==================
How to use rst2pdf
==================

:author: Roberto Alsina <ralsina@netmanagers.com.ar>
:version: 0.9
:revision: $LastChangedRevision: 402 $

.. header::

   ###Section###

.. footer::

   Page ###Page###

.. contents::
    
.. section-numbering::

.. raw:: pdf

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Introduction
============

This document explains how to use rst2pdf. Here is the very short version::

    rst2pdf.py mydocument.txt -o mydocument.pdf

That will, as long as mydocument.txt is a valid Restructured Text (ReST) 
document, produce a file called mydocument.pdf which is a PDF 
version of your document.

Of course, that means you just used default styles and settings. If it 
looks good enough for you, then you may stop reading this document, 
because you are done with it. If you are reading this in a PDF,
it was generated using those default settings.

However, if you want to customize the output, or are just curious to see
what can be done, let´s continue.

Command line Options
====================

-h, --help            show this help message and exit
-o FILE, --output=FILE
                    Write the PDF to FILE
-s STYLESHEETS
                    A comma-separated list of custom stylesheets.
                    Default=""
-c, --compressed      Create a compressed PDF. Default=False
--print-stylesheet    Print the default stylesheet and exit
--font-folder=FOLDER     Search this folder for fonts. (Deprecated)
--font-path=FOLDERLIST
                      A colon-separated list of folders to search for fonts.
                      Default=""
-l LANG, --language=LANG
                    Language to be used for hyphenation. Default="en_US"
--fit-literal-mode=MODE
                    What todo when a literal is too wide. One of
                    error,overflow,shrink,truncate.
-b LEVEL, --break-level=LEVEL
                    Maximum section level that starts in a new page.
                    Default: 0
--inline-links        Shows target between parenthesis instead of active
                        link
-q, --quiet           Print less information.
-v, --verbose         Print debug information.
--very-verbose        Print even more debug information.

Some of these options' defaults can be changed by creating a `configuration file`_

Configuration File
==================

Since version 0.8, rst2pdf will read (if it is available) configuration files in
``/etc/rst2pdf.conf`` and ``~/.rst2pdf/config``.

The user's file at ``~/.rst2pdf/config`` will have priority over the system's at
``/etc/rst2pdf.conf`` [#]_

.. [#] The ``/etc/rst2pdf.conf`` location makes sense for Linux and linux-like systems.
       if you are using rst2pdf in other systems, please contact me and tell me where
       the system-wide config file should be.



Here's an example file showing all the currently available options:

.. code-block:: ini

    # This is an example config file. Modify and place in ~/.rst2pdf/config
    
    [general]
    # A comma-separated list of custom stylesheets. Example:
    # stylesheets="fruity.json,a4paper.json,verasans.json"
    stylesheets=""

    # Create a compressed PDF
    # Use true/false (lower case) or 1/0
    # Example: compressed=true
    compressed=false

    # A colon-separated list of folders to search for fonts. Example:
    # font_path="/usr/share/fonts:/usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/"
    font_path=""

    # Language to be used for hyphenation support
    language="en_US"

    # What to do if a literal block is too large. Can be
    # shrink/truncate/overflow
    fit_mode="shrink"

    # What is the maximum level of heading that starts in a new page.
    # 0 means no level starts in a new page.
    break_level=0


Pipe usage
==========

If no input nor output are provided, stdin and stdout will be used respectively

You may want to use rst2pdf in a linux pipe as such::

    cat readme.txt | rst2pdf | gzip -c > readme.pdf.gz
    
or::

    curl http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/user/rst/quickstart.txt | rst2pdf > quickstart.pdf
    
If no input argument is provided, stdin will be used::

    cat readme.txt | rst2pdf -o readme.pdf

If outpufile is set to dash '-', output goes to stdout::

    rst2pdf -o - readme.txt > output.pdf


Headers and Footers
===================

ReST supports headers and footers, using the header and footer directive::

  .. header::

     This will be at the top of every page.

Often, you may want to put a page number there, or a section name.The following
magic tokens will be replaced (More will be added as rst2pdf evolves):

###Page###
    Replaced by the current page number.
###Title###
    Replaced by the document title
###Section###
    Replaced by the currect section title
###SectNum###
    Replaced by the currect section number. **Important:** You must use the sectnum directive for this to work.

Headers and footers are visible by default but they can be disabled by specific
`Page Templates`_ for example, cover pages.
    
