This repository contains the official KiCad documentation.
You can discuss the documentation and its translations in the repository issues.
To participate to the translation effort read the translation_instructions.adoc.
Submit your translation pull requests to the stable docs branch 4.0, please.
See docs-versioning.adoc for details about docs versioning.
The following instructions explain how to test changes before submitting a pull-request.
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AsciiDoc >= 8.6.9 is both the language of the documentation and the tool used to generate the PDF and HTML outputs.
We will probably switch to asciidoctor in the future, when asciidoctor tools are stable enough, because of their ability to generate PDF and epub document formats directly without the intervention of any other external tool or intermediate format like dblatex or docbook. See the asciidoctor-pdf project.
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po4a >= 0.45 is used to translate the English AsciiDoc documentation to other languages before the last compilation steps.
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CMake >= 2.8
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dblatex >= 0.3.4
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gettext >= 0.18
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source-highlight
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The VL Gothic font is required when you build the Japanese PDFs. Look for a package named
fonts-vlgothic
. Otherwise use the SINGLE_LANGUAGE option to avoid build errors. -
For building PDF files with Cyrillic characters (like Russian) the fonts package freefont-ttf is required, so you will need to look for similar named package.
To install the dependencies on Debian / Ubuntu run the following (requires about 1.5GiB of space):
sudo apt-get install asciidoc cmake dblatex fonts-freefont-ttf \ fonts-vlgothic gettext git make po4a source-highlight \ texlive-lang-cyrillic texlive-lang-english texlive-lang-european \ texlive-lang-french texlive-lang-german texlive-lang-italian \ texlive-lang-japanese texlive-lang-other texlive-lang-polish \ texlive-lang-spanish texlive-xetex texlive-lang-chinese
Note
|
Debian Jessie and Ubuntu 16.04 LTS has no package texlive-lang-european, install the package texlive-lang-dutch instead. |
Note
|
in Ubuntu 14.04 LTS there is no texlive-lang-japanese. Install texlive-lang-cjk instead. |
or, if you do not have space problems:
sudo apt-get install asciidoc cmake dblatex fonts-freefont-ttf \ fonts-vlgothic gettext git make po4a source-highlight \ texlive-lang-all texlive-xetex
To install the dependencies on Fedora run the following:
sudo dnf install git make cmake asciidoc gettext po4a dblatex \ source-highlight texlive vlgothic-fonts perl-Unicode-LineBreak \ texlive-scheme-full texlive-collection-xetex gnu-free-serif-fonts \ gnu-free-mono-fonts gnu-free-sans-fonts
Start with windows_dependencies.adoc then run:
cd kicad-doc mkdir build cd build cmake -G "MinGW Makefiles" -DPDF_GENERATOR=FOP ../ make
Read utils/docker/README.adoc if you want to build the documentation in a container.
By default BUILD_FORMATS is set to html;pdf;epub
to enable building all supported
document formats.
It’s possible to set BUILD_FORMATS in order to build only a subset of formats,
e.g. -DBUILD_FORMATS=html
When only one build format is enabled the package name is transformed to include the format.
By default CMake will configure to build all languages available for each document.
You can build just a single language by using the SINGLE_LANGUAGE option when
configuring a build with CMake, e.g. -DSINGLE_LANGUAGE=it
, etc.
Currently, the available languages are : en
, fr
, it
, ja
, nl
, and pl
however, any
language code can be selected. Only translated documents will be built, so for
some languages there may only be a partial documentation output.
When the SINGLE_LANGUAGE option is set, the package name is transformed to include the language.
By default CMake will use dblatex building PDFs.
You can build PDFs however using either DBLATEX
or FOP
by using the
PDF_GENERATOR option whilst configuring a CMake build.
For example, use -DPDF_GENERATOR=FOP
to use FOP to build the PDFs. If the
BUILD_FORMATS option doesn’t include pdf
, the PDF_GENERATOR option
will have no effect on the build.
This option doesn’t transform the built package name.
The docs use CMake as mentioned earlier, so to install it as a packager use the normal CMake way, for example:
mkdir build; cd build cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr .. make install
And if on OS X you might want something like:
mkdir build; cd build cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="/Library/Application Support/kicad" .. make install