If a setting exists in DEFAULT_CONFIG, assume it will be there
(instead of checking and/or providing a local default). The earlier
code was split between the two idioms, which was confusing.
Setting migration is something that will happen for multiple settings,
and the more we can standardize the reporting procedure, the easier it
will be to add new warnings.
This dictionary is accessed by plugins (like `summary`) which add new
settings, so it should be public (i.e. no prefixed underscore).
The changed name length would have led to a re-indenting of the
default contents anyway, so I shifted them all to four spaces.
From the Python docs for os.sep [1]:
Note that knowing this is not sufficient to be able to parse or
concatenate pathnames - use os.path.split() and os.path.join()...
Where I touched a line, I also changed double quoted string literals
to single quotes, since they are used more often in the source:
wking@mjolnir ~/src/pelican $ git grep "'" pelican/*.py | wc -l
683
wking@mjolnir ~/src/pelican $ git grep '"' pelican/*.py | wc -l
181
[1]: http://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.sep
Allows users to have per-year, per-month, and per-day archives of posts
automatically generated. The feature is disabled by default; to enable
it a user must supply format strings for a period's respective
`_SAVE_AS` setting.
Sometimes the base filename doesn't have everything you need.
Remember that os.sep is platform dependent, so using it in a regular
expression for this setting may not be portable (boo MS Windows!).
Static needs a lot of the same handling as other pages, so make it a
subclass of Page. The rename from StaticContent to Static makes for
cleaner configuration settings (STATIC_URL instead of
STATICCONTENT_URL).
All currently generated Static instances override the save_as
attribute explicitly on initialization, but it isn't hard to imagine
wanting to adjust STATIC file output based on metadata (e.g. extracted
from their source filename). With this union, the framework for
manipulating URLs and filenames is shared between all source file
types.
Making everything consistent is a bit awkward, since this is a
commonly used attribute, but I've done my best.
Reasons for not consolidating on `filename`:
* It is often used for the "basename" (last component in the path).
Using `source_path` makes it clear that this attribute can contain
multiple components.
Reasons for not consolidating on `filepath`:
* It is barely used in the Pelican source, and therefore easy to
change.
* `path` is more Pythonic. The only place `filepath` ever show up in
the documentation for `os`, `os.path`, and `shutil` is in the
`os.path.relpath` documentation [1].
Reasons for not consolidating on `path`:
* The Page elements have both a source (this attribute) and a
destination (.save_as). To avoid confusion for developers not aware
of this, make it painfully obvious that this attribute is for the
source. Explicit is better than implicit ;).
Where I was touching the line, I also updated the string formatting in
StaticGenerator.generate_output to use the forward compatible
'{}'.format() syntax.
[1]: http://docs.python.org/2/library/os.path.html#os.path.relpath
This allows users to organize their files in ways where the subfolder name
would not make a good category name (i.e. /2012/09/). Set this to ``False``
and the subfolder will no longer be used as a standard category,
`DEFAULT_CATEGORY` will be used instead.
As @ametaireau suggested: instead of having logic that prepends the
OUTPUT_SOURCES_EXTENSION with a '.' we allow the user more
flexibility to control the extension that can be used.