Footnotes
=========

Currently rst2pdf doesn't support real footnotes, and converts them to endnotes.
There is a real complicated technical reason for this: I can't figure out a
clean way to do it right.

I could go the HTML path and just render them where you put them, but then they
wouldn't be footnotes either, would they? They would be
"in-the-middle-of-text-notes" or just plain notes.

Images
======

Inline
------

You can insert images in the middle of your text like this::

  This |biohazard| means you have to run.

  .. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png

This |biohazard| means you have to run.

.. |biohazard| image:: biohazard.png

This only works correctly with reportlab 2.2 or later.



Supported Image Types
---------------------

For raster images, rst2pdf supports anything PIL (The Python Imaging Library) supports.
The exact list of supported formats varies according to your PIL version and system.

For vector image support, you need to install Uniconvertor from http://sk1project.org
version 1.1.3 or later.

It provides support for these formats:

* CorelDRAW ver.7-X3,X4 (CDR/CDT/CCX/CDRX/CMX)
* Adobe Illustrator up to 9 ver. (AI postscript based)
* Postscript (PS)
* Encapsulated Postscript (EPS)
* Computer Graphics Metafile (CGM)
* Windows Metafile (WMF)
* XFIG
* Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG)
* Skencil/Sketch/sK1 (SK and SK1)
* Acorn Draw (AFF)

Some features will not work when using these images.For example, gradients will not
display, and text may cause problems.

To test suitability of your vector images for use with rst2pdf, try converting them
to PDF using uniconvertor. The result should be exactly the way they will look
when used in your documents.

If you can choose between raster and vectorial images, for non-photographic images,
vector files are usually smaller and look better, specially when printed.

Styles
======

You can style paragraphs with a style using the class directive::

  .. class:: special

  This paragraph is special.

  This one is not.

Or inline styles using custom interpreted roles::

   .. role:: redtext

   I like color :redtext:`red`.

For more information about this, please check the ReST docs.

The only special thing about using rst2pdf here is the syntax of
the stylesheet. 

You can make rst2pdf print the default stylesheet::

  rst2pdf --print-stylesheet

If you want to add styles, just take the standard stylesheet, 
modify it and pass it with the -s option::

  rst2pdf mydoc.txt -s mystyles.txt


StyleSheet Syntax
-----------------

It´s a JSON file with several elements in it.

Font Alias
----------

This is the fontsAlias element. By default, it uses some of the standard PDF fonts::

  "fontsAlias" : {
    "stdFont": "Helvetica",
    "stdBold": "Helvetica-Bold",
    "stdItalic": "Helvetica-Oblique",
    "stdBoldItalic": "Helvetica-BoldOblique",
    "stdMono": "Courier"
  },

This defines the fonts used in the styles. You can use, for example, Helvetica 
directly in a style, but if later you want to use another font all through
your document, you will haveto change it in each style. So, I suggest you
use aliases.

The standard PDF fonts are these:

  Times_Roman
  Times-Bold
  Times-Italic
  Times-Bold-Italic
  Helvetica
  Helvetica_Bold
  Helvetica-Oblique
  Helvetica-Bold-Oblique
  Courier
  Courier-Bold
  Courier-Oblique
  Courier-Bold-Oblique
  Symbol
  Zapf-Dingbats

Style Definition
----------------

Then you have a 'styles' which is a list of [ stylename, styleproperties ]. For example::

    ["normal" , {
      "parent": "base"
    }],

This means that the style called "normal" inherits style "base". So, each property 
not defined in the normal style will be taken from the base style.

I suggest you do not remove any style from the default stylesheet. Add or modify at
will, though.

If your document requires a style that is not defined in your styleheet, it will 
print a warning and use bodytext instead.

Also, the order of the styles is important: if styleA is the parent of styleB,
styleA should be earlier in the stylesheet.

These are all the possible attributes for a style and their default values.
Some of them, like alignment, apply only when used to paragraphs,
and not on inline styles::

    "fontName":"Times-Roman",
    "fontSize":10,
    "leading":12,
    "leftIndent":0,
    "rightIndent":0,
    "firstLineIndent":0,
    "alignment":TA_LEFT,
    "spaceBefore":0,
    "spaceAfter":0,
    "bulletFontName":"Times-Roman",
    "bulletFontSize":10,
    "bulletIndent":0,
    "textColor": black,
    "backColor":None,
    "wordWrap":None,
    "borderWidth": 0,
    "borderPadding": 0,
    "borderColor": None,
    "borderRadius": None,
    "allowWidows": 1,
    "allowOrphans": 0

The following are the only attributes that work on styles when used for interpreted roles
(inline styles):

* fontName

* fontSize

* textColor

Notice that backColor is **not** in that list.
    

