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An Introduction to reStructuredText
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:Contact: goodger@users.sourceforge.net
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:Revision: $Revision: 3974 $
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:Date: $Date: 2005-10-29 16:39:45 +0200 (Sat, 29 Oct 2005) $
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:Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain.
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reStructuredText_ is an easy-to-read, what-you-see-is-what-you-get
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plaintext markup syntax and parser system. It is useful for inline
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program documentation (such as Python docstrings), for quickly
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creating simple web pages, and for standalone documents.
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reStructuredText_ is a proposed revision and reinterpretation of the
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StructuredText_ and Setext_ lightweight markup systems.
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reStructuredText is designed for extensibility for specific
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application domains. Its parser is a component of Docutils_.
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This document defines the goals_ of reStructuredText and provides a
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history_ of the project. It is written using the reStructuredText
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markup, and therefore serves as an example of its use. For a gentle
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introduction to using reStructuredText, please read `A
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ReStructuredText Primer`_. The `Quick reStructuredText`_ user
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reference is also useful. The `reStructuredText Markup
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Specification`_ is the definitive reference. There is also an
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analysis of the `Problems With StructuredText`_.
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ReStructuredText's web page is
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http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html.
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.. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html
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http://www.zope.org/DevHome/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/FrontPage
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.. _Setext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/mirror/setext.html
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.. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/
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.. _A ReStructuredText Primer: ../../user/rst/quickstart.html
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.. _Quick reStructuredText: ../../user/rst/quickref.html
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.. _reStructuredText Markup Specification: restructuredtext.html
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.. _Problems with StructuredText: ../../dev/rst/problems.html
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The primary goal of reStructuredText_ is to define a markup syntax for
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use in Python docstrings and other documentation domains, that is
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readable and simple, yet powerful enough for non-trivial use. The
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intended purpose of the reStructuredText markup is twofold:
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- the establishment of a set of standard conventions allowing the
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expression of structure within plaintext, and
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- the conversion of such documents into useful structured data
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The secondary goal of reStructuredText is to be accepted by the Python
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community (by way of being blessed by PythonLabs and the BDFL [#]_) as
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a standard for Python inline documentation (possibly one of several
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standards, to account for taste).
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.. [#] Python's creator and "Benevolent Dictator For Life",
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To clarify the primary goal, here are specific design goals, in order,
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beginning with the most important:
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1. Readable. The marked-up text must be easy to read without any
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prior knowledge of the markup language. It should be as easily
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read in raw form as in processed form.
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2. Unobtrusive. The markup that is used should be as simple and
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unobtrusive as possible. The simplicity of markup constructs
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should be roughly proportional to their frequency of use. The most
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common constructs, with natural and obvious markup, should be the
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simplest and most unobtrusive. Less common constructs, for which
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there is no natural or obvious markup, should be distinctive.
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3. Unambiguous. The rules for markup must not be open for
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interpretation. For any given input, there should be one and only
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one possible output (including error output).
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4. Unsurprising. Markup constructs should not cause unexpected output
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upon processing. As a fallback, there must be a way to prevent
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unwanted markup processing when a markup construct is used in a
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non-markup context (for example, when documenting the markup syntax
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5. Intuitive. Markup should be as obvious and easily remembered as
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possible, for the author as well as for the reader. Constructs
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should take their cues from such naturally occurring sources as
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plaintext email messages, newsgroup postings, and text
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documentation such as README.txt files.
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6. Easy. It should be easy to mark up text using any ordinary text
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7. Scalable. The markup should be applicable regardless of the length
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8. Powerful. The markup should provide enough constructs to produce a
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reasonably rich structured document.
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9. Language-neutral. The markup should apply to multiple natural (as
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well as artificial) languages, not only English.
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10. Extensible. The markup should provide a simple syntax and
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interface for adding more complex general markup, and custom
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11. Output-format-neutral. The markup will be appropriate for
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processing to multiple output formats, and will not be biased
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toward any particular format.
