Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: superhelp
Version: 0.9.33
Summary: SuperHELP - Help for Humans!
Home-page: https://github.com/grantps/superhelp
Author: Grant Paton-Simpson
Author-email: grant@p-s.co.nz
License: MIT
Download-URL: https://github.com/grantps/superhelp/dist/superhelp-0.9.33.tar.gz
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Requires-Dist: Markdown (>=3.2.1)
Requires-Dist: PyYAML (>=5.3.1)
Requires-Dist: Pygments (>=2.6.1)
Requires-Dist: astpath (>=0.9.0)
Requires-Dist: cssselect (>=1.1.0)
Requires-Dist: flake8 (>=3.5)
Requires-Dist: lxml (>=4.5.0)
Requires-Dist: tabulate (>=0.8.7)

## https://github.com/grantps/superhelp

![Example HTML output](https://github.com/grantps/superhelp/raw/master/superhelp_logo_padded_small.png)

version number: 0.9.33
author: Grant Paton-Simpson

## Overview

SuperHELP is Help for Humans! The goal is to provide customised help for
simple code snippets. SuperHELP is not intended to replace the built-in Python
help but to supplement it for basic Python code structures. SuperHELP will
also be opinionated. Help can be provided in a variety of contexts including
the terminal and web browsers (perhaps as part of on-line tutorials).

## Quick Start

Click the button below to open a Binder Jupyter Notebook you can play around
in e.g. get advice on a snippet or line of Python

[![Binder](https://mybinder.org/badge_logo.svg)](https://mybinder.org/v2/git/https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fgrantps%2Fsuperhelp.git/master?filepath=notebooks%2FSuperhelpDemo.ipynb)

or put the following at the top of your Python script and run the script:

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this()

## Installation

Note - Python 3.6+ only. If you have an older version of Python use the Binder
Jupyter Notebook button instead (see higher up)

To install

1) Use pip e.g.

    $ pip3 install superhelp

or similar

    $ python3 -m pip install superhelp

2) Or clone the repo

    $ git clone https://github.com/grantps/superhelp.git
    $ python3 setup.py install

## Example Use Cases

* Charlotte likes to check her code before others see it so includes

        import superhelp
        superhelp.this(warnings_only=True)

    at the top of each script. When she is happy with the code she comments
    those two lines out.

* Avi is a Python beginner and wants to get advice on a five-line
function he wrote to display greetings to a list of people. He learns about
Python conventions for variable naming and better ways of combining strings.

* Zach wants to get advice on a named tuple. He learns how to add doc strings
to individual fields.

* Noor is considering submitting some code to Stack Overflow but wants to
improve it first (or possibly get ideas for a solution directly). She discovers
that a list comprehension might work. She also becomes aware of dictionary
comprehensions for the first time.

* Al has written a simple Python decorator but is wanting to see if there is
anything which can be improved. He learns how to use functool.wrap from an
example provided.

* Moana is an experienced Python developer but tends to forget things like doc
strings in her functions. She learns a standard approach and starts using it
more often. Moana also finds the summarised linting useful.

* Paul wants to check the quality of some code before including it in his
project. He learns about some issues and makes improvements before integrating
it.

# Example Usage

## Screenshot from HTML output

![Example HTML output](https://github.com/grantps/superhelp/raw/master/example_html_output_1.png)

## Screenshot from Terminal output

![Example Terminal output](https://github.com/grantps/superhelp/raw/master/example_terminal_output_1.png)

## Screenshot from Markdown output

![Example Markdown output](https://github.com/grantps/superhelp/raw/master/example_markdown_output_1.png)

## Using SuperHELP on the Notebook

Add new cell at end with content like:

    %%shelp

    def sorted(my_list):
        sorted_list = my_list.sort()
        return sorted_list

and run it to get advice.

The notebook has more detailed instructions at the top.

## Using SuperHELP on a Local Installation

### Inside your script

Put the following at the top of your script and then run the script (note - there are two underscores on either side of file):

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this()

If you don't want the default web output you can specify another output such as 'cli' (command line interface) or 'md' (markdown):

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this(output='md')

If you don't want the default 'Extra' level of messages you can specify a different detail level ('Brief' or 'Main') e.g.

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this(output='md', detail_level='Brief')

or:

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this(detail_level='Main')

If you only want to see warnings you can specify warnings only e.g.

    import superhelp
    superhelp.this(warnings_only=True)

**Changes since 0.9.21**:

Changed:

    output (replaces displayer)
    detail_level (replaces level)

Added:

    warnings_only

### From the command line (terminal / console)

    $ shelp -h  ## get help on usage

    $ shelp --code "people = ['Tomas', 'Sal', 'Raj']" --output html --detail-level Main
    $ shelp -c "people = ['Tomas', 'Sal', 'Raj']" -o html -d Main

    $ shelp --file-path my_script.py --output cli  --detail-level Extra
    $ shelp -f my_snippet.py -o cli -d Brief

    $ shelp -w --code "people = ['Tomas', 'Sal', 'Raj']"
    $ shelp --warnings-only --code "people = ['Tomas', 'Sal', 'Raj']"

    $ shelp  ## to see advice on an example snippet displayed (detail level 'Extra')

**Changes since 0.9.21**:

Changed:

    --output and -o (replaces --displayer and -d)
    --detail-level and -d (replaces --level and -l)

Added:

    --warnings-only and -w


## Stretch Ideas

* Extend beyond standard library into popular libraries like requests, bottle, flask etc.


