Nanodoc
--------

Nanodoc is a minimalist document bundler designed for stiching hints, reminders and short docs.
Useful for prompts, personalized docs highlights for your teams or a note to your future self

No config, nothing to learn nor remember. Short , simple, sweet.

Features
--------

- No config, no tutorial, no pain.
- Combines multiple text files into a single document
- Adds clear title separators between pages
- Supports optional line numbering (per file or global)
- Can generate a table of contents
- Flexible file selection methods
- Customizable header styles and sequence numbering

Usage
-----

$ nanodoc file1.txt file2.txt


$ nanodoc -n file1.txt file2.txt              # Per-file line numbering
$ nanodoc -nn file1.txt file2.txt             # Global line numbering
$ nanodoc -nn --toc file1.txt file2.txt       # Global numbering with TOC

File Selection Options
----------------------

Nanodoc is flexible in how you specify the files to bundle:

$ nanodoc <file-1>...<file-n> # individual files
$ nanodoc <dir-name> # all txt and md files in the dir will be included
$ nanodoc <dir-name> <file-1> # mix and match as yould like
$ nanodoc <bundle> # any .bundle.* file that is a list of paths, one per line
$ nanodoc <live-bundle> # a file that mixes text and file paths, where paths are replaced with their content

Get only parts of a file:

$ nanodoc readme.txt:L14-16,L30-50 # get the good parts only

Command Line Options
--------------------

- `-n`: Add per-file line numbering (01, 02, etc.)
- `-nn`: Add global line numbering: useful for referencing the full doc gen later
- `--toc`: Generate a table of contents at the beginning

Get fancy
---------

- `--seq`: numerical, roman or letter for ref the file sequence
- `--style`: nice (Human Readable (human-readable.txt), or file, or full-path

Save for later:
---------------

Generated a doc good enough to repeat, export the bundle

$nanodoc --export-bundle bestdocs.bundle.txt <file-1>...<file-n>

Keep it simple
--------------

Nothing to config.
Nothing to learn.
No tutorials to watch.

In fact, you've just went through the full documentation.
$ nanodoc --help # all there is


## Installation

nanodoc is available at a distributor near you:

# Using pip
pip install nanodoc

# Using Homebrew (macOS and Linux)
# First, add the tap (only needed once)
brew tap arthur-debert/nanodoc https://github.com/arthur-debert/nanodoc
brew install nanodoc
# To update to the latest version
brew update && brew upgrade nanodoc

# Using apt (Debian/Ubuntu) - Direct installation
wget https://github.com/arthur-debert/nanodoc/raw/main/Debian/python3-nanodoc_0.3.1-1_all.deb
sudo apt install ./python3-nanodoc_0.3.1-1_all.deb

# Using apt (Debian/Ubuntu) - Add as repository
# Add the repository to your sources
echo "deb [trusted=yes] https://raw.githubusercontent.com/arthur-debert/nanodoc/main/Debian ./" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/nanodoc.list
# Update package lists
sudo apt update
# Install the package
sudo apt install python3-nanodoc

# For more detailed APT installation instructions, see README-apt-repo.md

## Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Say hi, curse me for eternety or even send in something constructive.
Feel free to open issues or submit pull requests.

(just keep it short, we're nano people after all)

## License

MIT License