Font Embedding
--------------

There are thousands of excelent free True Type and Type 1 fonts available on the
web, and you can use many of them in your documents by declaring them in your
stylesheet.


The Easy Way
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Just use the font name in your style. For example, you can define this::

    ["normal" , {
      "fontName" : "fonty"
    }]

And then it *may* work.

What would need to happen for this to work?

Fonty is a True Type font:
""""""""""""""""""""""""""

1. You need to have it installed in your system, and have the fc-match
    utility available (it's part of fontconfig_). You can test if it is
    so by running this command::

        $ fc-match fonty
        fonty.ttf: "Fonty" "Normal"

    If you are in Windows, I need your help ;-) or you can use `The Harder Way (True Type)`_

2. The folder where fonty.ttf is located needs to be in your font path. You can set it
    using the --font-path option. For example::

        rst2pdf mydoc.txt -s mystyle.style --font-path /usr/share/fonts

    You don't need to put the *exact* folder, just something that is above it. In my own case,
    fonty is in /usr/share/fonts/TTF

Whenever a font is embedded, you can refer to it in a style by its name, and
to its variants by the aliases Name-Oblique, Name-Bold, Name-BoldOblique.

Fonty is a Type 1 font:
"""""""""""""""""""""""

You need it installed, and the folders where its font metric (.afm) and binary (.pfb) files
are located need to be in your font fath.

For example, the "URW Palladio L" font that came with my installation of TeX consists of
the following files::

    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/type1/urw/palatino/uplb8a.pfb
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/type1/urw/palatino/uplbi8a.pfb
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/type1/urw/palatino/uplr8a.pfb
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/type1/urw/palatino/uplri8a.pfb
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/afm/urw/palatino/uplb8a.afm
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/afm/urw/palatino/uplbi8a.afm
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/afm/urw/palatino/uplr8a.afm
    /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts/afm/urw/palatino/uplri8a.afm

So, I can use it if I put ``/usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts`` in my font path::

    rst2pdf mydoc.txt -s mystyle.style --font-path /usr/share/texmf-dist/fonts

And putting this in my stylesheet, for example::

    [ "title", { "fontName" : "URWPalladioL-Bold" } ]

There are some standard aliases defined so you can use other names::

    'ITC Bookman'            : 'URW Bookman L',
    'ITC Avant Garde Gothic' : 'URW Gothic L',
    'Palatino'               : 'URW Palladio L',
    'New Century Schoolbook' : 'Century Schoolbook L',
    'ITC Zapf Chancery'      : 'URW Chancery L'

So, for example, you can use ``Palatino`` or ``New Century SchoolBook-Oblique`` And it will mean
``URWPalladioL`` or ``CenturySchL-Ital``, respectively.

Whenever a font is embedded, you can refer to it in a style by its name, and
to its variants by the aliases Name-Oblique, Name-Bold, Name-BoldOblique.

The Harder Way (True Type)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The stylesheet has an element is "embeddedFonts" that handles embedding True Type
fonts in your PDF.

Usually, it's empty, because with the default styles you are not using any font
beyond the standard PDF fonts::

  "embeddedFonts" : [ ],

You can put there the name of the font, and rst2pdf will try to embed it as described
above. Example::

  "embeddedFonts" : [ "Tuffy" ],

Or you can be explicit and tell rst2pdf the files that contain each variant of the
font.

Suppose you want to use the nice public domain `Tuffy font`_ (included in rst2pdf's
source distribution).

You need to give the filenames of all variants::

  "embeddedFonts" : [ ["Tuffy.ttf","Tuffy_Bold.ttf","Tuffy_Italic.ttf","Tuffy_Bold_Italic.ttf"] ],

This will provide your styles with fonts called "Tuffy" "Tuffy_Bold" and so on. They will
be available with the names based on the filenames (Tuffy_Bold) and also by standard
aliases similar to those of the standard PDF fonts (Tuffy-Bold/Tuffy-Oblique/Tuffy-BoldOblique).

