We currently use Sphinx for generating the API and reference documentation for Numpy. You will need Sphinx 1.0.1 or newer.
If you only want to get the documentation, note that pre-built versions can be found at
http://docs.scipy.org/
in several different formats.
If you obtained Numpy via git, get also the git submodules that contain additional parts required for building the documentation:
git submodule init
git submodule updateSince large parts of the main documentation are stored in docstrings, you will need to first build Numpy, and install it so that the correct version is imported by
>>> import numpy
Note that you can eg. install Numpy to a temporary location and set
the PYTHONPATH environment variable appropriately. Also note that if
you have a system Numpy installed via Python eggs, you will also need
to use setupegg.py to install the temporary Numpy.
After Numpy is installed, write:
make htmlin this doc/ directory. If all goes well, this will generate a
build/html subdirectory containing the built documentation. Note
that building the documentation on Windows is currently not actively
supported, though it should be possible. (See Sphinx documentation
for more information.)
To build the PDF documentation, do instead:
make latex
make -C build/latex all-pdfYou will need to have Latex installed for this.
In addition to the above, you can also do:
make distwhich will rebuild Numpy, install it to a temporary location, and build the documentation in all formats. This will most likely again only work on Unix platforms.
Numpy's documentation uses several custom extensions to Sphinx. These
are shipped in the sphinxext/ directory, and are automatically
enabled when building Numpy's documentation.
If you want to make use of these extensions in third-party projects, they are available on PyPi as the numpydoc package.