# HG changeset patch # User paulb # Date 1142903914 0 # Node ID 9a87b8a2d1a710adf88094a13e17a2e66331cfe1 # Parent 6dba385935df8d44daded53ddec5fff0b90bfc60 [project @ 2006-03-21 01:18:34 by paulb] Updated version number. diff -r 6dba385935df -r 9a87b8a2d1a7 docs/index.html --- a/docs/index.html Fri Mar 17 18:27:03 2006 +0000 +++ b/docs/index.html Tue Mar 21 01:18:34 2006 +0000 @@ -10,23 +10,23 @@ libxml2, libxslt and (optionally) WebStack.
First of all, let us assume that the XSLTools distribution has been
-unpacked and now sits in the XSLTools-0.4
directory.
XSLTools-0.4.1
directory.
Before we begin, we must make sure that the XSLTools package is
available
-to Python. The easiest way to do this is to change into the XSLTools-0.4
directory and to run the setup.py
+to Python. The easiest way to do this is to change into the XSLTools-0.4.1
directory and to run the setup.py
script provided with the version of Python you are going to be using
(possibly as a privileged user like root
):
cd XSLTools-0.4+
python setup.py install
cd XSLTools-0.4.1
python setup.py install
If you don't want to install XSLTools in this way, or if you can't
do so
because you don't have root
privileges, you can just make
sure
-that the XSLTools-0.4
directory sits on your
+that the XSLTools-0.4.1
directory sits on your
PYTHONPATH
.
The API documentation for use in conjunction with this
guide can be found inside the apidocs
-directory within the XSLTools-0.4
directory. Of course,
+directory within the XSLTools-0.4.1
directory. Of course,
it is always possible to view the API documentation
within Python by importing modules (such as XSLTools.XSLOutput
)
and using Python's built-in help
function.