Now, if you use *italics* in a paragraph whose style uses the Tuffy font, it will use
Tuffy_Italic. That's why it's better if you use fonts that provide the four variants, and
that is the order in which you should put them. If your font lacks a variant, use the
"normal" variant instead. For example, if you only had Tuffy.ttf::

  "embeddedFonts" : [ ["Tuffy.ttf","Tuffy.ttf","Tuffy.ttf","Tuffy.ttf"] ],

However, that means that italics and bold in styles using Tuffy will not work correctly (they will
display as regular text).

If you want to use this as the base font for your document, you should change the fontsAlias
section accordingly. For example::

      "fontsAlias" : {
        "stdFont": "Tuffy",
        "stdBold": "Tuffy_Bold",
        "stdItalic": "Tuffy_Italic",
        "stdBoldItalic": "Tuffy_Bold_Italic",
        "stdMono": "Courier"
      },

If, on the other hand, you only want a specific style to use the Tuffy
font, don't change the fontAlias, and set the fontName properties for
that style. For example::

    ["heading1" , {
      "parent": "normal",
      "fontName": "Tuffy_Bold",
      "bulletFontName": "Tuffy_Bold",
      "fontSize": 18,
      "bulletFontSize": 18,
      "leading": 22,
      "keepWithNext": true,
      "spaceAfter": 6
    }],

.. _tuffy font: http://tulrich.com/fonts/

By default, rst2pdf will search for the fonts in its fonts folder and
in the current folder. You can make it search another folder by passing
the --font-folder option, or you can use absolute paths in your stylesheet.

The Harder Way (Type1)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To be written (and implemented and tested)

Page Size and Margins
---------------------

In your stylesheet, the pageSetup element controls your page layout.

Here's the default stylesheet's::

  "pageSetup" : {
    "size": "A4",
    "width": null,
    "height": null,
    "margin-top": "2cm",
    "margin-bottom": "2cm",
    "margin-left": "2cm",
    "margin-right": "2cm",
    "margin-gutter": "0cm"
  },

Size is one of the standard paper sizes, like A4 or LETTER.

Here's a list: A0, A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, A6, B0, B1, B2, B3, B4, B5, B6,
LETTER, LEGAL, ELEVENSEVENTEEN.

If you want a non-standard size, set size to null and use width and height.

When specifying width, height or margins, you need to use units, like
inch (inches) or cm (centimeters).
 
When both width/height and size are specified, size will be used, and
width/height ignored.

All margins should be self-explanatory, except for margin-gutter. That's the
margin in the center of a two-page spread.

This value is added to the left margin of odd pages and the right margin of
even pages, adding (or removing, if it's negative) space "in the middle" of
opposingpages.

If you intend to bound a printed copy, you may need extra space there. OTOH,
if you will display it on-screen on a two-page format (common in many PDF
readers, nice for ebooks), a negative value may be pleasant.

Multiple Stylesheets
--------------------

When you use a custom stylesheet, you don't need to define *everything* in it.
Whatever you don't define will be taken from the default stylesheet. For example,
if you only want to change page size, default font and font size, this would
be enough:

.. code-block:: js

    {
        "pageSetup" : {
            "size": "A5",
        },
        "fontsAlias" : {
            "stdFont": "Times-Roman",
        },
        "styles" : [
            ["normal" , {
            "fontSize": 14
            }]
        ]
    }


.. raw:: pdf

    PageBreak


Syntax Highlighting
===================

Inline
------

Rst2pdf adds a non-standard directive, called code-block, which produces syntax
highlighted for many languages using Pygments_.

For example, if you want to include a python fragment::

    .. code-block:: python

        def myFun(x,y):
            print x+y
       
.. code-block:: python

   def myFun(x,y):
       print x+y

Notice that you need to declare the language of the fragment. Here's a list of
the currently supported_.

Rst2pdf includes several stylesheets for highlighting code:

* autumn.json
* borland.json
* bw.json
* colorful.json
* default.json
* emacs.json
* friendly.json
* fruity.json
* manni.json
* murphy.json
* native.json
* pastie.json
* perldoc.json
* trac.json
* vs.json

You can use any of them instead of the default by adding, for example, a ``-s murphy.json`` to
the command line.

If you already are using a custom stylesheet, use both::

    rst2pdf mydoc.rst -o mydoc.pdf -s mystyle.json,murphy.json

The default is the same as "emacs".

