fix doc build; reorganize placement of library docs

This commit is contained in:
Dan Halbert 2023-08-14 12:34:00 -04:00
parent 2f81f36c41
commit 4a579f7242
6 changed files with 26 additions and 347 deletions

View File

@ -441,7 +441,7 @@ texinfo_documents = [
# Example configuration for intersphinx: refer to the Python standard library.
intersphinx_mapping = {"cpython": ('https://docs.python.org/3/', None),
intersphinx_mapping = {"python": ('https://docs.python.org/3/', None),
"register": ('https://circuitpython.readthedocs.io/projects/register/en/latest/', None),
"typing": ('https://circuitpython.readthedocs.io/projects/adafruit-circuitpython-typing/en/latest/', None)}

View File

@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ Full Table of Contents
:caption: API and Usage
../shared-bindings/index.rst
library/index.rst
supported_ports.rst
troubleshooting.rst
libraries.rst
@ -32,13 +33,12 @@ Full Table of Contents
design_guide
porting
common_hal
reference/mpyfiles.rst
reference/glossary.rst
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 2
:caption: MicroPython specific
library/index.rst
reference/glossary.rst
:caption: Python stand
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1

View File

@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ Functions
Encode binary data in base64 format, as in `RFC 3548
<https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3548.html>`_. Returns the encoded data
followed by a newline character if ``newline``is true, as a bytes object.
followed by a newline character if ``newline`` is true, as a bytes object.
.. function:: crc32(data, value=0, /)

View File

@ -1,161 +0,0 @@
:mod:`btree` -- simple BTree database
=====================================
.. include:: ../templates/unsupported_in_circuitpython.inc
.. module:: btree
:synopsis: simple BTree database
The ``btree`` module implements a simple key-value database using external
storage (disk files, or in general case, a random-access `stream`). Keys are
stored sorted in the database, and besides efficient retrieval by a key
value, a database also supports efficient ordered range scans (retrieval
of values with the keys in a given range). On the application interface
side, BTree database work as close a possible to a way standard `dict`
type works, one notable difference is that both keys and values must
be `bytes` objects (so, if you want to store objects of other types, you
need to serialize them to `bytes` first).
The module is based on the well-known BerkelyDB library, version 1.xx.
Example::
import btree
# First, we need to open a stream which holds a database
# This is usually a file, but can be in-memory database
# using io.BytesIO, a raw flash partition, etc.
# Oftentimes, you want to create a database file if it doesn't
# exist and open if it exists. Idiom below takes care of this.
# DO NOT open database with "a+b" access mode.
try:
f = open("mydb", "r+b")
except OSError:
f = open("mydb", "w+b")
# Now open a database itself
db = btree.open(f)
# The keys you add will be sorted internally in the database
db[b"3"] = b"three"
db[b"1"] = b"one"
db[b"2"] = b"two"
# Assume that any changes are cached in memory unless
# explicitly flushed (or database closed). Flush database
# at the end of each "transaction".
db.flush()
# Prints b'two'
print(db[b"2"])
# Iterate over sorted keys in the database, starting from b"2"
# until the end of the database, returning only values.
# Mind that arguments passed to values() method are *key* values.
# Prints:
# b'two'
# b'three'
for word in db.values(b"2"):
print(word)
del db[b"2"]
# No longer true, prints False
print(b"2" in db)
# Prints:
# b"1"
# b"3"
for key in db:
print(key)
db.close()
# Don't forget to close the underlying stream!
f.close()
Functions
---------
.. function:: open(stream, *, flags=0, pagesize=0, cachesize=0, minkeypage=0)
Open a database from a random-access `stream` (like an open file). All
other parameters are optional and keyword-only, and allow to tweak advanced
parameters of the database operation (most users will not need them):
* *flags* - Currently unused.
* *pagesize* - Page size used for the nodes in BTree. Acceptable range
is 512-65536. If 0, a port-specific default will be used, optimized for
port's memory usage and/or performance.
* *cachesize* - Suggested memory cache size in bytes. For a
board with enough memory using larger values may improve performance.
Cache policy is as follows: entire cache is not allocated at once;
instead, accessing a new page in database will allocate a memory buffer
for it, until value specified by *cachesize* is reached. Then, these
buffers will be managed using LRU (least recently used) policy. More
buffers may still be allocated if needed (e.g., if a database contains
big keys and/or values). Allocated cache buffers aren't reclaimed.
* *minkeypage* - Minimum number of keys to store per page. Default value
of 0 equivalent to 2.
Returns a BTree object, which implements a dictionary protocol (set
of methods), and some additional methods described below.
Methods
-------
.. method:: btree.close()
Close the database. It's mandatory to close the database at the end of
processing, as some unwritten data may be still in the cache. Note that
this does not close underlying stream with which the database was opened,
it should be closed separately (which is also mandatory to make sure that
data flushed from buffer to the underlying storage).
.. method:: btree.flush()
Flush any data in cache to the underlying stream.
.. method:: btree.__getitem__(key)
btree.get(key, default=None, /)
btree.__setitem__(key, val)
btree.__delitem__(key)
btree.__contains__(key)
Standard dictionary methods.
.. method:: btree.__iter__()
A BTree object can be iterated over directly (similar to a dictionary)
to get access to all keys in order.
.. method:: btree.keys([start_key, [end_key, [flags]]])
btree.values([start_key, [end_key, [flags]]])
btree.items([start_key, [end_key, [flags]]])
These methods are similar to standard dictionary methods, but also can
take optional parameters to iterate over a key sub-range, instead of
the entire database. Note that for all 3 methods, *start_key* and
*end_key* arguments represent key values. For example, `values()`
method will iterate over values corresponding to they key range
given. None values for *start_key* means "from the first key", no
*end_key* or its value of None means "until the end of database".
By default, range is inclusive of *start_key* and exclusive of
*end_key*, you can include *end_key* in iteration by passing *flags*
of `btree.INCL`. You can iterate in descending key direction
by passing *flags* of `btree.DESC`. The flags values can be ORed
together.
Constants
---------
.. data:: INCL
A flag for `keys()`, `values()`, `items()` methods to specify that
scanning should be inclusive of the end key.
.. data:: DESC
A flag for `keys()`, `values()`, `items()` methods to specify that
scanning should be in descending direction of keys.

