mdfy 0.5.0

Creator: bradpython12

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Description:

mdfy 0.5.0

mdfy
Transform text into beautiful markdown, effortlessly.

🌟 Features

Simplicity: Just a few lines of code and voila! An intuitive architecture made simple.
Modulability: Each module is highly independent, making it easy to use on its own.
Customizable: Extensible design allowing for easy customization.
Highly Tested: Robust unit tests ensure reliability.

🚀 Getting Started
Installation
pip install mdfy

Usage
Here's a quick start guide to get you up and running!
from mdfy import Mdfier, MdText, MdHeader, MdTable

contents = [
MdHeader("Hello, MDFY!"),
MdText("[Life:bold] is [like:italic] a bicycle."),
MdTable(["head1": "content", "head2": "content"])
]
Mdfier("markdown.md").write(contents)

# or use a with statement to write iteratively

with Mdfier("markdown.md") as md:
for content in contents:
md.write(MdText(text))

# => markdown.md
#
# # Hello, MDFY!
# **Life** is *like* a bicycle.

Each mdfy element is string-convertible and can operate independently!
from mdfy import MdText, MdHeader, MdTable

print(MdHeader("Hello, MDFY!"))
print(MdText("[Life:bold] is [like:italic] a bicycle."))
print(MdTable(["head1": "content", "head2": "content"]))

# => result
#
# # Hello, MDFY!
# **Life** is *like* a bicycle.
# | head1 | head2 |
# | --- | --- |
# | content | content |

MdText Format
With MdText, you can flexibly specify text styles in a way similar to python's string formatting.
MdText("[a family:quote] of [plain-text formatting syntaxes:bold] that optionally can be [converted to [formal:italic] [markup languages:bold]:not] such as [HTML:strong]")

a family of plain-text formatting syntaxes that optionally can be converted to formal markup languages such as HTML
See MdText document for details
MdTable
MdTable offers a flexible way to convert a Python dict to a Markdown table.
data = [
{"precision": 0.845, "Recall": 0.662},
{"precision": 0.637, "Recall": 0.802},
{"precision": 0.710, "Recall": 0.680},
]

print(MdTable(data))

# The result will be
# | precision | Recall |
# | --- | --- |
# | 0.845 | 0.662 |
# | 0.637 | 0.802 |
# | 0.71 | 0.68 |

To transpose a table, all you need to do is pass True to the transpose parameter.
print(MdTable(data, transpose=True))

# | Key | Value 0 | Value 1 | Value 2 |
# | --- | --- | --- | --- |
# | precision | 0.845 | 0.637 | 0.71 |
# | Recall | 0.662 | 0.802 | 0.68 |

# And you can specify header labels when transpose
labels = ["Metrics", "Model 1", "Model 2", "Model 3"]
print(MdTable(data, transpose=True, labels=labels))

# | Metrics | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 |
# | --- | --- | --- | --- |
# | precision | 0.845 | 0.637 | 0.71 |
# | Recall | 0.662 | 0.802 | 0.68 |

You can also specify the precision of float values.
data = [
{"precision": 0.84544, "Recall": 0.662765},
{"precision": 0.63743, "Recall": 0.802697},
{"precision": 0.718203, "Recall": 0.6802435},
]
labels = ["Metrics", "Model 1", "Model 2", "Model 3"]
print(MdTable(data, transpose=True, labels=labels, precision=3))

# | Metrics | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 |
# | --- | --- | --- | --- |
# | precision | 0.845 | 0.637 | 0.718 |
# | Recall | 0.663 | 0.803 | 0.680 |

See MdTable document for details
📖 Documentation
Check out our full documentation for detailed guides and API references.
✅ Testing
To run the tests:
python -m pytest

💡 Contributing
We welcome contributions!
📜 License
This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

License

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

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