Examples
~~~~~~~~

As rst2pdf is in python let's see some examples and variations around python

Python in console

.. code-block:: pycon

    >>> my_string="python is great"
    >>> my_string.find('great')
    10
    >>> my_string.startswith('py')
    True

Python traceback

.. code-block:: pytb

    Traceback (most recent call last):
        File "error.py", line 9, in ?
        main()
        File "error.py", line 6, in main
        print call_error()
        File "error.py", line 2, in call_error
        r = 1/0
    ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
    Exit 1

File inclusion
--------------

Also, you can use the code-block directive with an external file, using
the :include: option::

  .. code-block:: python
     :include: setup.py

This will give a warning if setup.py doesn't exist or can't be opened.

Include with Boundaries
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

you can add selectors to limit the inclusion to a portion of the file.
the options are:

* :start-at: string

    will include file beginning at the first occurence of string, string **included**
    
* :start-after: string

    will include file beginning at the first occurence of string, string **excluded**

* :end-before: string

    will include file up to the first occurence of string, string **excluded**

* :end-at: string

    will include file up to the first occurence of string, string **included**

Let's display a class from rst2pdf::
    
      .. code-block:: python
         :include: ../rst2pdf/flowables.py
         :start-at: class Separation(Flowable):
         :end-before: class Reference(Flowable):

this command gives
         
.. code-block:: python
    :include: ../rst2pdf/flowables.py
    :start-at: class Separation(Flowable):
    :end-before: class Reference(Flowable):

    
.. _supported: http://pygments.org/docs/lexers/

.. _pygments: http://pygments.org/

Raw Directive
=============

Rst2pdf has a very limited mechanism to pass commands to reportlab, the PDF generation library.
You can use the raw directive to insert pagebreaks and spacers (other reportlab flowables
may be added if there's interest).

The syntax is shell-like, here's an example that shows all the syntax::

    One page

    .. raw:: pdf

        PageBreak

    Another page. Now some space:

    .. raw:: pdf

        Spacer 0,200
        Spacer 0 200

    And another paragraph.

The unit used by the spacer is points, and using a space or a comma is the same thing in all cases.

Mathematics
===========

If you have Matplotlib_ installed, rst2pdf supports a math role and a math directive. You can use
them to insert formulae and mathematical notation in your documents using a subset of LaTeX
syntax, but doesn't require you have LaTeX installed.

For example, here's how you use the math directive::

    .. math::

       \frac{2 \pm \sqrt{7}}{3}

And here's the result:

.. math::

   \frac{2 \pm \sqrt{7}}{3}

If you want to insert mathematical notation in your text like this: :math:`\pi` that is the job
of the math *role*::

    This is :math:`\pi`

Produces: This is :math:`\pi`

Currently, the math role is slightly buggy, and in some cases will produce misaligned and
generally broken output. Also, while the math directive embeds fonts and draws your formula
as text, the math role embeds an image. That means:

* You can't copy the text of inline math

* Inline math will look worse when printed, or make your file larger.

So, use it only in emergencies ;-)

You can also use an inline substitution of the math directive for things you use often,
which is the same as using the math role::

    This is the square of x: |xsq|

    .. |xsq| math:: x^2

This is the square of x: |xsq|

.. |xsq| math:: x^2

You don't need to worry about fonts, the correct math fonts will be used and embedded in
your PDF automatically (they are included with matplotlib).

.. _matplotlib: http://matplotlib.sf.net

For an introduction to LaTeX syntax, see the "Typesetting Mathematical Formulae" chapter
in "The Not So Short Introduction to LaTeX 2e":

http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/info/lshort/english/lshort.pdf

Basically, the inline form ``$a^2$`` is similar to the math role, and the display form
is similar to the math directive.

Rst2pdf doesn't support numbering equations yet.

Hyphenation
===========

If you want good looking documents, you want to enable hyphenation.

To do it, you need to install Wordaxe [#]_.

.. [#] You can get Wordaxe from htp://deco-cow.sf.net. Version 0.2.6 or later is
       recommended.

If after installing it you get the letter "s" or a black square instead of a hyphen,
that means you need to replace the rl_codecs.py file from reportlab with the one from
wordaxe.

