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txt2tags is a document generator software that uses a lightweight markup language. txt2tags is free software under GNU General Public License.. Written in Python, it can export documents to several formats including: HTML, XHTML, SGML, LaTeX, Lout, roff, MediaWiki, Google Code Wiki, DokuWiki, MoinMoin, MagicPoint, PageMaker and plain text.
Sphinx converts reStructuredText files into HTML websites and other formats including PDF, EPub, Texinfo and man. reStructuredText is extensible, and Sphinx exploits its extensible nature through a number of extensions – for autogenerating documentation from source code, writing mathematical notation or highlighting source code, etc.
The syntax of Meson's build description files, the Meson language, borrows from Python, but is not Python. It is designed such that it can be reimplemented in any other language; [9] for example, muon [10] is a C implementation, and Meson++ [11] is a C++ implementation. The dependency on Python is an implementation detail.
C/C++, C#, D, IDL, Fortran, Java, PHP, Python Any 1997/10/26 1.9.1 GPL Epydoc: Edward Loper Text Python Any 2002/01/— 3.0 (2008) MIT: fpdoc (Free Pascal Documentation Generator) Sebastian Guenther and Free Pascal Core Text (Object)Pascal/Delphi FPC tier 1 targets 2005 3.2.2 GPL reusable parts are GPL with static linking exception Haddock ...
T4 Template/Text File: Any text format such as XML, XAML, C# files or just plain text files. Umple: Umple, Java, Javascript, PHP Active Tier Umple code embedding one or more of Java, Python, C++, PHP or Ruby Pure Umple code describing associations, patterns, state machines, etc.
Static site generators (SSGs) are software engines that use text input files (such as Markdown, reStructuredText, AsciiDoc and JSON) to generate static web pages. [1] Static sites generated by static site generators do not require a backend after site generation, making them first-class citizens on content delivery networks (CDNs).
Language bindings allow it to be used from programming languages including Go, Haskell, Java, JavaScript (with Node.js and WASM), Kotlin, Lua, OCaml, Perl, Python, Ruby, Rust, and Swift. Tree-sitter parsers have been written for these languages and many others. [ 11 ]
Many tools can process the exported XML. If you process a large number of pages (for instance a whole dump) you probably won't be able to get the document in main memory so you will need a parser based on SAX or other event-driven methods. You can also use regular expressions to directly process parts of the XML code.