# HG changeset patch # User paulb # Date 1195431830 0 # Node ID 406c86bad317d8b7879c611b1975967ec41e440a # Parent 37ef332e67b5762627ffbc52c5b8540538a47e6e [project @ 2007-11-19 00:23:50 by paulb] Updated release information. diff -r 37ef332e67b5 -r 406c86bad317 docs/index.html --- a/docs/index.html Mon Nov 19 00:23:45 2007 +0000 +++ b/docs/index.html Mon Nov 19 00:23:50 2007 +0000 @@ -10,19 +10,19 @@ using the WebStack framework.

Setting Up

First of all, let us assume that the WebStack distribution has been -unpacked and now sits in the WebStack-1.2.7 directory.

+unpacked and now sits in the WebStack-1.3 directory.

Before we begin, we must make sure that the WebStack package is available to Python. The easiest way to do this is to change into the -WebStack-1.2.7 directory and to run the setup.py +WebStack-1.3 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 WebStack-1.2.7
python setup.py install
+
cd WebStack-1.3
python setup.py install

If you don't want to install WebStack in this way, or if you can't do so because you don't have root privileges, you can just make sure -that the WebStack-1.2.7 directory sits on your +that the WebStack-1.3 directory sits on your PYTHONPATH.

Supported Frameworks

With the help of Python's built-in standard library, WebStack can run without any additional software, but @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ run WebStack applications in other environments.

Viewing the API Documentation

The API documentation for use in conjunction with this guide can be found inside the apidocs -directory within the WebStack-1.2.7 directory. Of course, +directory within the WebStack-1.3 directory. Of course, it is always possible to view WebStack's API documentation within Python by importing modules (such as WebStack.Generic) and using Python's built-in help function.