From: William P. <wil...@gm...> - 2007-11-02 03:32:37
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I am using docutils/odtwriter to do automatic creation of reports. I spend a lot of time using numpy to do system identification. I don't want to spend a lot of time on the report due to time restraints. I can now create these reports but I have to hard code the python outputs into the file I want to create the report form. Can anyone point me in a direction for the best way to do this, i.e. run the python script to do generic numerical manipulation and then create the report automatically with python outputs included? Basically, now I have to use two scripts that never interact with each other. One does the calculations and one creates a report using rst2odt.py. I want to integrate these two so the report is automatically generated. Do I need a third script to collect the outputs and then input them into the file I want to create an odt file from or can the two script be integrated into one that does it all. Thanks, Bill |
From: G. M. <mi...@us...> - 2007-11-02 08:01:18
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On 1.11.07, William Purcell wrote: > I can now create these reports but I have to hard code the python > outputs into the file I want to create the report form. Can anyone > point me in a direction for the best way to do this, i.e. run the > python script to do generic numerical manipulation and then create the > report automatically with python outputs included? If the names of your python output files do not change, you can use the :: .. include:: <filename> directive. (it has also some nice options like :literal: or :start-after:, see http://docutils.sf.net/docs/ref/rst/directives.html) > ... can the two script be integrated into one that does it all. Have a look at http://gael-varoquaux.info/computers/pyreport/ it might do exactly what you want. Günter |