# QZT Dokumentation ![Deploy Status](https://woodpecker.hyteck.de/api/badges/103/status.svg) # Quickstart Create & activate a virtual environment to avoid cluttering your system ```zsh python -m venv venv source venv/bin/activate ``` Install dependencies ```zsh pip install -r requirements.txt ``` And serve a local development version ```zsh cd docs sphinx-autobuild ./ ./_build/html ``` You can now access the documentation on [http://127.0.0.1:8000](http://127.0.0.1:8000). It will be rebuilt automatically upon file changes. If you only want to build the static files once you can do `make html`. ## Docker Build the docker image with ```bash docker build . -t sphinx-qzt ``` and use it to build the documentation like this ```bash docker run --rm -v ./docs:/docs sphinx-qzt make html ``` # QZT Dokumentation # Quickstart Create & activate a virtual environment to avoid cluttering your system ```zsh python -m venv venv source venv/bin/activate ``` Install dependencies ```zsh pip install -r requirements.txt ``` And serve a local development version ```zsh cd docs sphinx-autobuild ./ ./_build/html ``` You can now access the documentation on . It will be rebuilt automatically upon file changes. If you only want to build the static files once you can do `make html`. ## Docker Build the docker image with ```bash docker build . -t sphinx-rtd ``` and use it to build the documentation like this ```bash docker run --rm -v ./docs:/docs sphinx-rtd make html ``` # CI Woodpecker can be used to deploy the documentation to a server