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The design goals above were used as criteria for accepting or
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rejecting syntax, or selecting between alternatives.
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It is emphatically *not* the goal of reStructuredText to define
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docstring semantics, such as docstring contents or docstring length.
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These issues are orthogonal to the markup syntax and beyond the scope
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of this specification.
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Also, it is not the goal of reStructuredText to maintain compatibility
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with StructuredText_ or Setext_. reStructuredText shamelessly steals
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their great ideas and ignores the not-so-great.
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Due to the nature of the problem we're trying to solve (or,
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perhaps, due to the nature of the proposed solution), the above
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goals unavoidably conflict. I have tried to extract and distill
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the wisdom accumulated over the years in the Python Doc-SIG_
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mailing list and elsewhere, to come up with a coherent and
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consistent set of syntax rules, and the above goals by which to
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There will inevitably be people who disagree with my particular
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choices. Some desire finer control over their markup, others
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prefer less. Some are concerned with very short docstrings,
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others with full-length documents. This specification is an
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effort to provide a reasonably rich set of markup constructs in a
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reasonably simple form, that should satisfy a reasonably large
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group of reasonable people.
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David Goodger (goodger@users.sourceforge.net), 2001-04-20
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.. _Doc-SIG: http://www.python.org/sigs/doc-sig/
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reStructuredText_, the specification, is based on StructuredText_ and
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Setext_. StructuredText was developed by Jim Fulton of `Zope
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Corporation`_ (formerly Digital Creations) and first released in 1996.
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It is now released as a part of the open-source "Z Object Publishing
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Environment" (ZOPE_). Ian Feldman's and Tony Sanders' earlier Setext_
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specification was either an influence on StructuredText or, by their
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similarities, at least evidence of the correctness of this approach.
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I discovered StructuredText_ in late 1999 while searching for a way to
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document the Python modules in one of my projects. Version 1.1 of
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StructuredText was included in Daniel Larsson's pythondoc_. Although
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I was not able to get pythondoc to work for me, I found StructuredText
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to be almost ideal for my needs. I joined the Python Doc-SIG_
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(Documentation Special Interest Group) mailing list and found an
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ongoing discussion of the shortcomings of the StructuredText
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"standard". This discussion has been going on since the inception of
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the mailing list in 1996, and possibly predates it.
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I decided to modify the original module with my own extensions and
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some suggested by the Doc-SIG members. I soon realized that the
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module was not written with extension in mind, so I embarked upon a
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general reworking, including adapting it to the "re" regular
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expression module (the original inspiration for the name of this
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project). Soon after I completed the modifications, I discovered that
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StructuredText.py was up to version 1.23 in the ZOPE distribution.
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Implementing the new syntax extensions from version 1.23 proved to be
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an exercise in frustration, as the complexity of the module had become
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In 2000, development on StructuredTextNG_ ("Next Generation") began at
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`Zope Corporation`_ (then Digital Creations). It seems to have many
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improvements, but still suffers from many of the problems of classic
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I decided that a complete rewrite was in order, and even started a
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`reStructuredText SourceForge project`_ (now inactive). My
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motivations (the "itches" I aim to "scratch") are as follows:
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- I need a standard format for inline documentation of the programs I
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write. This inline documentation has to be convertible to other
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useful formats, such as HTML. I believe many others have the same
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- I believe in the Setext/StructuredText idea and want to help
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formalize the standard. However, I feel the current specifications
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and implementations have flaws that desperately need fixing.
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- reStructuredText could form part of the foundation for a
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documentation extraction and processing system, greatly benefitting
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Python. But it is only a part, not the whole. reStructuredText is
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a markup language specification and a reference parser
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implementation, but it does not aspire to be the entire system. I
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don't want reStructuredText or a hypothetical Python documentation
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processor to die stillborn because of over-ambition.
