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gh-110631: Fix wrong reST markup and list numbers. #110885
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@@ -1107,7 +1107,7 @@ subject value: | |||
If only keyword patterns are present, they are processed as follows, | |||
one by one: | |||
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I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. | |||
1. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. |
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Sphinx <7 doesn't seem to support them, so they are actually just regular paragraphs starting with I. ...
. Letters like a. b. c. ...
are also not supported, so we only have numbers left and have to rely on the indentation to distinguish the levels.
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I see.
Well, we need to keep support for older Sphinx for the benefit of Linux distros (and are testing it on CI), but can we use Sphinx 7 for our actual main build and deploy?
The Roman numerals won't cause any errors for for Sphinx <7, and they'll be better rendered for for Sphinx 7.
Re: #99380 and cc @AA-Turner.
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I should be able to fix the indentation/rendering of the nested lists while keeping the roman numerals, the only issue is that since they are rendered as <p>
s rather than <li>
s, it's technically incorrect (at least on Sphinx <7). Not sure if that matters though (maybe for screen readers or similar cases?).
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Actually if I fix it for <7, once we upgrade to 7 it will break again.
On <7 I could do:
I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject.
* ...
* ...
which will be seen as a paragraph followed by a list, but on 7 it would have to be:
I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject.
* ...
* ...
since it will be seen as a list item followed by a sublist that needs to be indented.
If I leave the indentation on <7, it will render an additional blockquote around the sublist, and it will cause sphinx-lint
to complain, so switching to numbers might still be the best compromise.
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I don't mind too much if the display isn't perfect for <7, as long as it still builds and looks reasonable.
Then we can use 7 for our deploys, and sphinx-lint will be happy too.
Would that work?
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sphinx-lint
will be sad on 7 too, since the checker currently ignores alphabetic lists (like Sphinx 6 does) and sees this as an incorrectly indented list under a paragraph, regardless of the Sphinx version used.
I tried adding support for alphabetic lists, but it's a can of worms with many false positives.
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Hmm, maybe we should ignore the Sphinx Lint warning here?
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1. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. | |
I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. |
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I haven't looked into this in a while, but if possible we should find a solution that is both rendered correctly and that is not reported by sphinx-lint
as error.
Fixing sphinx-lint
is also an option if the error is reported mistakenly, but avoiding alphabetic lists and roman numerals might still be a simpler solution.
@ezio-melotti @hugovk Is this something that we can move forward? Or should it be closed? |
The cited issues were with Sphinx 6 and earlier, which we have now dropped. |
@@ -1107,7 +1107,7 @@ subject value: | |||
If only keyword patterns are present, they are processed as follows, | |||
one by one: | |||
|
|||
I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. | |||
1. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. |
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1. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. | |
I. The keyword is looked up as an attribute on the subject. |
@@ -1120,13 +1120,13 @@ subject value: | |||
pattern fails; if this succeeds, the match proceeds to the next keyword. | |||
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II. If all keyword patterns succeed, the class pattern succeeds. | |||
2. If all keyword patterns succeed, the class pattern succeeds. |
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2. If all keyword patterns succeed, the class pattern succeeds. | |
II. If all keyword patterns succeed, the class pattern succeeds. |
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If any positional patterns are present, they are converted to keyword | ||
patterns using the :data:`~object.__match_args__` attribute on the class | ||
``name_or_attr`` before matching: | ||
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I. The equivalent of ``getattr(cls, "__match_args__", ())`` is called. | ||
1. The equivalent of ``getattr(cls, "__match_args__", ())`` is called. |
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1. The equivalent of ``getattr(cls, "__match_args__", ())`` is called. | |
I. The equivalent of ``getattr(cls, "__match_args__", ())`` is called. |
2. Once all positional patterns have been converted to keyword patterns, | ||
the match proceeds as if there were only keyword patterns. |
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2. Once all positional patterns have been converted to keyword patterns, | |
the match proceeds as if there were only keyword patterns. | |
II. Once all positional patterns have been converted to keyword patterns, | |
the match proceeds as if there were only keyword patterns. |
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Looks good to me. Thanks @ezio-melotti and @AA-Turner for moving this forward.
📚 Documentation preview 📚: https://cpython-previews--110885.org.readthedocs.build/