Documentation#

Tüyo

Documentation on this site is written in ReStructuredText, or RST for short. Please check the RST Primer if you are not familiar with RST.

This page will guide you through writing great documentation for the UBports project that can be featured on this site.

Documentation guidelines#

These rules govern how you should write your documentation to avoid problems with style, format, or linking.

Title#

All pages must have a document title that will be shown in the table of contents (left sidebar) and at the top of the page.

Titles should be “sentence cased” rather than “Title Cased”. For example:

Incorrect casing:
    Writing A Good Bug Report
Correct casing:
    Writing a good bug report
Correct casing when proper nouns are involved:
    Installing Ubuntu Touch on your phone

There isn’t a single definition of title casing that everyone follows, but sentence casing is easy. This helps keep capitalization in the table of contents consistent.

Page titles are underlined with equals signs. For example, the markup for Hata rapor etme includes the following title:

Bug reporting
=============

Note that:

  1. The title is sentence cased

  2. The title is underlined with equals signs

  3. The underline spans the title completely without going over

Incorrect examples of titles include:

  • Incorrect casing

    Bug Reporting
    =============
    
  • Underline too short

    Bug reporting
    =====
    
  • Underline too long

    Bug reporting
    ================
    

Headings#

There are several levels of headings that you may place on your page. These levels are shown here in order:

Page title
==========

Level one
---------

Level two
^^^^^^^^^

Level three
"""""""""""

Each heading level creates a sub-section in the global table of contents tree available when the documentation is built. In the primary (web) version of the documentation, this only shows four levels deep from the top level of the documentation. Please refrain from using more heading levels than will show in this tree as it makes navigating your document difficult. If you must use this many heading levels, it is a good sign that your document should be split up into multiple pages.

Table of contents#

People can’t navigate to your new page if they can’t find it. Neither can Sphinx. That’s why you need to add new pages to Sphinx’s table of contents.

You can do this by adding the page to the index.rst file in the same directory that you created it. For example, if you create a file called “newpage.rst”, you would add the line marked with a chevron (>) in the nearest index:

.. toctree::
    :maxdepth: 1
    :name: example-toc

    oldpage
    anotheroldpage
>   newpage

The order matters. If you would like your page to appear in a certain place in the table of contents, place it there. In the previous example, newpage would be added to the end of this table of contents.

Moving pages#

Sometimes it becomes necessary to move a page from one place in the documentation to another. Generally this is to improve document flow: For example, it makes more sense for the page to come after a page you’ve just added in a different section.

However, people link to our documentation from many sources that we do not control. Blogs, websites, and other documentation sites can direct people here using links that they may never update. It is a terrible experience to follow a link from a different site and land on a 404 page, left to your own devices to find your way in restructured documentation.

We use a tool called Rediraffe to avoid this bad experience. Rediraffe creates redirect pages which can send a user from an old, invalid link to a new, useful link. Please create a redirect link when changing a page’s name or moving a page within the documentation’s directory structure. Redirect links are created by placing the filename of the old document and the filename of the new document, relative to the documentation’s root, in the redirects.txt file.

We use Rediraffe’s checkdiff builder to ensure that pages are not deleted from the documentation without a redirect in place. This builder is run as part of the build.sh script in the repository and as part of our automated build once you submit a Pull Request.

What follows are some examples of situations where you should create redirects.

You are moving systemdev/calendars.rst to appdev/calendars.rst. Add the following to the redirects.txt file:

"systemdev/calendars.txt" "appdev/calendars.txt"

You are moving appdev/clickable.rst into several pages in appdev/clickable/ to give significantly more information about the tool than there was previously. You have created an introduction page, appdev/clickable/introduction.rst. In this case, it would be a good idea to redirect the old page to the new introduction page. This can be done by adding the following to redirects.txt:

"appdev/clickable.rst" "appdev/clickable/introduction.rst"

Warnings#

Your edits must not introduce any warnings into the documentation build. If any warnings occur, the build will fail and your pull request will be marked with a red ‘X’. Please ensure that your RST is valid and correct before you create a pull request. This is done automatically (via sphinx-build crashing with your error) if you follow our build instructions below.

Line length#

There is no restriction on line length in this repository. Please do not break lines at an arbitrary line length. Instead, turn on word wrap in your text editor.

Contribution workflow#

The following steps will help you to make a contribution to this documentation after you have written a document.

Not

You will need a GitHub account to complete these steps. If you do not have one, click here to begin the process of making an account.

Forking the repository#

You can make more advanced edits to our documentation by forking ubports/docs.ubports.com on GitHub. If you’re not sure how to do this, check out the excellent GitHub guide on forking projects.

Building the documentation#

If you’d like to build this documentation before sending a PR (which you should), follow these instructions on your local copy of your fork of the repository.

The documentation can be built by running ./build.sh in the root of this repository. The script will also create a virtual build environment in ~/ubportsdocsenv if none is present.

If all went well, you can enter the _build/html directory and open index.html to view the UBports documentation.

If you have trouble building the docs, the first thing to try is deleting the build environment. Run rm -r ~/ubportsdocsenv and try the build again. Depending on when you first used the build script, you may need to run the rm command with sudo.

Final check of your contribution#

After you have created your PR on github, the CI (continuous integration) system will make a test build of your contribution. Please double check whether this builds successfully and whether the result looks as you intended it to:

  • Scroll to the bottom of the “Conversation” tab of your PR on github, here you will see the checks (You may have to click on “Show all checks”)

  • It can have a yellow dot, i.e., “pending” then wait a few more seconds.

  • Or it may have a red X, i.e., it failed. In this case please check why it failed

  • If it shows a green check mark, it means the PR could be built successfully

  • Now please click on “Details”,

  • then “Artifacts” on the top right,

  • then “_build/html/..index.html”,

  • and finally on “Go to start page”.

Now you can browse a complete build of the UBports docs site with your contribution included. Double check whether your changes look ok.

Alternative methods to contribute#

Translations#

You may find the components of this document to translate at its project in UBports Weblate.

Writing documents not in RST format#

If you would like to write documents for UBports but are not comfortable writing ReStructuredText, please write it without formatting and post it on the UBports Forum in the relevant section (likely General). Someone will be able to help you revise your draft and write the required ReStructuredText.

Uncomfortable with Git#

If you’ve written a complete document in ReStructuredText but aren’t comfortable using Git or GitHub, please post it on the UBports Forum in the relevant section (likely General). Someone will be able to help you revise your draft and submit it to this documentation.

Current TODOs#

This section lists the TODOs that have been included in this documentation. If you know how to fix one, please send us a Pull Request to make it better!

To create a todo, add this markup to your page:

.. todo::

   My todo text

Yapılacaklar

There is also another way to create somewhat more featureful webapps, sometimes referred to as webapp+ or alternative container. This needst to be properly documented. It’s a simple qml app that can be easily configured. Creation is almost as simple as ‘classic’ webapp, but result is more powerfull with the a nice navigation feature. A rather advanced example of this is the YouTube app from Mateo Salta which has quite some modifications on top of the template.

(özgün giriş, /home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/docsubportscom-rturkish/checkouts/latest/appdev/webapp/index.rst içinde, 19. satırda bulunur.)

Yapılacaklar

Document the process for Nexus 4 (mako)

(özgün giriş, /home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/docsubportscom-rturkish/checkouts/latest/systemdev/kernel-hal.rst içinde, 57. satırda bulunur.)