Awesome
Pillar
Pillar is a markup syntax and tool-suite to generate documentation, books, websites and slides. Pillar is not new, it was invented around 2000 as a supporting language for SmallWiki: one of the first wiki using OOP for real. Its ancestor was the markup for the Pier CMS and we extracted it from Pier to make it more applicable to different domains. The Pillar syntax is similar to markdown but its emphasis is on publishing and how it handles different types of links.
Now in the latest version Pillar we are supporting Microdown syntax and migrating all the support to Microdown while supporting the Pillar syntax for backward compatibility reasons. We can migrate automatically books from Pillar syntax to Microdown syntax (compatible with markdown).
In the future Pillar will be the name of the compilation chain and the syntax language will be Microdown.
Installation
1. Building from sources
For HTTPS setup, execute the build.sh
script found in the scripts
directory:
$ git clone https://github.com/pillar-markup/pillar.git
$ cd pillar
$ git checkout v8.3.2
$ chmod a+x ./scripts/build.sh
$ ./scripts/build.sh
The script will create a build
directory in your current working directory with the pillar installation.
$ ls
LICENSE README.md appveyor.yml archetypes ==>>build<<== download.sh scripts src
2. Setting up the environment
You can then proceed to install that pillar build where you want. For example, you can place it in a hidden directory in your home directory:
$ cd ..
$ mv pillar ~/.pillar
Then add that directory to the PILLAR_HOME
and HOME
environment variables, for example, by modifying your .bashrc
with
export PILLAR_HOME="$HOME/.pillar"
To make the pillar
command available in your shell you can:
- either symlink the
pillar
script into your~/bin
(or~/.local/bin
on some environments) folder using:
ln -s $PILLAR_HOME/build/pillar ~/bin/pillar
- or add the build folder into the your
PATH
envirnment variable, for example by adding into your.bashrc
(or shell startup):
export PATH="$PATH:$PILLAR_HOME/build"
3. Install external dependencies
You need to have a LaTeX
installation in your machine. The simplest is to do a full installation, otherwise read below for a more tailored solution.
Installing LaTeX
on OSX
The simplest installation is to do a full mactex installation. Just follow the instructions in https://www.tug.org/mactex/
Installing LaTeX
on *nix
The simplest way to install LaTeX
on unix is to install texlive-full in your system using your preferred package manager.
Installing LaTeX
on Windows
Install a LaTeX
distribution such as MiKTeX and install the dependencies specified below using the provided package manager. Then, make sure the bin directory is in your PATH environment variable. For example this could be the following value:
C:\Program Files\MiKTeX 2.9\miktex\bin\x64
The automatic installer does this for you in general.
Also, latexmk on MiKTeX depends on a perl interpreter, that could be obtained via:
http://www.perl.org/get.html#win32
And requires to install this specific package MiKTeX package:
- supp-pdf
Tailored installation (for non-full lovers)
Producing pdf documents with Pillar requires a LaTeX
installation with certain packages.
Pillar 7.7.3 introduced the possibility to use LaTeX 2018 or the rolling version of 2019.
Check the ensure-deps.sh files and companion travis file (if you want to run in travis) in the support/latex of the archetype.
4. Test your installation
To test your pillar installation, open a new terminal and execute the pillar --version
command.
If everything is ok, that should print out (as in the current version) the version of the Pharo VM.
For example:
$ pillar --version
M: CoInterpreter VMMaker.oscog-eem.2265 uuid: 76b62109-629a-4c39-9641-67b53321df9a Aug 27 2017
StackToRegisterMappingCogit VMMaker.oscog-eem.2262 uuid: 8b531242-de02-48aa-b418-8d2dde0bec6c Aug 27 2017
VM: 201708271955 https://github.com/OpenSmalltalk/opensmalltalk-vm.git $ Date: Sun Aug 27 21:55:26 2017 +0200 $ Plugins: 201708271955 https://github.com/OpenSmalltalk/opensmalltalk-vm.git $
Getting started
To create a book, you can start by installing the book archetype in a directory where you want to manage it:
$ mkdir my-new-book
$ cd my-new-book
$ pillar archetype book
You can then edit the pillar files and the pillar configuration file pillar.conf
.
Finally, you can generate your book in pdf using.
$ pillar build pdf
Or in html:
$ pillar build html
The resulting pdf or html site will be written into the _result
directory.
All commands
Add the -h
flag to get documentation.
pillar build
It builds by default the export format found in pillar.conf
at defaultExport
target.
pillar archetype
pillar updateTemplate
pillar serve
Contributing to Pillar
The current pillar version is being developped using both Pharo10 (soon Pharo11). To contribute, the easiest way to to follow the previous scripts and send PullRequests. Use the latest dev-branch as a root for your changes.
More documentation
Read the documentation at https://github.com/SquareBracketAssociates/Booklet-PublishingAPillarBooklet. Please note that chapter on "Pharo a web Perspective" is obsolete since it refers to Pharo 60.
History
For Pharo 11
- v9.0.0 loading in Pharo 11. The development will now happen in P11.
For Pharo 10
- v8.3.2 fixed baseline and updated readme
- 8.3.0 full support for microdown and pillar books using MD v2.3.1
- 8.2.7 [Bogus] full support for microdown and pillar books (but it did load the correct version of microdown)
- 8.2.6 [Bogus] full support for microdown and pillar books (but it did load the correct version of microdown)
- 8.2.4-5 introduced hooks for file include in Pillar and microdown
- 8.2.3 remove temporary PRMicrodownWriter (since it was ported to MicrodownV2)
- 8.2.2 -- cache table of contents to avoid quadratic search -- Ready for P10 SubOSProcess 1.4, ifError:
- 8.2.1 remove pillar before loading
- 8.2.0 Change microdownDev to Microdown 1.0.0
- 8.0.15
- 8.0.12 Tagged versions from 8.0.4 to 8.0.12 excluded got broken due to a class renaming. 8.0.12 is now green tests and loads. It is the future candidate for stable.
- 7.7.4 Last version before moving to P8.
- 7.7.3 introduces the possibility to use LaTeX 2018 or the rolling version of 2019. Check the ensure-deps.sh and companion travis file in the support/latex of the archetype.
- 7.7.0 cleaned useless features, plus travis builds.
- 7.5.0 introduces environments (${begin:card|x=12}$ ... ${end:card}$
- 7.4.1 introduces element-based templating (templates found in a given folder are used to output one given element).
Planned features
- Up to date documentation
- Remodularize packaging to be able to use Pillar inside Pharo for class/package comments.
- Integration with Citezen
- Introduce a markdown brand (to be able to do full roundtrip pillar <-> markdown <-> pillar). It will not cover every features of markdown and it will cover pillar core features: environment, extensible tags.
- Better templates for Web
- More components (blog)
- Reinitiate a small version of Pier to get live support