I would recommend Pandoc, the "swiss-army knife for converting files from one markup format into another" (check out the diagram of supported conversions at the bottom of the page, it is quite impressive). Pandoc allows markdown to reStructuredText translation directly. There is also an online editor here which lets you try it out, so you could simply use the online editor to convert your README files.
As @Chris suggested, you can use Pandoc to convert Markdown to RST. This can be simply automated using pypandoc module and some magic in setup.py:
from setuptools import setup
try:
from pypandoc import convert
read_md = lambda f: convert(f, 'rst')
except ImportError:
print("warning: pypandoc module not found, could not convert Markdown to RST")
read_md = lambda f: open(f, 'r').read()
setup(
# name, version, ...
long_description=read_md('README.md'),
install_requires=[]
)
This will automatically convert README.md to RST for the long description using on PyPi. When pypandoc is not available, then it just reads README.md without the conversion – to not force others to install pypandoc when they wanna just build the module, not upload to PyPi.
So you can write in Markdown as usual and don’t care about RST mess anymore. ;)
The PyPI Warehouse now supports rendering Markdown as well! You just need to update your package configuration and add the long_description_content_type='text/markdown'
to it. e.g.:
setup(
name='an_example_package',
# other arguments omitted
long_description=long_description,
long_description_content_type='text/markdown'
)
Therefore, there is no need to keep the README in two formats any longer.
You can find more information about it in the documentation.
The Markup library used by GitHub supports reStructuredText. This means you can write a README.rst file.
They even support syntax specific color highlighting using the code
and code-block
directives (Example)
PyPI now supports Markdown for long descriptions!
In setup.py
, set long_description
to a Markdown string, add long_description_content_type="text/markdown"
and make sure you're using recent tooling (setuptools
38.6.0+, twine
1.11+).
See Dustin Ingram's blog post for more details.
You might also be interested in the fact that it is possible to write in a common subset so that your document comes out the same way when rendered as markdown or rendered as reStructuredText: https://gist.github.com/dupuy/1855764 ☺
For my requirements I didn't want to install Pandoc in my computer. I used docverter. Docverter is a document conversion server with an HTTP interface using Pandoc for this.
import requests
r = requests.post(url='http://c.docverter.com/convert',
data={'to':'rst','from':'markdown'},
files={'input_files[]':open('README.md','rb')})
if r.ok:
print r.content
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