diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst | 125 |
1 files changed, 125 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst b/docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..75d916368e33 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst @@ -0,0 +1,125 @@ +========================== +Sphinx Quickstart Template +========================== + +.. sectionauthor:: Sean Silva <silvas@purdue.edu> + +Introduction and Quickstart +=========================== + +This document is meant to get you writing documentation as fast as possible +even if you have no previous experience with Sphinx. The goal is to take +someone in the state of "I want to write documentation and get it added to +LLVM's docs" and turn that into useful documentation mailed to llvm-commits +with as little nonsense as possible. + +You can find this document in ``docs/SphinxQuickstartTemplate.rst``. You +should copy it, open the new file in your text editor, write your docs, and +then send the new document to llvm-commits for review. + +Focus on *content*. It is easy to fix the Sphinx (reStructuredText) syntax +later if necessary, although reStructuredText tries to imitate common +plain-text conventions so it should be quite natural. A basic knowledge of +reStructuredText syntax is useful when writing the document, so the last +~half of this document (starting with `Example Section`_) gives examples +which should cover 99% of use cases. + +Let me say that again: focus on *content*. + +Once you have finished with the content, please send the ``.rst`` file to +llvm-commits for review. + +Guidelines +========== + +Try to answer the following questions in your first section: + +#. Why would I want to read this document? + +#. What should I know to be able to follow along with this document? + +#. What will I have learned by the end of this document? + +Common names for the first section are ``Introduction``, ``Overview``, or +``Background``. + +If possible, make your document a "how to". Give it a name ``HowTo*.rst`` +like the other "how to" documents. This format is usually the easiest +for another person to understand and also the most useful. + +You generally should not be writing documentation other than a "how to" +unless there is already a "how to" about your topic. The reason for this +is that without a "how to" document to read first, it is difficult for a +person to understand a more advanced document. + +Focus on content (yes, I had to say it again). + +The rest of this document shows example reStructuredText markup constructs +that are meant to be read by you in your text editor after you have copied +this file into a new file for the documentation you are about to write. + +Example Section +=============== + +Your text can be *emphasized*, **bold**, or ``monospace``. + +Use blank lines to separate paragraphs. + +Headings (like ``Example Section`` just above) give your document +structure. Use the same kind of adornments (e.g. ``======`` vs. ``------``) +as are used in this document. The adornment must be the same length as the +text above it. For Vim users, variations of ``yypVr=`` might be handy. + +Example Subsection +------------------ + +Make a link `like this <http://llvm.org/>`_. There is also a more +sophisticated syntax which `can be more readable`_ for longer links since +it disrupts the flow less. You can put the ``.. _`link text`: <URL>`` block +pretty much anywhere later in the document. + +.. _`can be more readable`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LLVM + +Lists can be made like this: + +#. A list starting with ``#.`` will be automatically numbered. + +#. This is a second list element. + + #. They nest too. + +You can also use unordered lists. + +* Stuff. + + + Deeper stuff. + +* More stuff. + +Example Subsubsection +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +You can make blocks of code like this: + +.. code-block:: c++ + + int main() { + return 0 + } + +For a shell session, use a ``bash`` code block: + +.. code-block:: bash + + $ echo "Goodbye cruel world!" + $ rm -rf / + +If you need to show LLVM IR use the ``llvm`` code block. + +Hopefully you won't need to be this deep +"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" + +If you need to do fancier things than what has been shown in this document, +you can mail the list or check Sphinx's `reStructuredText Primer`_. + +.. _`reStructuredText Primer`: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/rest.html |