view README.txt @ 92:bfab7367eb56

add some more documentation tidbits
author Jeff Hammel <jhammel@mozilla.com>
date Mon, 10 Jan 2011 21:49:43 -0800
parents 672d2d3ee322
children 3eb34cad5858
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Make It So!
===========

templates for the people

So people generally do things the easiest way possible.  If you try to
get people to send you a file with, say, a "one-off" script, they will
probably hard code a bunch of stuff in it.  Then, you're not really
sure what needs to be changed and because you're human you might make
a mistake.  Worse, its a perl script and you're a python programmer.
You don't know what that script does!

And this is the time of the iceberg.  If it really is a one-off, who
cares?  But quickly one-offs become a deployment story, and not a very
efficient one.  


Making a New Template
---------------------


Variable Conventions
--------------------

MakeItSo! provides a few variables for you.  You can include another
file or URL using {{include(URI)}}, where URI is the file path or the
URL (of course, internet is required to include remote resources). The
included resource is not included.

Files and URLS being interpolated also have the variable %(here)s,
which is the parent of their resource.  Therefor, using sensible path
conventions, a neighboring file may be (e.g.) included like

{{include(here + 'foo.txt')}}

The python template asserts several conventions:

- project: the project chosen
- author: author of a project
- email: author's email
- url: url of the project


Adding a License to a Template
------------------------------

[TODO]


Web Service
-----------

python has the ability to run files from stdin.  This means you can
run makeitso directly from the web::

 python <(curl http://k0s.org/mozilla/hg/MakeItSo/raw-file/tip/makeitso/makeitso.py) [URI] 

This uses the bash shell.  If you have another shell you may have to
use another syntax, download the file, or install the package.