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PEP: 12 Title: Sample reStructuredText PEP Template Author: David Goodger <[email protected]>,

Barry Warsaw <[email protected]>, Brett Cannon <[email protected]>

Status: Active Type: Process Content-Type: text/x-rst Created: 05-Aug-2002 Post-History: 30-Aug-2002

Note

For those who have written a PEP before, there is a template.

Abstract

This PEP provides a boilerplate or sample template for creating your own reStructuredText PEPs. In conjunction with the content guidelines in PEP 1 [1], this should make it easy for you to conform your own PEPs to the format outlined below.

Note: if you are reading this PEP via the web, you should first grab the text (reStructuredText) source of this PEP in order to complete the steps below. DO NOT USE THE HTML FILE AS YOUR TEMPLATE!

The source for this (or any) PEP can be found in the PEPs repository, viewable on the web at https://github.com/python/peps/ .

Rationale

If you intend to submit a PEP, you MUST use this template, in conjunction with the format guidelines below, to ensure that your PEP submission won't get automatically rejected because of form.

ReStructuredText provides PEP authors with useful functionality and expressivity, while maintaining easy readability in the source text. The processed HTML form makes the functionality accessible to readers: live hyperlinks, styled text, tables, images, and automatic tables of contents, among other advantages.

How to Use This Template

To use this template you must first decide whether your PEP is going to be an Informational or Standards Track PEP. Most PEPs are Standards Track because they propose a new feature for the Python language or standard library. When in doubt, read PEP 1 for details, or open a tracker issue on the PEPs repo to ask for assistance.

Once you've decided which type of PEP yours is going to be, follow the directions below.

  • Make a copy of this file (the .rst file, not the HTML!) and perform the following edits. Name the new file pep-9999.rst if you don't yet have a PEP number assignment, or pep-NNNN.rst if you do. Those with push permissions are welcome to claim the next available number (ignoring the special blocks 3000 and 8000, and a handful of special allocations - currently 666, 754, and 801) and push it directly.

  • Replace the "PEP: 12" header with "PEP: 9999" or "PEP: NNNN", matching the file name. Note that the file name should be padded with zeros (eg pep-0012.rst), but the header should not (PEP: 12).

  • Change the Title header to the title of your PEP.

  • Change the Author header to include your name, and optionally your email address. Be sure to follow the format carefully: your name must appear first, and it must not be contained in parentheses. Your email address may appear second (or it can be omitted) and if it appears, it must appear in angle brackets. It is okay to obfuscate your email address.

  • If none of the authors are Python core developers, include a Sponsor header with the name of the core developer sponsoring your PEP.

  • For many PEPs, discussions will take place on [email protected] and/or [email protected]. If there is another mailing list or public forum more appropriate for discussion of your new feature, add a Discussions-To header right after the Author header. Most Informational PEPs don't need a Discussions-To header.

  • Change the Status header to "Draft".

  • For Standards Track PEPs, change the Type header to "Standards Track".

  • For Informational PEPs, change the Type header to "Informational".

  • For Standards Track PEPs, if your feature depends on the acceptance of some other currently in-development PEP, add a Requires header right after the Type header. The value should be the PEP number of the PEP yours depends on. Don't add this header if your dependent feature is described in a Final PEP.

  • Change the Created header to today's date. Be sure to follow the format carefully: it must be in dd-mmm-yyyy format, where the mmm is the 3 English letter month abbreviation, i.e. one of Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec.

  • For Standards Track PEPs, after the Created header, add a Python-Version header and set the value to the next planned version of Python, i.e. the one your new feature will hopefully make its first appearance in. Do not use an alpha or beta release designation here. Thus, if the last version of Python was 2.2 alpha 1 and you're hoping to get your new feature into Python 2.2, set the header to:

    Python-Version: 2.2
    
  • Leave Post-History alone for now; you'll add dates to this header each time you post your PEP to the designated discussion forum (see the Discussions-To header above). If you posted your PEP to the lists on August 14, 2001 and September 3, 2001, the Post-History header would look like:

    Post-History: 14-Aug-2001, 03-Sept-2001
    

    You must manually add new dates and commit them (with a pull request if you don't have push privileges).

  • Add a Replaces header if your PEP obsoletes an earlier PEP. The value of this header is the number of the PEP that your new PEP is replacing. Only add this header if the older PEP is in "final" form, i.e. is either Accepted, Final, or Rejected. You aren't replacing an older open PEP if you're submitting a competing idea.

