Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/ctjacobs/pyqso into copypaste

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Christian Jacobs 2018-02-23 17:04:09 +00:00
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Copyright (C) 2013-2017 Christian Thomas Jacobs.
Copyright (C) 2013-2018 Christian Thomas Jacobs.
This file is part of PyQSO.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with PyQSO. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
PyQSO
=====
# PyQSO
PyQSO is a contact logging tool for amateur radio operators.
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/ctjacobs/pyqso.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/ctjacobs/pyqso)
[![Documentation Status](https://readthedocs.org/projects/pyqso/badge/?version=latest)](https://readthedocs.org/projects/pyqso/?badge=latest)
Installation and running
------------------------
## Dependencies
Assuming that the current working directory is PyQSO's base directory (the directory that the `Makefile` is in), PyQSO can be run without installation by issuing the following command in the terminal:
As the name suggests, PyQSO is written primarily in the [Python](https://www.python.org/) programming language (version 3.x). The graphical user interface has been developed using the [GTK+ library](https://www.gtk.org/) through the [PyGObject bindings](https://pygobject.readthedocs.io). Therefore, in order to run PyQSO, the Python interpreter must be present on your system along with support for GTK+. On many Linux-based systems this can be accomplished by installing the following Debian packages:
python3 bin/pyqso
If the `pip3` package manager is available on your system then PyQSO can be installed system-wide using:
sudo make install
Once installed, the following command will run PyQSO:
pyqso
Documentation
-------------
The PyQSO documentation is stored in the `docs` directory. It can be built with the following command:
make docs
which will produce an HTML version of the documentation in `docs/build/html` that can be opened in a web browser.
Alternatively, a ready-built version of the PyQSO documentation can be found on [Read the Docs](http://pyqso.readthedocs.io/).
Dependencies
------------
PyQSO depends on the following Debian packages:
* gir1.2-gtk-3.0
* python3
* python3-gi-cairo (for log printing purposes)
* gir1.2-gtk-3.0
* python3-gi-cairo
The following extra packages are necessary to fully enable the grey line tool and the plotting of logbook statistics:
Several extra packages are necessary to enable the full functionality of PyQSO, such as the grey line tool. Many of these (specified in the `requirements.txt` file) can be readily installed system-wide using the Python package manager by issuing the following command in the terminal:
sudo pip3 install -U -r requirements.txt
but the complete list is given below:
* python3-matplotlib (version 1.3.0 or later)
* python3-mpltoolkits.basemap
* python3-numpy
* libxcb-render0-dev
* python3-cairocffi
* [geocoder](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/geocoder) (installable with `pip3` and used for QTH lookups)
* [geocoder](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/geocoder) (for QTH lookups)
* python3-sphinx (for building the documentation)
* python3-hamlib (for Hamlib support)
The following extra package is necessary to build the documentation:
* python3-sphinx
### Hamlib support
There currently does not exist a Python 3-compatible Debian package for [Hamlib](http://www.hamlib.org). This library must be built manually to enable Hamlib support. As per the instructions on the [Hamlib mailing list](https://sourceforge.net/p/hamlib/mailman/message/35692744/), run the following commands in the Hamlib root directory (you may need to run `sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf automake libtool` beforehand):
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export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/path/to/hamlib/bindings:/path/to/hamlib/bindings/.libs
Contact
-------
## Installing and running
Assuming that the current working directory is PyQSO's base directory (the directory that the `Makefile` is in), PyQSO can be run without installation by issuing the following command in the terminal:
python3 bin/pyqso
If the Python package manager `pip3` is available on your system then PyQSO can be installed system-wide using:
sudo make install
Once installed, the following command will run PyQSO:
pyqso
## Documentation
Guidance on how to use PyQSO is available on [Read the Docs](http://pyqso.readthedocs.io/) and in the screencast below.
[![PyQSO: A Logging Tool for Amateur Radio Operators](https://img.youtube.com/vi/sVdZl9KnDsk/0.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVdZl9KnDsk)
The documentation can also be built locally with the following command:
make docs
which will produce an HTML version of the documentation in `docs/build/html` that can be opened in a web browser.
## Contact
If you have any comments or questions about PyQSO please send them via email to Christian Jacobs, M0UOS, at <christian@christianjacobs.uk>.

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@ -8,11 +8,11 @@ It is recommended that users run PyQSO on the Linux operating system,
since all development and testing of PyQSO takes place there.
As the name suggests, PyQSO is written primarily in the `Python <https://www.python.org/>`_
programming language (version 3.x). The graphical user interface has been built using
programming language (version 3.x). The graphical user interface has been developed using
the `GTK+ library <https://www.gtk.org/>`_ through the `PyGObject bindings <https://pygobject.readthedocs.io>`_. PyQSO also uses an
`SQLite <https://www.sqlite.org/>`_ embedded database to manage all the contacts an amateur radio
operator makes. Users must therefore make sure that the Python
interpreter and any additional software dependencies are satisfied
interpreter is installed and that any additional software dependencies are satisfied
before PyQSO can be run successfully. The list of software packages that
PyQSO depends on is provided in the ``README.md`` file.

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requirements.txt 100644
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numpy
matplotlib>=1.3.0
basemap
cairocffi
sphinx
geocoder