mdBook/src/lib.rs

120 lines
3.6 KiB
Rust

//! # mdBook
//!
//! **mdBook** is similar to Gitbook but implemented in Rust.
//! It offers a command line interface, but can also be used as a regular crate.
//!
//! This is the API doc, but you can find a [less "low-level" documentation here](../index.html) that
//! contains information about the command line tool, format, structure etc.
//! It is also rendered with mdBook to showcase the features and default theme.
//!
//! Some reasons why you would want to use the crate (over the cli):
//!
//! - Integrate mdbook in a current project
//! - Extend the capabilities of mdBook
//! - Do some processing or test before building your book
//! - Write a new Renderer
//! - ...
//!
//! ## Example
//!
//! ```no_run
//! extern crate mdbook;
//!
//! use mdbook::MDBook;
//!
//! # #[allow(unused_variables)]
//! fn main() {
//! let mut book = MDBook::new("my-book") // Path to root
//! .with_source("src") // Path from root to source directory
//! .with_destination("book") // Path from root to output directory
//! .read_config() // Parse book.toml configuration file
//! .expect("I don't handle configuration file errors, but you should!");
//!
//! book.build().unwrap(); // Render the book
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! ## Implementing a new Renderer
//!
//! If you want to create a new renderer for mdBook, the only thing you have to do is to implement
//! the [Renderer trait](renderer/renderer/trait.Renderer.html)
//!
//! And then you can swap in your renderer like this:
//!
//! ```no_run
//! # extern crate mdbook;
//! #
//! # use mdbook::MDBook;
//! # use mdbook::renderer::HtmlHandlebars;
//! #
//! # #[allow(unused_variables)]
//! # fn main() {
//! # let your_renderer = HtmlHandlebars::new();
//! #
//! let book = MDBook::new("my-book").set_renderer(Box::new(your_renderer));
//! # }
//! ```
//! If you make a renderer, you get the book constructed in form of `Vec<BookItems>` and you get
//! the book config in a `BookConfig` struct.
//!
//! It's your responsability to create the necessary files in the correct directories.
//!
//! ## utils
//!
//! I have regrouped some useful functions in the [utils](utils/index.html) module, like the
//! following function [`utils::fs::create_file(path:
//! &Path)`](utils/fs/fn.create_file.html)
//!
//! This function creates a file and returns it. But before creating the file
//! it checks every directory in the path to see if it exists, and if it does
//! not it will be created.
//!
//! Make sure to take a look at it.
#[macro_use]
extern crate error_chain;
extern crate handlebars;
#[macro_use]
extern crate lazy_static;
#[macro_use]
extern crate log;
extern crate pulldown_cmark;
extern crate regex;
#[macro_use]
extern crate serde_derive;
extern crate serde;
#[macro_use]
extern crate serde_json;
extern crate tempdir;
mod parse;
mod preprocess;
pub mod book;
pub mod config;
pub mod renderer;
pub mod theme;
pub mod utils;
pub use book::MDBook;
pub use book::BookItem;
pub use renderer::Renderer;
/// The error types used through out this crate.
pub mod errors {
error_chain!{
foreign_links {
Io(::std::io::Error);
HandlebarsRender(::handlebars::RenderError);
HandlebarsTemplate(::handlebars::TemplateError);
Utf8(::std::string::FromUtf8Error);
}
errors {
Subprocess(message: String, output: ::std::process::Output) {
description("A subprocess failed")
display("{}: {}", message, String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stdout))
}
}
}
}