Rinohtype is a document processor in the style of LaTeX. It renders structured documents to PDF based on a document template and a style sheet. An important goal of rinohtype is to be more user-friendly than LaTeX. This includes providing clear error messages and making it very easy to adjust the document style. See the documentation to learn how to customize the style of your document.
Rinohtype is currently in a beta phase and thus not recommended for production use, but you can use it to explore rinohtype's features and bugs. I'd highly appreciate it if you could create a ticket for any bugs you may encounter. However, rinohtype is already very capable. Here is a list of its main features:
- a powerful page layout system supporting columns, running headers/footers, floatable elements and footnotes
- support for figures, and (large) tables
- automatically generated table of contents and index
- automatic numbering and cross-referencing of section headings, figures and tables
- use one of the included document templates or create your own
- an intuitive style sheet system inspired by CSS
- modular design allowing for multiple frontends (such as reStructuredText, Markdown, DocBook, ...)
- handles OpenType, TrueType and Type1 fonts with support for advanced typographic features such as kerning, ligatures and small capitals
- embeds PDF, PNG and JPEG images, preserving transparency and color profiles
- easy to deploy; pure-Python with few dependencies
- built on Unicode; ready for non-latin languages
Rinohtype's primary input format is reStructuredText. The rinoh
command
line tool renders reStructuredText documents and the included Sphinx builder
obsoletes the need for a large LaTeX installation to produce PDF output. Have
a look at the rinohtype documentation for an example of the output.
Please, be warned that some older versions of PDF readers have trouble displaying the PDFs generated by rinohtype (issue 2):
- pre-37.0 Firefox's built-in PDF viewer (pdf.js)
- pre-0.41 poppler-based applications such as Evince
Rinohtype supports Python 3.3+. It might be back-ported to Python 2.7 at some point in the future if there are a lot of requests for it.
For parsing reStructuredText documents Rinohtype depends on docutils. For parsing PNG images rinohtype depends on PurePNG. pip takes care of these requirement when you install rinohtype. If you want to include images other than PDF, PNG or JPEG, you also need to install Pillow.
Installation is trivial:
pip install rinohtype
The easiest way to get started with rinohtype is to render a reStructuredText
document (such as demo.txt) using the rinoh
command line tool:
rinoh demo.txt
When rinoh
finishes, you will find demo.pdf
alongside the input file.
By default rinoh
renders the input document using the article template. Run
rinoh --help
to see how you can tell rinoh
which document template and
style sheet to use.
Rinohtype can be used as a drop-in replacement for the LaTeX builder (the
latex_documents
configuration variable has to be set). You only need to add
'rinoh.frontend.sphinx'
to the extensions
list in conf.py
. With
this in place, you can select the rinoh builder when building the
documentation:
sphinx-build -b rinoh . _build/rinoh
See CONTRIBUTING.rst.
All of rinohtype's source code is licensed under the Affero GPL 3.0, unless
indicated otherwise in the source file (such as hyphenator.py
).
The Affero GPL requires for software that builds on rinohtype to also be released as open source under the same license. For building closed-source applications, you can obtain a commercial license. The author of rinohtype is also available for consultancy projects involving rinohtype.