The source distribution for the standard Python documentation
contains a large number of directories. While third-party documents
do not need to be placed into this structure or need to be placed
within a similar structure, it can be helpful to know where to look
for examples and tools when developing new documents using the
Python documentation tools. This section describes this directory
structure.
The documentation sources are usually placed within the Python
source distribution as the top-level directory Doc/, but
are not dependent on the Python source distribution in any way.
The Doc/ directory contains a few files and several
subdirectories. The files are mostly self-explanatory, including a
README and a Makefile. The directories fall into
three categories:
The LATEX sources for each document are placed in a
separate directory. These directories are given short
names which vaguely indicate the document in each:
Most output formats have a directory which contains a
Makefile which controls the generation of that format
and provides storage for the formatted documents. The only
variations within this category are the Portable Document
Format (PDF) and PostScript versions are placed in the
directories paper-a4/ and paper-letter/ (this
causes all the temporary files created by LATEX to be kept
in the same place for each paper size, where they can be more
easily ignored).
Some additional directories are used to store supplemental
files used for the various processes. Directories are
included for the shared LATEX document classes, the
LATEX2HTML support, template files for various document
components, and the scripts used to perform various steps in
the formatting processes.