This repository is meant to write and manage the Official Documentation of QGIS, a free and Open Source Geographic Information System (GIS) Software, under the Open Source Geospatial (OSGeo) foundation umbrella.
The latest documentation is available at https://docs.qgis.org/latest
If not provided by your OS, you need to install:
- git (https://git-scm.com/download/)
- and Python3 (https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/)
You can install both in default places and with default options.
Clone the repository (https://help.github.com/en/github/creating-cloning-and-archiving-repositories/cloning-a-repository)
Go into that directory and follow the next instructions depending on your OS.
The best way to build the documentation is within a Python Virtual Environment (venv).
To check/create the venv and use it in the build:
make -f venv.mk html
The venv.mk will create/update a virtual env (if not available ) in current dir/venv AND run the html build in it.
You can also use that virtual environment later doing:
source venv/bin/activate
to activate the venv and then run the build from within that venv:
make html
If you want for some reason start from scratch:
make -f venv.mk cleanall
You can also use your own virtual env by creating it first:
# you NEED python >3.6. Depending on distro either use `python3` or `python`
# common name is 'venv' but call it whatever you like
python3 -m venv venv # using the venv module, create a venv named 'venv'
Then activate the venv:
source ./venv/bin/activate
With 'activated' virtualenv, you should see 'venv' in the prompt. Install the requirements via the REQUIREMENTS.txt:
pip install -r REQUIREMENTS.txt
And run the build from within that venv:
make html
Want to build your own language? Note that you will use the translations from the po files from git! For example for 'nl' do:
make LANG=nl html
Create a virtual environment called 'venv' in that directory (search the Internet for Python Virtual Env on Windows for more details), but in short: use the module 'venv' to create a virtual environment called 'venv'
# in dos box:
python -m venv venv
Then activate the venv:
venv\Scripts\activate.bat
With 'activated' virtualenv, you should see 'venv' in the prompt. Install the requirements via the REQUIREMENTS.txt:
pip install -r REQUIREMENTS.txt
And run the build from within that venv, using the make.bat script with the html argument to locally build the docs:
make.bat html
Want to build your own language? Note that you will use the translations from the po files from git! For example 'nl' do:
set SPHINXOPTS=-D language=nl
make.bat html
http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/advanced/intl.html
https://pypi.org/project/sphinx-intl/
https://docs.transifex.com/integrations/transifex-github-integration
To update the english po files (which are being used as SOURCE files in transifex):
# FIRST create the pot files in build/gettext (po file be based on those pot files)
make gettext
# then update the english po files only:
sphinx-intl update -p build/gettext -l en
To create the .tx/config to push/pull using tx client do:
# Creating the txconfig is only to be once the first time (we have one now...)
#sphinx-intl create-txconfig
sphinx-intl update-txconfig-resources --transifex-project-name qgis-documentation
# Then (only Transifex admin) can push the po source files to Transifex
tx push -fs --no-interactive (push the source (-f) files forcing (-f) overwriting the ones their without asking (--no-interactive)
To update all po files of all languages (Which we do not use here! This is done by Transifex):
export SPHINXINTL_LANGUAGE=de,nl, ...
# is the same same as
sphinx-intl <command> --language=de --language=nl ...
We created a script to create the transifex yaml files for github-transifex integrations.
BUT we do not do this yet as there were some technical issues...
.\scripts\create_transifex_yaml.sh