  • Now write your Abstract, Rationale, and other content for your PEP, replacing all this gobbledygook with your own text. Be sure to adhere to the format guidelines below, specifically on the prohibition of tab characters and the indentation requirements. See "Suggested Sections" below for a template of sections to include.

  • Update your References and Copyright section. Usually you'll place your PEP into the public domain, in which case just leave the Copyright section alone. Alternatively, you can use the Open Publication License, but public domain is still strongly preferred.

  • Leave the Emacs stanza at the end of this file alone, including the formfeed character ("^L", or \f).

  • Create a pull request against the https://github.com/python/peps repository.

For reference, here are all of the possible header fields (everything in brackets should either be replaced or have the field removed if it has a leading * marking it as optional and it does not apply to your PEP):

PEP: [NNN]
Title: [...]
Author: [Full Name <email at example.com>]
Sponsor: *[Full Name <email at example.com>]
PEP-Delegate:
Discussions-To: *[...]
Status: Draft
Type: [Standards Track | Informational | Process]
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Requires: *[NNN]
Created: [DD-MMM-YYYY]
Python-Version: *[M.N]
Post-History: [DD-MMM-YYYY]
Replaces: *[NNN]
Superseded-By: *[NNN]
Resolution:

ReStructuredText PEP Formatting Requirements

The following is a PEP-specific summary of reStructuredText syntax. For the sake of simplicity and brevity, much detail is omitted. For more detail, see Resources below. Literal blocks (in which no markup processing is done) are used for examples throughout, to illustrate the plaintext markup.

General

You must adhere to the Emacs convention of adding two spaces at the end of every sentence. You should fill your paragraphs to column 70, but under no circumstances should your lines extend past column 79. If your code samples spill over column 79, you should rewrite them.

Tab characters must never appear in the document at all. A PEP should include the standard Emacs stanza included by example at the bottom of this PEP.

Section Headings

PEP headings must begin in column zero and the initial letter of each word must be capitalized as in book titles. Acronyms should be in all capitals. Section titles must be adorned with an underline, a single repeated punctuation character, which begins in column zero and must extend at least as far as the right edge of the title text (4 characters minimum). First-level section titles are underlined with "=" (equals signs), second-level section titles with "-" (hyphens), and third-level section titles with "'" (single quotes or apostrophes). For example:

First-Level Title
=================

Second-Level Title
------------------

Third-Level Title
'''''''''''''''''

If there are more than three levels of sections in your PEP, you may insert overline/underline-adorned titles for the first and second levels as follows:

============================
First-Level Title (optional)
============================

-----------------------------
Second-Level Title (optional)
-----------------------------

Third-Level Title
=================

Fourth-Level Title
------------------

Fifth-Level Title
'''''''''''''''''

You shouldn't have more than five levels of sections in your PEP. If you do, you should consider rewriting it.

You must use two blank lines between the last line of a section's body and the next section heading. If a subsection heading immediately follows a section heading, a single blank line in-between is sufficient.

The body of each section is not normally indented, although some constructs do use indentation, as described below. Blank lines are used to separate constructs.

Paragraphs

Paragraphs are left-aligned text blocks separated by blank lines. Paragraphs are not indented unless they are part of an indented construct (such as a block quote or a list item).

Inline Markup

Portions of text within paragraphs and other text blocks may be styled. For example:

Text may be marked as *emphasized* (single asterisk markup,
typically shown in italics) or **strongly emphasized** (double
asterisks, typically boldface).  ``Inline literals`` (using double
backquotes) are typically rendered in a monospaced typeface.  No
further markup recognition is done within the double backquotes,
so they're safe for any kind of code snippets.

Block Quotes

Block quotes consist of indented body elements. For example:

This is a paragraph.

    This is a block quote.

    A block quote may contain many paragraphs.

Block quotes are used to quote extended passages from other sources. Block quotes may be nested inside other body elements. Use 4 spaces per indent level.

Literal Blocks

Literal blocks are used for code samples or preformatted ASCII art. To indicate a literal block, preface the indented text block with "::" (two colons). The literal block continues until the end of the indentation. Indent the text block by 4 spaces. For example:

This is a typical paragraph.  A literal block follows.

::

    for a in [5,4,3,2,1]:   # this is program code, shown as-is
        print a
    print "it's..."
    # a literal block continues until the indentation ends

The paragraph containing only "::" will be completely removed from the output; no empty paragraph will remain. "::" is also recognized at the end of any paragraph. If immediately preceded by whitespace, both colons will be removed from the output. When text immediately precedes the "::", one colon will be removed from the output, leaving only one colon visible (i.e., "::" will be replaced by ":"). For example, one colon will remain visible here:

Paragraph::

    Literal block

Lists

Bullet list items begin with one of "-", "*", or "+" (hyphen, asterisk, or plus sign), followed by whitespace and the list item body. List item bodies must be left-aligned and indented relative to the bullet; the text immediately after the bullet determines the indentation. For example:

This paragraph is followed by a list.