View File

@ -1,170 +0,0 @@
:mod:`framebuf` --- frame buffer manipulation
=============================================
.. include:: ../templates/unsupported_in_circuitpython.inc
.. module:: framebuf
:synopsis: Frame buffer manipulation
This module provides a general frame buffer which can be used to create
bitmap images, which can then be sent to a display.
class FrameBuffer
-----------------
The FrameBuffer class provides a pixel buffer which can be drawn upon with
pixels, lines, rectangles, text and even other FrameBuffer's. It is useful
when generating output for displays.
For example::
import framebuf
# FrameBuffer needs 2 bytes for every RGB565 pixel
fbuf = framebuf.FrameBuffer(bytearray(100 * 10 * 2), 100, 10, framebuf.RGB565)
fbuf.fill(0)
fbuf.text('MicroPython!', 0, 0, 0xffff)
fbuf.hline(0, 9, 96, 0xffff)
Constructors
------------
.. class:: FrameBuffer(buffer, width, height, format, stride=width, /)
Construct a FrameBuffer object. The parameters are:
- *buffer* is an object with a buffer protocol which must be large
enough to contain every pixel defined by the width, height and
format of the FrameBuffer.
- *width* is the width of the FrameBuffer in pixels
- *height* is the height of the FrameBuffer in pixels
- *format* specifies the type of pixel used in the FrameBuffer;
permissible values are listed under Constants below. These set the
number of bits used to encode a color value and the layout of these
bits in *buffer*.
Where a color value c is passed to a method, c is a small integer
with an encoding that is dependent on the format of the FrameBuffer.
- *stride* is the number of pixels between each horizontal line
of pixels in the FrameBuffer. This defaults to *width* but may
need adjustments when implementing a FrameBuffer within another
larger FrameBuffer or screen. The *buffer* size must accommodate
an increased step size.
One must specify valid *buffer*, *width*, *height*, *format* and
optionally *stride*. Invalid *buffer* size or dimensions may lead to
unexpected errors.
Drawing primitive shapes
------------------------
The following methods draw shapes onto the FrameBuffer.
.. method:: FrameBuffer.fill(c)
Fill the entire FrameBuffer with the specified color.
.. method:: FrameBuffer.pixel(x, y[, c])
If *c* is not given, get the color value of the specified pixel.
If *c* is given, set the specified pixel to the given color.
.. method:: FrameBuffer.hline(x, y, w, c)
.. method:: FrameBuffer.vline(x, y, h, c)
.. method:: FrameBuffer.line(x1, y1, x2, y2, c)
Draw a line from a set of coordinates using the given color and
a thickness of 1 pixel. The `line` method draws the line up to
a second set of coordinates whereas the `hline` and `vline`
methods draw horizontal and vertical lines respectively up to
a given length.
.. method:: FrameBuffer.rect(x, y, w, h, c)
.. method:: FrameBuffer.fill_rect(x, y, w, h, c)
Draw a rectangle at the given location, size and color. The `rect`
method draws only a 1 pixel outline whereas the `fill_rect` method
draws both the outline and interior.
Drawing text
------------
.. method:: FrameBuffer.text(s, x, y[, c])
Write text to the FrameBuffer using the the coordinates as the upper-left
corner of the text. The color of the text can be defined by the optional
argument but is otherwise a default value of 1. All characters have
dimensions of 8x8 pixels and there is currently no way to change the font.
Other methods
-------------
.. method:: FrameBuffer.scroll(xstep, ystep)
Shift the contents of the FrameBuffer by the given vector. This may
leave a footprint of the previous colors in the FrameBuffer.
.. method:: FrameBuffer.blit(fbuf, x, y, key=-1, palette=None)
Draw another FrameBuffer on top of the current one at the given coordinates.
