Skip to content

marcoesters/conda-docs

 
 

Repository files navigation

Conda documentation

This repository includes documentation that is common for conda and conda-build, as well as landing pages for those projects (located at https://docs.conda.io/).

The conda documentation is built using ReadTheDocs. The conda-docs repo is the primary project, while conda and conda-build are created as subprojects. This enables each project's respective documentation to remain in its repo, but for all of the documentation to exist together on the same domain. The landing pages built from the conda-docs repo link to the documentation built from the conda and conda-build repos.

The documentation for each of those individual repositories can be found in their respective repos:

Please file issues, comments, and pull requests at the appropriate repo.

Contribution guidelines

Conda capitalization

The word "conda" should be lowercase, except when starting a sentence or header. Use code formatting when talking about the conda command.

For more detailed information on conda capitalization standards, see the conda contributing guide.

Creating new pages

If you create any new documentation files in this repo, please update the table of contents with the name of your new file. Otherwise, your page will not appear in the table of contents tree on the left-hand side of the documentation. The toctree directive for the conda-docs repo exists in the index.rst file. If you are in the conda or conda-build repos, there are many toctree directives on many index files, so make sure you edit the correct one.

Local builds

You can build this docs repo on your local machine to preview changes in your browser.

NOTE: These steps have only been tested on MacOS.

Set up and activate a doc build environment

  1. Create a conda environment using the supplied requirements file in the conda-docs repo.
    conda create -n conda-docs pip -y
    conda activate conda-docs
    pip install -r requirements.txt
    

Run a local build

  1. Go to the docs directory.

    cd docs
    
  2. Build the HTML docs using the make command. The commands used for this are defined in the docs/Makefile file.

    make html
    
  3. Open the conda-docs/_build/html directory in your file manager, locate the desired .html file you want to preview, and double-click it to open it in your browser. (You can also drag and drop the file into an open browser.)

About

Conda documentation

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published