Kristof Csillag added the comment:
I have prepared a patch to build the 2.7 docs in EPUB format, too.
(Since this was already done on Python 3; this is only a very simple backport
of a few lines in a Makefile, a readme and a HTML download page.)
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keywords: +patch
nosy: +csillag
Added
Changes by Ilpo Nyyssönen i...@iki.fi:
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nosy: +biny
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James Polley jamezpol...@gmail.com added the comment:
It looks like the first release that had epub support was 1.0; docs.python.org
is still using 0.6.7, according to the footer on the bottom of the page.
I suspect that this is (A) pending the upgrade to 1.0.0, which is (B) more
difficult
Sandro Tosi sandro.t...@gmail.com added the comment:
Hello James,
please note that EPUB is already available for Python 3 documentation:
http://docs.python.org/py3k/download.html . We will probably make it available
also for 2.7 when I'll find the time to work on upgrading sphinx on 2.7
James Polley jamezpol...@gmail.com added the comment:
So http://bitbucket.org/birkenfeld/sphinx/issue/140/ has now been closed;
sphinx happily builds epub.
However, the python docs are still not available for download in epub format
from http://docs.python.org/download.html, which was the
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
In any case, this belongs in the Sphinx tracker:
http://bitbucket.org/birkenfeld/sphinx/issue/140/
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resolution: - duplicate
status: open - closed
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Keith Fahlgren ke...@oreilly.com added the comment:
I got the same impression: xhtml + extra markup for mobile readers.
ePub is indeed based heavily on XHTML 1.1 and CSS and uses a fairly
simple ZIP container. Having written DocBook-ePub tools, I'm happy to
help anyone interested in doing
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Well, the request is valid, so I'll leave this open here.
Since the format seems to me to be nothing but XHTML with a bit of extra
markup around it, it would be quite easy to write a builder for Sphinx
(by copying from the HTML help one) to do
Terry J. Reedy tjre...@udel.edu added the comment:
A few days ago, Tim O'Reilly wrote a column in Forbes
http://www.forbes.com/2009/02/22/kindle-oreilly-ebooks-technology-breakthroughs_oreilly.html
promoting epub and noting that his computer book company is starting to
use it.
I got the same
Changes by Raymond Hettinger rhettin...@users.sourceforge.net:
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nosy: +rhettinger
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New submission from wrobell wrob...@pld-linux.org:
python documentation can be downloaded in pdf format (a4, us letter),
html and text plain. they are useful for printing and computer based
viewing, but not so good to read on ebook hardware/software
(i.e. sony prs-{505,700} or stanza ebook
Senthil orsent...@gmail.com added the comment:
I got into thinking if sphinx-dev or docutils be the best place for this ticket?
Python Documentation is nothing but ReStructured text and it is
required to create a rst2epub that would convert restructured text to
epub format. If you are already
wrobell wrob...@pld-linux.org added the comment:
probably sphinx/docutils deserve their own tickets, but appropriate
tools support will not guarantee, that documentation in epub format is
going to be published on
http://docs.python.org/download.html
if documentation won't be published in
Senthil orsent...@gmail.com added the comment:
On Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 5:12 PM, wrobell rep...@bugs.python.org wrote:
probably sphinx/docutils deserve their own tickets,
I agree with your points and I would wait for Georg's call on this ticket.
It would definitely help if you have already
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