If *key* is specified then it should be a color integer and the
corresponding color will be considered transparent: all pixels with that
color value will not be drawn.
The *palette* argument enables blitting between FrameBuffers with differing
formats. Typical usage is to render a monochrome or grayscale glyph/icon to
a color display. The *palette* is a FrameBuffer instance whose format is
that of the current FrameBuffer. The *palette* height is one pixel and its
pixel width is the number of colors in the source FrameBuffer. The *palette*
for an N-bit source needs 2**N pixels; the *palette* for a monochrome source
would have 2 pixels representing background and foreground colors. The
application assigns a color to each pixel in the *palette*. The color of the
current pixel will be that of that *palette* pixel whose x position is the
color of the corresponding source pixel.
Constants
---------
.. data:: framebuf.MONO_VLSB
Monochrome (1-bit) color format
This defines a mapping where the bits in a byte are vertically mapped with
bit 0 being nearest the top of the screen. Consequently each byte occupies
8 vertical pixels. Subsequent bytes appear at successive horizontal
locations until the rightmost edge is reached. Further bytes are rendered
at locations starting at the leftmost edge, 8 pixels lower.
.. data:: framebuf.MONO_HLSB
Monochrome (1-bit) color format
This defines a mapping where the bits in a byte are horizontally mapped.
Each byte occupies 8 horizontal pixels with bit 7 being the leftmost.
Subsequent bytes appear at successive horizontal locations until the
rightmost edge is reached. Further bytes are rendered on the next row, one
pixel lower.
.. data:: framebuf.MONO_HMSB
Monochrome (1-bit) color format
This defines a mapping where the bits in a byte are horizontally mapped.
Each byte occupies 8 horizontal pixels with bit 0 being the leftmost.
Subsequent bytes appear at successive horizontal locations until the
rightmost edge is reached. Further bytes are rendered on the next row, one
pixel lower.
.. data:: framebuf.RGB565
Red Green Blue (16-bit, 5+6+5) color format
.. data:: framebuf.GS2_HMSB
Grayscale (2-bit) color format
.. data:: framebuf.GS4_HMSB
Grayscale (4-bit) color format
.. data:: framebuf.GS8
Grayscale (8-bit) color format

View File

@ -1,15 +1,13 @@
.. _micropython_lib:
MicroPython libraries
=====================
Standard Libraries
==================
Python standard libraries and micro-libraries
---------------------------------------------
Python standard libraries
-------------------------
The libraries below are inherited from MicroPython.
They are similar to the standard Python libraries with the same name.
They implement a subset of or a variant of the corresponding
standard Python library.
The libraries below implement a subset of the corresponding
standard Python (CPython) library. They are implemented in C, not Python.
CircuitPython's long-term goal is that code written in CircuitPython
using Python standard libraries will be runnable on CPython without changes.
@ -38,10 +36,22 @@ These libraries are not currently enabled in any CircuitPython build, but may be
ctypes.rst
select.rst
Omitted functions in the ``string`` library
-------------------------------------------
Omitted ``string`` functions
----------------------------
A few string operations are not enabled on small builds
due to limited flash memory:
``string.center()``, ``string.partition()``, ``string.splitlines()``,
``string.reversed()``.
CircuitPython/MicroPython-specific libraries
--------------------------------------------
Functionality specific to the CircuitPython/MicroPython implementations is available in
the following libraries.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
micropython.rst