py-make 0.1.2

Creator: bigcodingguy24

Last updated:

0 purchases

py-make 0.1.2 Image
py-make 0.1.2 Images
Add to Cart

Description:

pymake 0.1.2

Bring basic Makefile support to any system with Python.
Inspired by work in tqdm.
Simply install then execute pymake in a directory containing a Makefile.
pymake works on any platform (Linux, Windows, Mac, FreeBSD, Solaris/SunOS).
pymake does not require any library to run, just a vanilla Python
interpreter will do.


Table of contents

Installation

Latest PyPI stable release
Latest development release on GitHub


Changelog
Usage
Known Issues
Documentation
Contributions
LICENCE
Authors



Installation

Latest PyPI stable release

pip install py-make


Latest development release on GitHub

Pull and install in the current directory:
pip install -e git+https://github.com/tqdm/py-make.git@master#egg=py-make



Changelog
The list of all changes is available either on GitHub’s Releases:
or on crawlers such as
allmychanges.com.


Usage
Simply install then execute pymake -p to list commands and pymake <command> to use a command, in a directory containing a Makefile.


Known Issues
For compatibility, ensure:

Every alias is preceded by @[+]make (eg: @make alias)
A maximum of one @make alias or command per line

A full list of what is and is not supported is on the
issue tracker.
Sample makefile compatible with pymake:
PY=python -m py_compile
.PHONY:
all
test
install
compile
all:
@+make test
@make install
test:
pytest
install:
python -m pip install
compile:
$(PY) test.py
circle:
# of life
circle
empty:
# this is a comment
If you get a “Permission Denied” error, please check if maybe your antivirus may be preventing the launch of compiled python scripts, if the Scripts subdirectory is in the PATH, or other issues with the Python install.


Documentation
(Since 28 Oct 2016)
pymake --help


Contributions

All source code is hosted on GitHub.
Contributions are welcome.
See the
CONTRIBUTING.md
file for more information.


LICENCE
Open Source (OSI approved):
Citation information:


Authors
The main developers, ranked by surviving lines of code
(git fame -wMC), are:

Stephen Larroque (lrq3000, core logic)
Casper da Costa-Luis (casperdcl, modularization & maintenance)

We are grateful for all .
(Since 28 Oct 2016)

License

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

Customer Reviews

There are no reviews.