* This is the first bullet list item.  The blank line above the
  first list item is required; blank lines between list items
  (such as below this paragraph) are optional.

* This is the first paragraph in the second item in the list.

  This is the second paragraph in the second item in the list.
  The blank line above this paragraph is required.  The left edge
  of this paragraph lines up with the paragraph above, both
  indented relative to the bullet.

  - This is a sublist.  The bullet lines up with the left edge of
    the text blocks above.  A sublist is a new list so requires a
    blank line above and below.

* This is the third item of the main list.

This paragraph is not part of the list.

Enumerated (numbered) list items are similar, but use an enumerator instead of a bullet. Enumerators are numbers (1, 2, 3, ...), letters (A, B, C, ...; uppercase or lowercase), or Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, iv, ...; uppercase or lowercase), formatted with a period suffix ("1.", "2."), parentheses ("(1)", "(2)"), or a right-parenthesis suffix ("1)", "2)"). For example:

1. As with bullet list items, the left edge of paragraphs must
   align.

2. Each list item may contain multiple paragraphs, sublists, etc.

   This is the second paragraph of the second list item.

   a) Enumerated lists may be nested.
   b) Blank lines may be omitted between list items.

Definition lists are written like this:

what
    Definition lists associate a term with a definition.

how
    The term is a one-line phrase, and the definition is one
    or more paragraphs or body elements, indented relative to
    the term.

Tables

Simple tables are easy and compact:

=====  =====  =======
  A      B    A and B
=====  =====  =======
False  False  False
True   False  False
False  True   False
True   True   True
=====  =====  =======

There must be at least two columns in a table (to differentiate from section titles). Column spans use underlines of hyphens ("Inputs" spans the first two columns):

=====  =====  ======
   Inputs     Output
------------  ------
  A      B    A or B
=====  =====  ======
False  False  False
True   False  True
False  True   True
True   True   True
=====  =====  ======

Text in a first-column cell starts a new row. No text in the first column indicates a continuation line; the rest of the cells may consist of multiple lines. For example:

=====  =========================
col 1  col 2
=====  =========================
1      Second column of row 1.
2      Second column of row 2.
       Second line of paragraph.
3      - Second column of row 3.

       - Second item in bullet
         list (row 3, column 2).
=====  =========================

Hyperlinks

When referencing an external web page in the body of a PEP, you should include the title of the page in the text, with either an inline hyperlink reference to the URL or a footnote reference (see Footnotes below). Do not include the URL in the body text of the PEP.

Hyperlink references use backquotes and a trailing underscore to mark up the reference text; backquotes are optional if the reference text is a single word. For example:

In this paragraph, we refer to the `Python web site`_.

An explicit target provides the URL. Put targets in a References section at the end of the PEP, or immediately after the reference. Hyperlink targets begin with two periods and a space (the "explicit markup start"), followed by a leading underscore, the reference text, a colon, and the URL (absolute or relative):

.. _Python web site: http://www.python.org/

The reference text and the target text must match (although the match is case-insensitive and ignores differences in whitespace). Note that the underscore trails the reference text but precedes the target text. If you think of the underscore as a right-pointing arrow, it points away from the reference and toward the target.

The same mechanism can be used for internal references. Every unique section title implicitly defines an internal hyperlink target. We can make a link to the Abstract section like this:

Here is a hyperlink reference to the `Abstract`_ section.  The
backquotes are optional since the reference text is a single word;
we can also just write: Abstract_.

Footnotes containing the URLs from external targets will be generated automatically at the end of the References section of the PEP, along with footnote references linking the reference text to the footnotes.

Text of the form "PEP x" or "RFC x" (where "x" is a number) will be linked automatically to the appropriate URLs.

Footnotes

Footnote references consist of a left square bracket, a number, a right square bracket, and a trailing underscore:

This sentence ends with a footnote reference [1]_.

Whitespace must precede the footnote reference. Leave a space between the footnote reference and the preceding word.

When referring to another PEP, include the PEP number in the body text, such as "PEP 1". The title may optionally appear. Add a footnote reference following the title. For example:

Refer to PEP 1 [2]_ for more information.

