This section describe how Pelican works internally. As you’ll see, it’s quite simple, but a bit of documentation doesn’t hurt. :)
You can also find in the Some history about Pelican section an excerpt of a report the original author wrote with some software design information.
What Pelican does is take a list of files and process them into some sort of output. Usually, the input files are reStructuredText and Markdown files, and the output is a blog, but both input and output can be anything you want.
The logic is separated into different classes and concepts:
Is there an awesome markup language you want to add to Pelican? Well, the only thing you have to do is to create a class with a read method that returns HTML content and some metadata.
Take a look at the Markdown reader:
class MarkdownReader(Reader):
enabled = bool(Markdown)
def read(self, filename):
"""Parse content and metadata of markdown files"""
text = open(filename)
md = Markdown(extensions = ['meta', 'codehilite'])
content = md.convert(text)
metadata = {}
for name, value in md.Meta.items():
if name in _METADATA_FIELDS:
meta = _METADATA_FIELDS[name](value[0])
else:
meta = value[0]
metadata[name.lower()] = meta
return content, metadata
Simple, isn’t it?
If your new reader requires additional Python dependencies, then you should wrap their import statements in a try...except block. Then inside the reader’s class, set the enabled class attribute to mark import success or failure. This makes it possible for users to continue using their favourite markup method without needing to install modules for formats they don’t use.
Generators have two important methods. You’re not forced to create both; only the existing ones will be called.