From ec46692cf5c4d5e22950bc8e7d14cb0ec327fb87 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Waylan Limberg Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2012 09:35:40 -0500 Subject: Rename docs/*.md => docs/*.txt The documentation uses features of Python-Markdown that are not supported on GitHub and it's better to get a source view of the docs anyway. For example, that way comments and bug reports can reference a specific line of a file. Of course, it makes sense for Github to render the README, so that is left with the `.md` file extension. --- docs/extensions/rss.txt | 41 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 41 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/extensions/rss.txt (limited to 'docs/extensions/rss.txt') diff --git a/docs/extensions/rss.txt b/docs/extensions/rss.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..67e6d96 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/extensions/rss.txt @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@ +title: RSS Extension +prev_title: New Line to Break Extension +prev_url: nl2br.html +next_title: Sane Lists Extension +next_url: sane_lists.html + +RSS +=== + +Summary +------- + +An extension to Python-Markdown that outputs a markdown document as RSS. This +extension has been included with Python-Markdown since 1.7 and should be +available to anyone who has a typical install of Python-Markdown. + +Usage +----- + +From the Python interpreter: + + >>> import markdown + >>> text = "Some markdown document." + >>> rss = markdown.markdown(text, ['rss']) + +Configuring the Output +---------------------- + +An RSS document includes some data about the document (URI, author, title) that +will likely need to be configured for your needs. Therefore, three configuration +options are available: + +* **URL** : The Main URL for the document. +* **CREATOR** : The Feed creator's name. +* **TITLE** : The title for the feed. + +An example: + + >>> rss = markdown.markdown(text, extensions = \ + ... ['rss(URL=http://example.com,CREATOR=JOHN DOE,TITLE=My Document)'] + ... ) -- cgit v1.2.3