restructuredtext-lint 2.0.2


pip install restructuredtext-lint

  Latest version

Released: Nov 23, 2025

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Author: Todd Wolfson

Classifiers

Development Status
  • 3 - Alpha

Intended Audience
  • Developers

License
  • Public Domain

Operating System
  • OS Independent

Topic
  • Text Processing :: Markup
Build Status

reStructuredText linter

This was created out of frustration with PyPI; it sucks finding out your reST is invalid after uploading it. It is being developed in junction with a Sublime Text linter.

Getting Started

Install the module with: pip install restructuredtext_lint

import restructuredtext_lint
errors = restructuredtext_lint.lint("""
Hello World
=======
""")

# `errors` will be list of system messages
# [<system_message: <paragraph...><literal_block...>>]
errors[0].message  # Title underline too short.

CLI Utility

For your convenience, we present a CLI utility rst-lint (also available as restructuredtext-lint).

$ rst-lint --help
usage: rst-lint [-h] [--version] [--format {text,json}]
                [--level {debug,info,warning,error,severe}]
                [--rst-prolog RST_PROLOG]
                path [path ...]

Lint reStructuredText files. Returns 0 if all files pass linting, 1 for an
internal error, and 2 if linting failed.

positional arguments:
  path                  File/folder to lint

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --version             show program's version number and exit
  --format {text,json}  Format of the output (default: "text")
  --level {debug,info,warning,error,severe}
                        Minimum error level to report (default: "warning")
  --rst-prolog RST_PROLOG
                        reStructuredText content to prepend to all files
                        (useful for substitutions)

$ rst-lint README.rst
WARNING README.rst:2 Title underline too short.

Other tools

restructuredtext-lint is also integrated in other tools. A list can be found and updated in our wiki

https://github.com/twolfson/restructuredtext-lint/wiki/Integration-in-other-tools

PyPI issues

While a document may lint cleanly locally, there can be issues when submitted it to PyPI. Here are some common problems:

  • Usage of non-builtin lexers (e.g. bibtex) will pass locally but not be recognized/parsable on PyPI

    • This is due to PyPI not having a non-builtin lexer installed

    • Please avoid non-builtin lexers to avoid complications

    • For more information, see #27

  • Relative hyperlinks will not work (e.g. ./UNLICENSE)

    • According to Stack Overflow, hyperlinks must use a scheme (e.g. http, https) and that scheme must be whitelisted

    • Please use absolute hyperlinks (e.g. https://github.com/twolfson/restructuredtext-lint/blob/master/UNLICENSE)

Breaking changes in 2.0.0

We removed the --encoding CLI parameter and its correspodning keyword argument.

This was because not using “utf-8” by default was confusing and detracted from the purpose of our tool (#65).

i.e. rst-lint's purpose is to check reST structural elements, not the content itself.

Documentation

restructuredtext-lint exposes a lint and lint_file function

restructuredtext_lint.lint(content, filepath=None, rst_prolog=None)

Lint reStructuredText and return errors

  • content String - reStructuredText to be linted

  • filepath String - Optional path to file, this will be returned as the source

  • rst_prolog String - Optional content to prepend to content, line numbers will be offset to ignore this

Returns:

  • errors List - List of errors

    • Each error is a class from docutils with the following attrs

      • line Integer|None - Line where the error occurred

        • On rare occasions, this will be None (e.g. anonymous link mismatch)

      • source String - filepath provided in parameters

      • level Integer - Level of the warning

        • Levels represent ‘info’: 1, ‘warning’: 2, ‘error’: 3, ‘severe’: 4

      • type String - Noun describing the error level

        • Levels can be ‘INFO’, ‘WARNING’, ‘ERROR’, or ‘SEVERE’

      • message String - Error message

      • full_message String - Error message and source lines where the error occurred

    • It should be noted that level, type, message, and full_message are custom attrs added onto the original system_message

restructuredtext_lint.lint_file(filepath, *args, **kwargs)

Lint a reStructuredText file and return errors

  • filepath String - Path to file for linting

  • *args - Additional arguments to be passed to lint

  • **kwargs - Additional keyword arguments to be passed to lint

Returns: Same structure as restructuredtext_lint.lint

Extension

Under the hood, we leverage docutils for parsing reStructuredText documents. docutils supports adding new directives and roles via register_directive and register_role.

Sphinx

Unfortunately due to customizations in Sphinx’s parser we cannot include all of its directives/roles (see #29). However, we can include some of them as one-offs. Here is an example of adding a directive from Sphinx.

https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/blob/1.3/sphinx/directives/code.py

sphinx.rst

Hello
=====
World

.. highlight:: python

    Hello World!

sphinx.py

# Load in our dependencies
from docutils.parsers.rst.directives import register_directive
from sphinx.directives.code import Highlight
import restructuredtext_lint

# Load our new directive
register_directive('highlight', Highlight)

# Lint our README
errors = restructuredtext_lint.lint_file('docs/sphinx/README.rst')
print errors[0].message # Error in "highlight" directive: no content permitted.

Examples

Here is an example of all invalid properties

rst = """
Some content.

Hello World
=======
Some more content!
"""
errors = restructuredtext_lint.lint(rst, 'myfile.py')
errors[0].line  # 5
errors[0].source  # myfile.py
errors[0].level  # 2
errors[0].type  # WARNING
errors[0].message  # Title underline too short.
errors[0].full_message  # Title underline too short.
                        #
                        # Hello World
                        # =======

Contributing

In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality.

Testing

Testing can be performed locally via:

# Configure local `rst-lint` to use run from this package
python setup.py develop

# Install development dependencies
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt

# Run our test suite
./test.sh

Donating

Support this project and others by twolfson via donations.

http://twolfson.com/support-me

Unlicense

As of Nov 22 2013, Todd Wolfson has released this repository and its contents to the public domain.

It has been released under the UNLICENSE.

Extras: None
Dependencies:
docutils (<1.0,>=0.11)