====================== ``py/bin/`` scripts ====================== The py-lib contains some scripts, most of which are small ones (apart from ``py.test``) that help during the python development process. If working from a svn-checkout of py lib you may add ``py/bin`` to your shell ``PATH`` which should make the scripts available on your command prompt. ``py.test`` =========== The ``py.test`` executable is the main entry point into the py-lib testing tool, see the `py.test documentation`_. .. _`py.test documentation`: test/index.html ``py.cleanup`` ============== Usage: ``py.cleanup [PATH]`` Delete pyc file recursively, starting from ``PATH`` (which defaults to the current working directory). Don't follow links and don't recurse into directories with a ".". ``py.countloc`` =============== Usage: ``py.countloc [PATHS]`` Count (non-empty) lines of python code and number of python files recursively starting from a ``PATHS`` given on the command line (starting from the current working directory). Distinguish between test files and normal ones and report them separately. ``py.lookup`` ============= Usage: ``py.lookup SEARCH_STRING [options]`` Looks recursively at Python files for a ``SEARCH_STRING``, starting from the present working directory. Prints the line, with the filename and line-number prepended. ``py.rest`` =========== Usage: ``py.rest [PATHS] [options]`` [deprecated in 1.0, will likely be separated] Loot recursively for .txt files starting from ``PATHS`` and convert them to html using docutils or to pdf files, if the ``--pdf`` option is used. For conversion to PDF you will need several command line tools, on Ubuntu Linux this is **texlive** and **texlive-extra-utils**. ``py.rest`` has some extra features over rst2html (which is shipped with docutils). Most of these are still experimental, the one which is most likely not going to change is the `graphviz`_ directive. With that you can embed .dot files into your document and have them be converted to png (when outputting html) and to eps (when outputting pdf). Otherwise the directive works mostly like the image directive:: .. graphviz:: example.dot :scale: 90 .. _`graphviz`: http://www.graphviz.org