Metadata-Version: 2.4
Name: docxcompose_tes
Version: 1.4.1.post0
Summary: Python library for concatenating/appending Microsoft Word (.docx) files.
License: MIT
Keywords: Python,DOCX,Word,OOXML
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Requires-Python: >=3.13
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE
Requires-Dist: lxml
Requires-Dist: python-docx>=1.2.0
Requires-Dist: six
Requires-Dist: babel
Provides-Extra: test
Requires-Dist: pytest; extra == "test"
Provides-Extra: tests
Requires-Dist: pytest; extra == "tests"
Dynamic: license-file


*docxcompose* is a Python library for concatenating/appending Microsoft
Word (.docx) files.

This fork fixes the DeprecationWarning on pkg_import, and modernizes the build system.

Example usage
-------------

Append a document to another document:

.. code::

    from docxcompose.composer import Composer
    from docx import Document
    master = Document("master.docx")
    composer = Composer(master)
    doc1 = Document("doc1.docx")
    composer.append(doc1)
    composer.save("combined.docx")


The docxcompose console script
------------------------------


The ``docxcompose`` console script allows to compose docx files from the command
line, e.g.:

.. code:: sh

    $ docxcompose files/master.docx files/content.docx -o files/composed.docx


Installation for development
----------------------------

To install docxcompose for development, clone the repository and using a python with setuptools (for example a fresh virtualenv), install it using pip:

.. code:: sh

    $ pip install -e .[tests]

Tests can then be run with ``pytest``.


A note about testing
--------------------

The tests provide helpers for blackbox testing that can compare whole word
files. To do so the following files should be provided:

- a file for the expected output that should be added to the folder
  `docs/composed_fixture`
- multiple files that can be composed into the file above should be added
  to the folder `docs`.

The expected output can now be tested as follows:


.. code:: python

    def test_example():
        fixture = FixtureDocument("expected.docx")
        composed = ComposedDocument("master.docx", "slave1.docx", "slave2.docx")
        assert fixture == composed


Should the assertion fail the output file will be stored in the folder
`docs/composed_debug` with the filename of the fixture file, `expected.docx`
in case of this example.


Headers and footers
-------------------

The first document is considered as the main template and headers and footers from the other documents are ignored, so that the header and footer of the first document is used throughout the merged file.