Add a footnote that includes the PEP's title and author. It may optionally include the explicit URL on a separate line, but only in the References section. Footnotes begin with ".. " (the explicit markup start), followed by the footnote marker (no underscores), followed by the footnote body. For example:

References
==========

.. [2] PEP 1, "PEP Purpose and Guidelines", Warsaw, Hylton
   (http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0001)

If you decide to provide an explicit URL for a PEP, please use this as the URL template:

http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-xxxx

PEP numbers in URLs must be padded with zeros from the left, so as to be exactly 4 characters wide; however, PEP numbers in the text are never padded.

During the course of developing your PEP, you may have to add, remove, and rearrange footnote references, possibly resulting in mismatched references, obsolete footnotes, and confusion. Auto-numbered footnotes allow more freedom. Instead of a number, use a label of the form "#word", where "word" is a mnemonic consisting of alphanumerics plus internal hyphens, underscores, and periods (no whitespace or other characters are allowed). For example:

Refer to PEP 1 [#PEP-1]_ for more information.

References
==========

.. [#PEP-1] PEP 1, "PEP Purpose and Guidelines", Warsaw, Hylton

   http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0001

Footnotes and footnote references will be numbered automatically, and the numbers will always match. Once a PEP is finalized, auto-numbered labels should be replaced by numbers for simplicity.

Images

If your PEP contains a diagram, you may include it in the processed output using the "image" directive:

.. image:: diagram.png

Any browser-friendly graphics format is possible: .png, .jpeg, .gif, .tiff, etc.

Since this image will not be visible to readers of the PEP in source text form, you should consider including a description or ASCII art alternative, using a comment (below).

Comments

A comment block is an indented block of arbitrary text immediately following an explicit markup start: two periods and whitespace. Leave the ".." on a line by itself to ensure that the comment is not misinterpreted as another explicit markup construct. Comments are not visible in the processed document. For the benefit of those reading your PEP in source form, please consider including a descriptions of or ASCII art alternatives to any images you include. For example:

.. image:: dataflow.png

..
   Data flows from the input module, through the "black box"
   module, and finally into (and through) the output module.

The Emacs stanza at the bottom of this document is inside a comment.

Escaping Mechanism

reStructuredText uses backslashes ("\") to override the special meaning given to markup characters and get the literal characters themselves. To get a literal backslash, use an escaped backslash ("\\"). There are two contexts in which backslashes have no special meaning: literal blocks and inline literals (see Inline Markup above). In these contexts, no markup recognition is done, and a single backslash represents a literal backslash, without having to double up.

If you find that you need to use a backslash in your text, consider using inline literals or a literal block instead.

Habits to Avoid

Many programmers who are familiar with TeX often write quotation marks like this:

`single-quoted' or ``double-quoted''

Backquotes are significant in reStructuredText, so this practice should be avoided. For ordinary text, use ordinary 'single-quotes' or "double-quotes". For inline literal text (see Inline Markup above), use double-backquotes:

``literal text: in here, anything goes!``

Suggested Sections

Various sections are found to be common across PEPs and are outlined in PEP 1 [1]. Those sections are provided here for convenience.

Abstract
========

[A short (~200 word) description of the technical issue being addressed.]


Motivation
==========

[Clearly explain why the existing language specification is inadequate to address the problem that the PEP solves.]


Rationale
=========

[Describe why particular design decisions were made.]


Specification
=============

[Describe the syntax and semantics of any new language feature.]


Backwards Compatibility
=======================

[Describe potential impact and severity on pre-existing code.]


Security Implications
=====================

[How could a malicious user take advantage of this new feature?]


How to Teach This
=================

[How to teach users, new and experienced, how to apply the PEP to their work.]


Reference Implementation
========================

[Link to any existing implementation and details about its state, e.g. proof-of-concept.]


Rejected Ideas
==============

[Why certain ideas that were brought while discussing this PEP were not ultimately pursued.]


Open Issues
===========

[Any points that are still being decided/discussed.]


References
==========

[A collection of URLs used as references through the PEP.]


Copyright
=========

This document is placed in the public domain or under the
CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.



..
   Local Variables:
   mode: indented-text
   indent-tabs-mode: nil
   sentence-end-double-space: t
   fill-column: 70
   coding: utf-8
   End:

Resources

Many other constructs and variations are possible. For more details about the reStructuredText markup, in increasing order of thoroughness, please see:

The processing of reStructuredText PEPs is done using Docutils. If you have a question or require assistance with reStructuredText or Docutils, please post a message to the Docutils-users mailing list. The Docutils project web site has more information.

References

[1](1, 2) PEP 1, PEP Purpose and Guidelines, Warsaw, Hylton (http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0001)

Copyright

This document is placed in the public domain or under the CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.