From 1f5c9270c08a6c6392d257d3af474cd8586fde89 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zeptodoctor <44736852+zeptodoctor@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2019 08:45:01 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] build based on 65d4ebc --- dev/generated/example.ipynb | 172 +++++++++++++++---------------- dev/generated/example/index.html | 86 ++++++++-------- dev/outputformats/index.html | 4 +- 3 files changed, 131 insertions(+), 131 deletions(-) diff --git a/dev/generated/example.ipynb b/dev/generated/example.ipynb index 2957ec2..5ec21f9 100644 --- a/dev/generated/example.ipynb +++ b/dev/generated/example.ipynb @@ -187,119 +187,119 @@ "\n", "\n" @@ -529,119 +529,119 @@ "\n", "\n" diff --git a/dev/generated/example/index.html b/dev/generated/example/index.html index ed4d3db..d4e1d80 100644 --- a/dev/generated/example/index.html +++ b/dev/generated/example/index.html @@ -17,119 +17,119 @@ y2 = cos.(x) plot(x, [y1, y2]) diff --git a/dev/outputformats/index.html b/dev/outputformats/index.html index 03fe667..8cdd312 100644 --- a/dev/outputformats/index.html +++ b/dev/outputformats/index.html @@ -31,8 +31,8 @@ When adding `x` and `y` together we obtain a new rational number: ```@example name z = x + y -```
We note that lines starting with # are printed as regular markdown, and the code lines have been wrapped in @example blocks. We also note that an @meta block have been added, that sets the EditURL variable. This is used by Documenter to redirect the "Edit on GitHub" link for the page, see Interaction with Documenter.
Some of the output rendering can be controlled with keyword arguments to Literate.markdown:
Literate.markdown — Function.Literate.markdown(inputfile, outputdir; kwargs...)Generate a markdown file from inputfile and write the result to the directoryoutputdir.
Keyword arguments:
name: name of the output file, excluding .md. name is also used to name all the @example blocks, and to replace @__NAME__. Defaults to the filename of inputfile.preprocess, postprocess: custom pre- and post-processing functions, see the Custom pre- and post-processing section of the manual. Defaults to identity.documenter: boolean that tells if the output is intended to use with Documenter.jl. Defaults to true. See the the manual section on Interaction with Documenter.codefence: A Pair of opening and closing code fence. Defaults to"```@example $(name)" => "```"if documenter = true and"```julia" => "```"if documenter = false.credit: boolean that controls the addition of This file was generated with Literate.jl ... to the bottom of the page. If you find Literate.jl useful then feel free to keep this to the default, which is true.The (default) notebook output of the source snippet can be seen here: notebook.ipynb.
We note that lines starting with # are placed in markdown cells, and the code lines have been placed in code cells. By default the notebook is also executed and output cells populated. The current working directory is set to the specified output directory the notebook is executed. Some of the output rendering can be controlled with keyword arguments to Literate.notebook:
Literate.notebook — Function.Literate.notebook(inputfile, outputdir; kwargs...)Generate a notebook from inputfile and write the result to outputdir.
Keyword arguments:
name: name of the output file, excluding .ipynb. name is also used to replace @__NAME__. Defaults to the filename of inputfile.preprocess, postprocess: custom pre- and post-processing functions, see the Custom pre- and post-processing section of the manual. Defaults to identity.execute: a boolean deciding if the generated notebook should also be executed or not. Defaults to true. The current working directory is set to outputdir when executing the notebook.documenter: boolean that says if the source contains Documenter.jl specific things to filter out during notebook generation. Defaults to true. See the the manual section on Interaction with Documenter.credit: boolean that controls the addition of This file was generated with Literate.jl ... to the bottom of the page. If you find Literate.jl useful then feel free to keep this to the default, which is true.The (default) script output of the source snippet above is as follows
x = 1//3
+```We note that lines starting with # are printed as regular markdown, and the code lines have been wrapped in @example blocks. We also note that an @meta block have been added, that sets the EditURL variable. This is used by Documenter to redirect the "Edit on GitHub" link for the page, see Interaction with Documenter.
Some of the output rendering can be controlled with keyword arguments to Literate.markdown:
Literate.markdown — Function.Literate.markdown(inputfile, outputdir; kwargs...)Generate a markdown file from inputfile and write the result to the directoryoutputdir.
Keyword arguments:
name: name of the output file, excluding .md. name is also used to name all the @example blocks, and to replace @__NAME__. Defaults to the filename of inputfile.preprocess, postprocess: custom pre- and post-processing functions, see the Custom pre- and post-processing section of the manual. Defaults to identity.documenter: boolean that tells if the output is intended to use with Documenter.jl. Defaults to true. See the the manual section on Interaction with Documenter.codefence: A Pair of opening and closing code fence. Defaults to"```@example $(name)" => "```"if documenter = true and"```julia" => "```"if documenter = false.credit: boolean that controls the addition of This file was generated with Literate.jl ... to the bottom of the page. If you find Literate.jl useful then feel free to keep this to the default, which is true.The (default) notebook output of the source snippet can be seen here: notebook.ipynb.
We note that lines starting with # are placed in markdown cells, and the code lines have been placed in code cells. By default the notebook is also executed and output cells populated. The current working directory is set to the specified output directory the notebook is executed. Some of the output rendering can be controlled with keyword arguments to Literate.notebook:
Literate.notebook — Function.Literate.notebook(inputfile, outputdir; kwargs...)Generate a notebook from inputfile and write the result to outputdir.
Keyword arguments:
name: name of the output file, excluding .ipynb. name is also used to replace @__NAME__. Defaults to the filename of inputfile.preprocess, postprocess: custom pre- and post-processing functions, see the Custom pre- and post-processing section of the manual. Defaults to identity.execute: a boolean deciding if the generated notebook should also be executed or not. Defaults to true. The current working directory is set to outputdir when executing the notebook.documenter: boolean that says if the source contains Documenter.jl specific things to filter out during notebook generation. Defaults to true. See the the manual section on Interaction with Documenter.credit: boolean that controls the addition of This file was generated with Literate.jl ... to the bottom of the page. If you find Literate.jl useful then feel free to keep this to the default, which is true.The (default) script output of the source snippet above is as follows
x = 1//3
y = 2//5
-z = x + yWe note that lines starting with # are removed and only the code lines have been kept. Some of the output rendering can be controlled with keyword arguments to Literate.script:
Literate.script — Function.Literate.script(inputfile, outputdir; kwargs...)Generate a plain script file from inputfile and write the result to outputdir.
Keyword arguments:
name: name of the output file, excluding .jl. name is also used to replace @__NAME__. Defaults to the filename of inputfile.preprocess, postprocess: custom pre- and post-processing functions, see the Custom pre- and post-processing section of the manual. Defaults to identity.documenter: boolean that says if the source contains Documenter.jl specific things to filter out during script generation. Defaults to true. See the the manual section on Interaction with Documenter.keep_comments: boolean that, if set to true, keeps markdown lines as comments in the output script. Defaults to false.credit: boolean that controls the addition of This file was generated with Literate.jl ... to the bottom of the page. If you find Literate.jl useful then feel free to keep this to the default, which is true.