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- Most of all, I want to help ease the documentation chore, the bane
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of many a programmer.
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Unfortunately I was sidetracked and stopped working on this project.
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In November 2000 I made the time to enumerate the problems of
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StructuredText and possible solutions, and complete the first draft of
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a specification. This first draft was posted to the Doc-SIG in three
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- `A Plan for Structured Text`__
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- `Problems With StructuredText`__
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- `reStructuredText: Revised Structured Text Specification`__
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001239.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001240.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2000-November/001241.html
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In March 2001 a flurry of activity on the Doc-SIG spurred me to
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further revise and refine my specification, the result of which you
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are now reading. An offshoot of the reStructuredText project has been
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the realization that a single markup scheme, no matter how well
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thought out, may not be enough. In order to tame the endless debates
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on Doc-SIG, a flexible `Docstring Processing System framework`_ needed
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to be constructed. This framework has become the more important of
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the two projects; reStructuredText_ has found its place as one
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possible choice for a single component of the larger framework.
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The project web site and the first project release were rolled out in
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June 2001, including posting the second draft of the spec [#spec-2]_
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and the first draft of PEPs 256, 257, and 258 [#peps-1]_ to the
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Doc-SIG. These documents and the project implementation proceeded to
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evolve at a rapid pace. Implementation history details can be found
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in the `project history file`_.
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In November 2001, the reStructuredText parser was nearing completion.
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Development of the parser continued with the addition of small
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convenience features, improvements to the syntax, the filling in of
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gaps, and bug fixes. After a long holiday break, in early 2002 most
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development moved over to the other Docutils components, the
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"Readers", "Writers", and "Transforms". A "standalone" reader
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(processes standalone text file documents) was completed in February,
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and a basic HTML writer (producing HTML 4.01, using CSS-1) was
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completed in early March.
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`PEP 287`_, "reStructuredText Standard Docstring Format", was created
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to formally propose reStructuredText as a standard format for Python
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docstrings, PEPs, and other files. It was first posted to
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comp.lang.python_ and the Python-dev_ mailing list on 2002-04-02.
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Version 0.4 of the reStructuredText__ and `Docstring Processing
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System`_ projects were released in April 2002. The two projects were
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immediately merged, renamed to "Docutils_", and a 0.1 release soon
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.. __: `reStructuredText SourceForge project`_
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.. [#spec-2] The second draft of the spec:
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- `An Introduction to reStructuredText`__
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- `Problems With StructuredText`__
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- `reStructuredText Markup Specification`__
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- `Python Extensions to the reStructuredText Markup
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001858.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001859.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001860.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001861.html
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.. [#peps-1] First drafts of the PEPs:
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- `PEP 256: Docstring Processing System Framework`__
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- `PEP 258: DPS Generic Implementation Details`__
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- `PEP 257: Docstring Conventions`__
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Current working versions of the PEPs can be found in
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http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/peps/, and official versions
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can be found in the `master PEP repository`_.
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001855.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001856.html
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__ http://mail.python.org/pipermail/doc-sig/2001-June/001857.html
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.. _Zope Corporation: http://www.zope.com
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.. _ZOPE: http://www.zope.org
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.. _reStructuredText SourceForge project:
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http://structuredtext.sourceforge.net/
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.. _pythondoc: http://starship.python.net/crew/danilo/pythondoc/
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.. _StructuredTextNG:
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http://www.zope.org/DevHome/Members/jim/StructuredTextWiki/StructuredTextNG
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.. _project history file: ../../../HISTORY.html
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.. _PEP 287: ../../peps/pep-0287.html
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.. _Docstring Processing System framework: ../../peps/pep-0256.html
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.. _comp.lang.python: news:comp.lang.python
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.. _Python-dev: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/
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.. _Docstring Processing System: http://docstring.sourceforge.net/
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.. _master PEP repository: http://www.python.org/peps/
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