For more information, see `this issue`_ in rst2pdf's bug tracker.

.. _this issue: http://code.google.com/p/rst2pdf/issues/detail?id=5

Also, you may need to set hyphenation to true in one or more styles, and the language
for hyphenation via the command line or paragraph styles.

For english, this should be enough::

    ["bodytext" , {
      "alignment": "TA_JUSTIFY",
      "hyphenation": true
    }],

If you are not an english speaker, you need to change the language.

You can use the -l or --language option. The currently available dictionaries
for wordaxe are:

* de_DE

* da

* en_GB

* en_US

* ru

However, since Wordaxe version 0.2.6, it can use the PyHyphen library if it's
available. PyHyphen can use any OpenOffice dictionary, and can even download
them automatically. [#]_

.. [#] For more information, please check the PyHyphen website at http://pyhyphen.googlecode.com

For example, this will enable german hyphenation globally:

    rst2pdf -l de_DE mydocument.txt

If you are creating a multilingual document, you can declare styles with specific languages.
For example, you could inherit bodytext for german::

    ["bodytext_de" , {
      "parent": "bodytext",
      "alignment": "TA_JUSTIFY",
      "hyphenation": true,
      "language": "de_DE"
    }],

And all paragraps declared of bodytext_de style would have german hyphenation::

    .. class:: bodytext_de

    Ein Vierteljahrhundert hindurch hatte ich Kopf, Herz, Hand und--Füße der
    Schilderung der Alpenwelt und ihrer Bewohner gewidmet mit dem
    erfreulichen Erfolg, daß die deutsche Leserwelt es gewöhnt geworden war,
    beim Anblick meines Namens auf Büchern sofort an die--Alpen zu denken.

Here is the result (made thinner to force hyphenation):

.. class:: thin

Ein Vierteljahrhundert hindurch hatte ich Kopf, Herz, Hand und--Füße der
Schilderung der Alpenwelt und ihrer Bewohner gewidmet mit dem
erfreulichen Erfolg, daß die deutsche Leserwelt es gewöhnt geworden war,
beim Anblick meines Namens auf Büchern sofort an die--Alpen zu denken.

BTW: I have no idea what that says, I just copied it from project Gutenberg.
Hopefully it's not offensive :-)

If you explicitly configure a language in a paragraph style and also pass a
language in the command line, the style has priority, so remember:

.. important::

    If you configure the bodytext style to have a language, your document
    is supposed to be in that language, regardless of what the command line
    says.

    If this is too confusing, let me know, I will try to figure out a simpler
    way.


Page Layout
===========

By default, your document will have a single column of text covering the space
between the margins. You can change that, though, in fact you can do so even in
the middle of your document!

.. _page templates:
    
To do it, you need to define *Page Templates* in your stylesheet. The default
stylesheet already has 3 of them::

  "pageTemplates" : {
    "coverPage": {
        "frames": [
            ["0cm", "0cm", "100%", "100%"]
        ],
        "showHeader" : false,
        "showFooter" : false
    },
    "oneColumn": {
        "frames": [
            ["0cm", "0cm", "100%", "100%"]
        ]
    },
    "twoColumn": {
        "frames": [
            ["0cm", "0cm", "49%", "100%"],
            ["51%", "0cm", "49%", "100%"]
        ]
    }
  }

A page template has a name (oneColumn, twoColumn) some options, and a list of frames.
A frame is a list containing this::

    [ left position, top position, width, height ]

For example, this defines a frame "at the very left", "at the very top", "a bit less than half
a page wide" and "as tall as possible"::

    ["0cm", "0cm", "49%", "100%"]

And this means "the bottom third of the page"::

    ["0cm", "66.66%", "100%", "33.34%"]

You can use all the usual units, cm, mm, inch, and % which means "percentage of
the page (excluding margins and headers or footers)". Using % is probably the smartest
for columns and gives you a fluid layout, while the other units are better for more
"fixed" elements.

Since we can have more than one template, there is a way to specify which one we want
to use, and a way to change from one to another.

To specify the first template, do it in your stylesheet, in pageSetup (oneColumn is
the default)::

  "pageSetup" : {
    "firstTemplate": "oneColumn"
  }

Then, to change to another template, in your document use this syntax (will change soon,
though):

.. code-block:: rst

   .. raw:: pdf

      PageBreak twoColumn

That will trigger a page break, and the new page will use the twoColumn template.

You can see an example of this in the *Montecristo* folder in the source package.

The supported page template options and their defaults are:

* showHeader : True

* showFooter : True



.. _fontconfig: http://www.freedesktop.org/fontconfig/
