The Csound Reference Manual is written using DocBook v4. To learn about DocBook, visit docbook.org.
If you find problems or have suggestions, open an issue, or fork this repository and make a pull request.
The instructions in the following sections pertain to DocBook generally, not to the Csound manual in particular. To build the Csound manual from source, you will need to adapt the general instructions. Specifically, after making sure that you have installed the necessary tooling and dependencies (as discussed in the following sections), you will need to get the source files for the Csound manual and then run make
to generate a version of the manual from those source files. The source files include a Makefile
that you may need to adapt to your configuration.
If you have installed Csound in ~/csound/csound
and would like to (1) install the Csound manual source in ~/csound/manual
and (2) build an html version in ~/csound/manual/html
, do the following:
$ cd ~/csound
$ git clone https://github.com/csound/manual.git manual
$ cd manual
$ make html # This assumes that the Makefile will work. If it doesn't, you wll need to edit it and re-run this line.
Note: if you are on Ubuntu, the Makefile will probably not work, because it calls Python with python and not python3. You will need to either (1) edit the Makefile so that you call python3 (the executable name for Python on Ubuntu) or (2) install something like python-is-python3, a convenience package for Debian and Ubuntu that creates a symlink from python to python3.
If you followed the above instructions, you will be able to open the manual locally in any web browser with a link like file:///home/(username)/csound/manual/html/index.html
.
In addition to other requirements specific to what you’re building, you need DocBook; Python, with Pygments v2.3 or later; and xsltproc.
To install DocBook, the required stylesheets, and xsltproc on a Debian-based system (including Ubuntu), run
sudo apt-get install -y docbook docbook-xsl xsltproc
Python is preinstalled on most Linux distributions. If you don’t have Python, visit https://www.python.org/downloads/ to find instructions for installing Python or building it from source.
To install Pygments v2.3 or later, run
sudo pip install 'pygments>=2.3'
or, if you don’t have pip,
sudo easy_install 'pygments>=2.3'
The easiest way to install DocBook is probably through
Homebrew. To install Homebrew, follow the instructions at
https://brew.sh. Then, enter brew install docbook docbook-xsl
in a Terminal.
To install Pygments v2.3 or later, enter in Terminal
sudo easy_install 'pygments>=2.3'
Python and xsltproc are preinstalled on macOS.
The easiest way to install DocBook is probably through Cygwin. To install Cygwin, visit https://www.cygwin.com and download and run an installer for the latest release of Cygwin.
To install Python, visit https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/ and download and run an installer for the latest release of Python 2.7. Make sure you add python.exe to your Windows Path when you install Python.
Visit http://pygments.org/download/ to learn how to install Pygments.
Run make ⟨target⟩
to build a ⟨target⟩
. For example, to build a collection of
HTML webpages, run make html
.
You may see this error: “The XSL_BASE_PATH variable must be set to the XSL
stylesheets installation directory.” To tell make
where to find DocBook XSL
stylesheets, run
make XSL_BASE_PATH=path/to/docbook/stylesheets ⟨target⟩
instead of make ⟨target⟩
. For example, on macOS run
make XSL_BASE_PATH="$(brew --prefix docbook-xsl)/docbook-xsl" ⟨target⟩
If you see an error message that CsoundDocumentLexer
isn’t found when you try
to build a ⟨target⟩
, then you’re probably using Pygments v2.0.2 or earlier,
and you need Pygments v2.3 or later.
Run make html
(or just make
) to create a folder named html containing a
collection of HTML files.
In addition to the general requirements, building PDF files requires Apache FOP. You may also need to download and install a Java Runtime Environment.
To install FOP on Linux, run
sudo apt-get install -y fop
To install FOP on macOS using Homebrew, run
brew install fop
Run make pdf
to create a PDF file suitable for printing on letter
paper.
Run make pdfA4
to create a PDF file suitable for printing on A4
paper.
You can only build Compiled HTML Help on Windows. In addition to the general requirements, building Compiled HTML Help requires HTML Help Workshop. To install HTML Help Workshop, visit https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=14188 to download htmlhelp.exe, and then double-click htmlhelp.exe.
Run make htmlhelp
to create a Compiled HTML Help (.chm) file.
DocBook is XML. When you write XML, remember to close tags. This is valid XML:
<para>text</para>
This isn’t:
<para>text</ERROR>
DocBook v4 has a document type definition (DTD) that describes valid DocBook elements and attributes. See DocBook: The Definitive Guide to learn more.
In general, an entry for a new opcode named newopcodename
will be an XML
file named newopcodename.xml containing
<refentry id="newopcodename">
<!-- More mark-up… -->
</refentry>
One way to get started documenting your opcode is to use an existing entry as a template. All opcode entries are in the opcodes folder. You can also use opcodes/templates.xml as a starting point.
To incorporate a new entry into the manual:
Add the entry as an entity in manual.xml. For example, if you put newopcodename.xml in the opcodes folder, add this entity to manual.xml:
<!ENTITY opcodesnewopcodename SYSTEM "opcodes/newopcodename.xml">
Use the entity to add your opcode entry to opcodes/top.xml. Opcode entries are arranged alphabetically, so just find where your opcode should be in the list and add:
&opcodesnewopcodename;
Link to your opcode entry from an appropriate section of the manual. For
example, if newopcodename
should be included with realtime spectral processing
opcodes, add a link
element to
spectral/realtime.xml, like this:
<link linkend="newopcodename"><citetitle>newopcodename</citetitle></link>
Repeat this step for each section in which you think your opcode should be included.
Optionally, use a refentryinfo
element
so your opcode will be properly categorized in the Quick
Reference. Use one of
the categories in categories.py. (If you omit a refentryinfo
element, your opcode will be categorized as
Miscellaneous.)
If possible, add a link
element
to your opcode in the appropriate section of the Opcodes
Overview.
There are several targets that prepare files for release. Remember to update Csound’s version number in manual.xml and the Makefile so that files are generated with that number. It’s also a good idea to update the What's new… section for each release.