Even though I wrote a literate programming tool (PyWeb) I slowly came to realize that it's not very good.
Mostly, I followed the Web/Weave world view and cribbed their markup syntax. It's not bad, but, the PyWeb markup is based on some presumptions about literate programming that were, perhaps, true with some languages, but are not true at all when working with Python.
- The source presentation order incomprehensible. To fix this, we create a literate programming document, and from that tangle the source into an order that's acceptable to the compiler, but perhaps hard to understand for people. We weave a document that's easy for people to understand.
- The source syntax may be incomprehensible. To fix this, we have fine grained substitution. The target source can be built at any level of syntax (token, line, or higher-level language construct.) We can assure that the woven document for people is written using elegant symbols even if the tangled source code uses technical gibberish.
- The woven documentation needs a lot of additional output markup. The original web/weave toolset create extensive TeX markup. Later tools reduced the markup to allow HTML or XML, minimizing the added markup in a woven document.
In Python, there's very little "boilerplate" or overhead in a module file. Also, because of very late binding, the presentation order of the source can better match reader expectations. For definitions, inter-class references mandate an order for the class statements in an inheritance hierarchy, but almost everything else is remarkably flexible.
Python syntax doesn't benefit from fine-grained web/weave techniques. It's pretty clear as written in it's normal form.
Finally, the presence of RST markup language means that a whole new meta-markup for literate programming isn't necessary.
PyLit demonstrates that an additional markup language is not helpful. RST is sufficient. PyLit is an elegant parser of RST and Python. It can reshape RST into Python as well as reshape Python into RST. Do your literate programming in either language and produce the other easily.
Enter Python 3
The problem with PyLit is that it's oriented to Python 2.4 through 2.7. How can we use PyLit for Python 3?
- Use six.py to make a single version that covers both Python2 and Python3.
- Rewrite PyLit it for Python3 and move forward.
My preference is to move forward. The backward compatibility is helpful when there's a vast user base, lots of ongoing development, and the very real possibility of bug fixes that apply to Python2 as well as Python3.
PyLit has a small user base, no real development to speak of, and a very remote possibility of backward compatible bug fixes.
The rewrites are small. Here's the summary.
- Remove print statement and exec statements.
- Replace string formatting % with .format().
- Replace raise statements and except statements with Python3 (and Python2.7) syntax.
- Upgrade for dict method changes in Python3.
- Replace DefaultDict with collections.defaultdict.
- Replace optparse with argparse.
I've done this in my Python3.2 installation.
This doesn't address the Sphinx documentation, however, which should probably be tweaked to be the latest and greatest Sphinx version, also. Not much will change, there, however, since the RST remains compatible.
Also, it doesn't address the files with names that differ only in case. There are two graphics files in the /trunk/rstdocs/logo/ path that differ only in case of letters. Bad, but acceptable for Linux. Fatal for Mac OS X with the default filesystem.
The question is, what's the polite way to proceed?
- Fork the PyLit 0.7.5 to create PyLit3 release 1.0? A whole, new project.
- Try to use six.py to create a 2-3 compatible source file and call this PyLit 0.8?
Adding six.py to a package that was a single module file seems like a bit of overkill. One of the elegant features of PyLit was that it was so simple, it didn't even have a setup.py. However, there may be a community of staunchly Python2 literate programming advocates.