`recipe.py`.
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Here is an example of the folder structure you might obtain:
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.. code-block:: text
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└── source
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├── _ext
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│ └── recipe.py
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├── conf.py
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└── index.rst
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Writing the extension
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---------------------
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Open :file:`recipe.py` and paste the following code in it, all of which we will
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explain in detail shortly:
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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Let's look at each piece of this extension step-by-step to explain what's going
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on.
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.. rubric:: The directive class
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The first thing to examine is the ``RecipeDirective`` directive:
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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:pyobject: RecipeDirective
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Unlike :ref:`tutorial-extending-syntax` and :ref:`tutorial-extend-build`,
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this directive doesn't derive from
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:class:`docutils.parsers.rst.Directive` and doesn't define a ``run`` method.
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Instead, it derives from :class:`sphinx.directives.ObjectDescription` and
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defines ``handle_signature`` and ``add_target_and_index`` methods. This is
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because ``ObjectDescription`` is a special-purpose directive that's intended
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for describing things like classes, functions, or, in our case, recipes. More
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specifically, ``handle_signature`` implements parsing the signature of the
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directive and passes on the object's name and type to its superclass, while
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``add_target_and_index`` adds a target (to link to) and an entry to the index
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for this node.
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We also see that this directive defines ``has_content``, ``required_arguments``
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and ``option_spec``. Unlike the ``TodoDirective`` directive added in the
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:ref:`previous tutorial <tutorial-extend-build>`,
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this directive takes a single argument,
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the recipe name, and an option, ``contains``,
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in addition to the nested reStructuredText in the body.
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.. rubric:: The index classes
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.. currentmodule:: sphinx.domains
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.. todo:: Add brief overview of indices
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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:pyobject: IngredientIndex
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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:pyobject: RecipeIndex
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Both ``IngredientIndex`` and ``RecipeIndex`` are derived from :class:`Index`.
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They implement custom logic to generate a tuple of values that define the
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index. Note that ``RecipeIndex`` is a simple index that has only one entry.
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Extending it to cover more object types is not yet part of the code.
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Both indices use the method :meth:`Index.generate` to do their work. This
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method combines the information from our domain, sorts it, and returns it in a
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list structure that will be accepted by Sphinx. This might look complicated but
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all it really is is a list of tuples like ``('tomato', 'TomatoSoup', 'test',
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'rec-TomatoSoup',...)``. Refer to the :doc:`domain API guide
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</extdev/domainapi>` for more information on this API.
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These index pages can be referenced with the :rst:role:`ref` role by combining
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the domain name and the index ``name`` value. For example, ``RecipeIndex`` can be
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referenced with ``:ref:`recipe-recipe``` and ``IngredientIndex`` can be referenced
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with ``:ref:`recipe-ingredient```.
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.. rubric:: The domain
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A Sphinx domain is a specialized container that ties together roles,
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directives, and indices, among other things. Let's look at the domain we're
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creating here.
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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:pyobject: RecipeDomain
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There are some interesting things to note about this ``recipe`` domain and domains
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in general. Firstly, we actually register our directives, roles and indices
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here, via the ``directives``, ``roles`` and ``indices`` attributes, rather than
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via calls later on in ``setup``. We can also note that we aren't actually
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defining a custom role and are instead reusing the
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:class:`sphinx.roles.XRefRole` role and defining the
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:class:`sphinx.domains.Domain.resolve_xref` method. This method takes two
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arguments, ``typ`` and ``target``, which refer to the cross-reference type and
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its target name. We'll use ``target`` to resolve our destination from our
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domain's ``recipes`` because we currently have only one type of node.
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Moving on, we can see that we've defined ``initial_data``. The values defined in
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``initial_data`` will be copied to ``env.domaindata[domain_name]`` as the
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initial data of the domain, and domain instances can access it via
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``self.data``. We see that we have defined two items in ``initial_data``:
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``recipes`` and ``recipe_ingredients``. Each contains a list of all objects
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defined (i.e. all recipes) and a hash that maps a canonical ingredient name to
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the list of objects. The way we name objects is common across our extension and
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is defined in the ``get_full_qualified_name`` method. For each object created,
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the canonical name is ``recipe.<recipename>``, where ``<recipename>`` is the
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name the documentation writer gives the object (a recipe). This enables the
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extension to use different object types that share the same name. Having a
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canonical name and central place for our objects is a huge advantage. Both our
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indices and our cross-referencing code use this feature.
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.. rubric:: The ``setup`` function
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.. currentmodule:: sphinx.application
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:ref:`As always <tutorial-extend-build>`,
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the ``setup`` function is a requirement and is used to
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hook the various parts of our extension into Sphinx. Let's look at the
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``setup`` function for this extension.
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.. literalinclude:: examples/recipe.py
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:language: python
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:linenos:
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:pyobject: setup
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This looks a little different to what we're used to seeing. There are no calls
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to :meth:`~Sphinx.add_directive` or even :meth:`~Sphinx.add_role`. Instead, we
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have a single call to :meth:`~Sphinx.add_domain` followed by some
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initialization of the :doc:`standard domain </usage/domains/standard>`.
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This is because we had already registered our directives,
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roles and indexes as part of the directive itself.
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Using the extension
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-------------------
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You can now use the extension throughout your project. For example:
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.. code-block:: rst
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:caption: index.rst
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Joe's Recipes
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=============
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Below are a collection of my favourite recipes. I highly recommend the
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:recipe:ref:`TomatoSoup` recipe in particular!
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.. toctree::
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tomato-soup
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.. code-block:: rst
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:caption: tomato-soup.rst
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The recipe contains `tomato` and `cilantro`.
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.. recipe:recipe:: TomatoSoup
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:contains: tomato, cilantro, salt, pepper
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This recipe is a tasty tomato soup, combine all ingredients
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and cook.
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The important things to note are the use of the ``:recipe:ref:`` role to
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cross-reference the recipe actually defined elsewhere (using the
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``:recipe:recipe:`` directive).
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Further reading
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---------------
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For more information, refer to the `docutils`_ documentation and
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:doc:`/extdev/index`.
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If you wish to share your extension across multiple projects or with others,
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check out the :ref:`third-party-extensions` section.
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.. _docutils: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/
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