A semantic search engine for source code https://bitshift.benkurtovic.com/
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ben Kurtovic 4dfd297472 Update some documentation. 10 years ago
bitshift Update some documentation. 10 years ago
docs Update some documentation. 10 years ago
static Add assets/config module, SASS files, templates. 10 years ago
templates Add assets/config module, SASS files, templates. 10 years ago
.gitignore Database schema, hashing module, some other things. 10 years ago
LICENSE Fix names in license. 10 years ago
README.md Update some documentation. 10 years ago
app.py Merge branch 'develop' of github.com:earwig/bitshift into develop 10 years ago
setup.py Update some documentation. 10 years ago

README.md

bitshift

bitshift is a semantic search engine for source code developed by Benjamin Attal, Ben Kurtovic, and Severyn Kozak.

Branches

  • master: working, tested, version-numbered code - no direct commits; should only accept merges from develop when ready to release
  • develop: integration branch with unreleased but mostly functional code - direct commits allowed but should be minor
  • feature/*: individual components of the project with untested, likely horribly broken code - branch off from and merge into develop when done

Style

bitshift uses SASS for styling; compile the stylesheets to CSS with sass --watch static/sass/:static/css.

Documentation

To build documentation, run make html from the docs subdirectory. You can then browse from docs/build/html/index.html.

To automatically update the API documentation structure (necessary when adding new modules or packages, but not when adding functions or changing docstrings), run sphinx-apidoc -fo docs/source/api bitshift from the project root. Note that this will revert any custom changes made to the files in docs/source/api, so you might want to update them by hand instead.

Releasing

  • Update __version__ in bitshift/__init__.py, version in setup.py, and version and release in docs/conf.py.