.. _cheat-sheet: ****************** Sphinx cheat sheet ****************** Here is a quick and dirty cheat sheet for some common stuff you want to do in sphinx and ReST. You can see the literal source for this file at :ref:`cheatsheet-literal`. .. _formatting-text: Formatting text =============== You use inline markup to make text *italics*, **bold**, or ``monotype``. You can represent code blocks fairly easily:: import numpy as np x = np.random.rand(12) Or literally include code: .. literalinclude:: pyplots/ellipses.py .. _making-a-list: Making a list ============= It is easy to make lists in rest Bullet points ------------- This is a subsection making bullet points * point A * point B * point C Enumerated points ------------------ This is a subsection making numbered points #. point A #. point B #. point C .. _making-a-table: Making a table ============== This shows you how to make a table -- if you only want to make a list see :ref:`making-a-list`. ================== ============ Name Age ================== ============ John D Hunter 40 Cast of Thousands 41 And Still More 42 ================== ============ .. _making-links: Making links ============ It is easy to make a link to `yahoo `_ or to some section inside this document (see :ref:`making-a-table`) or another document. You can also reference classes, modules, functions, etc that are documented using the sphinx `autodoc `_ facilites. For example, see the module :mod:`matplotlib.backend_bases` documentation, or the class :class:`~matplotlib.backend_bases.LocationEvent`, or the method :meth:`~matplotlib.backend_bases.FigureCanvasBase.mpl_connect`. .. _cheatsheet-literal: This file ========= .. literalinclude:: cheatsheet.rst