Going Further ============= .. currentmodule:: weasyprint Why WeasyPrint? --------------- Automatic document generation is a common need of many applications, even if a lot of operations do not require printed paper anymore. Invoices, tickets, leaflets, diplomas, documentation, books… All these documents are read and used on paper, but also on electronical readers, on smartphones, on computers. PDF is a great format to store and display them in a reliable way, with pagination. Using HTML and CSS to generate static and paged content can be strange at first glance: browsers display only one page, with variable dimensions, often in a very dynamic way. But paged media layout is actually included in CSS2_, which was already a W3C recommendation in 1998. Other well-known tools can be used to automatically generate PDF documents, like LaTeX and LibreOffice, but they miss many advantages that HTML and CSS offer. HTML and CSS are very widely known, by developers but also by webdesigners. They are specified in a backwards-compatible way, and regularly adapted to please the use of billions of people. They are really easy to write and generate, with a ridiculous amount of tools that are finely adapted to the needs and taste of their users. However, the web engines that are used for browsers were very limited for pagination when WeasyPrint was created in 2011. Even now, they lack a lot of basic features. That’s why projects such as wkhtmltopdf_ and PagedJS_ have been created: they add some of these features to existing browsers. Other solutions have beed developed, including web engine dedicated to paged media. Prince_, Antennahouse_ or `Typeset.sh`_ created original renderers supporting many features related to pagination. These tools are very powerful, but they are not open source. Building a free and open source web renderer generating high-quality documents is the main goal of WeasyPrint. Do you think that it was a little bit crazy to create such a big project from scratch? Here is what `Simon Sapin`_ wrote in WeasyPrint’s documentation one month after the beginning: Are we crazy? Yes. But not that much. Each modern web browser did take many developers’ many years of work to get where they are now, but WeasyPrint’s scope is much smaller: there is no user-interaction, no JavaScript, no live rendering (the document doesn’t changed after it was first parsed) and no quirks mode (we don’t need to support every broken page of the web.) We still need however to implement the whole CSS box model and visual rendering. This is a lot of work, but we feel we can get something useful much quicker than “Let’s build a rendering engine!” may seem. Simon is often right. .. _CSS2: https://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-CSS2-19980512/ .. _wkhtmltopdf: https://wkhtmltopdf.org/ .. _PagedJS: https://www.pagedjs.org/ .. _Prince: https://www.princexml.com/ .. _Antennahouse: https://www.antennahouse.com/ .. _Typeset.sh: https://typeset.sh/ .. _Simon Sapin: https://exyr.org/ Why Python? ----------- Python is a really good language to design a small, OS-agnostic parser. As it is object-oriented, it gives the possibility to follow the specification with high-level classes and a small amount of very simple code. Speed is not WeasyPrint’s main goal. Web rendering is a very complex task, and following :pep:`the Zen of Python <20>` helped a lot to keep our sanity (both in our code and in our heads): code simplicity, maintainability and flexibility are the most important goals for this library, as they give the ability to stay really close to the specification and to fix bugs easily. Dive into the Source -------------------- This chapter is a high-level overview of WeasyPrint’s source code. For more details, see the various docstrings or even the code itself. When in doubt, feel free to :ref:`ask `! Much `like in web browsers`_, the rendering of a document in WeasyPrint goes like this: 1. The HTML document is fetched and parsed into a tree of elements (like DOM). 2. CSS stylesheets (either found in the HTML or supplied by the user) are fetched and parsed. 3. The stylesheets are applied to the DOM-like tree. 4. The DOM-like tree with styles is transformed into a *formatting structure* made of rectangular boxes. 5. These boxes are *laid-out* with fixed dimensions and position onto pages. 6. For each page, the boxes are re-ordered to observe stacking rules, and are drawn on a PDF page. 7. Metadata −such as document information, attachments, embedded files, hyperlinks, and PDF trim and bleed boxes− are added to the PDF. .. _like in web browsers: https://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/internals/howbrowserswork/#The_main_flow Parsing HTML ............ Not much to see here. The :class:`HTML` class handles step 1 and gives a tree of HTML *elements*. Although the actual API is different, this tree is conceptually the same as what web browsers call *the DOM*. Parsing CSS ........... As with HTML, CSS stylesheets are parsed in the :class:`CSS` class with an external library, tinycss2_. In addition to the actual parsing, the ``css`` and ``css.validation`` modules do some pre-processing: * Unknown and unsupported declarations are ignored with warnings. Remaining property values are parsed in a property-specific way from raw tinycss2 tokens into a higher-level form. * Shorthand properties are expanded. For example, ``margin`` becomes ``margin-top``, ``margin-right``, ``margin-bottom`` and ``margin-left``. * Hyphens in property names are replaced by underscores (``margin-top`` becomes ``margin_top``). This transformation is safe since none of the known (not ignored) properties have an underscore character. * Selectors are pre-compiled with cssselect2_. .. _tinycss2: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/tinycss2 .. _cssselect2: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/cssselect2 The Cascade ........... After that and still in the ``css`` package, the cascade_ (that’s the C in CSS!) applies the stylesheets to the element tree. Selectors associate property declarations to elements. In case of conflicting declarations (different values for the same property on the same element), the one with the highest *weight* wins. Weights are based on the stylesheet’s :ref:`origin `, ``!important`` markers, selector specificity and source order. Missing values are filled in through *inheritance* (from the parent element) or the property’s *initial value*, so that every element has a *specified value* for every property. .. _cascade: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/cascade.html These *specified values* are turned into *computed values* in the ``css.computed_values`` module. Keywords and lengths in various units are converted to pixels, etc. At this point the value for some properties can be represented by a single number or string, but some require more complex objects. For example, a ``Dimension`` object can be either an absolute length or a percentage. The final result of the ``css.get_all_computed_styles`` function is a big dict where keys are ``(element, pseudo_element_type)`` tuples, and keys are style dict objects. Elements are ElementTree elements, while the type of pseudo-element is a string for eg. ``::first-line`` selectors, or :obj:`None` for “normal” elements. Style dict objects are dicts mapping property names to the computed values. (The return value is not the dict itself, but a convenience ``style_for`` function for accessing it.) Formatting Structure .................... The `visual formatting model`_ explains how *elements* (from the ElementTree tree) generate *boxes* (in the formatting structure). This is step 4 above. Boxes may have children and thus form a tree, much like elements. This tree is generally close but not identical to the ElementTree tree: some elements generate more than one box or none. .. _visual formatting model: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/visuren.html Boxes are of a lot of different kinds. For example you should not confuse *block-level boxes* and *block containers*, though *block boxes* are both. The ``formatting_structure.boxes`` module has a whole hierarchy of classes to represent all these boxes. We won’t go into the details here, see the module and class docstrings. The ``formatting_structure.build`` module takes an ElementTree tree with associated computed styles, and builds a formatting structure. It generates the right boxes for each element and ensures they conform to the models rules (eg. an inline box can not contain a block). Each box has a ``style`` attribute containing the style dict of computed values. The main logic is based on the ``display`` property, but it can be overridden for some elements by adding a handler in the ``html`` module. This is how ```` and ```` are currently implemented, for example. This module is rather short as most of HTML is defined in CSS rather than in Python, in the `user agent stylesheet`_. The ``formatting_structure.build.build_formatting_structure`` function returns the box for the root element (and, through its ``children`` attribute, the whole tree). .. _user agent stylesheet: https://github.com/Kozea/WeasyPrint/blob/main/weasyprint/css/html5_ua.css Layout ...... Step 5 is the layout. You could say the everything else is glue code and this is where the magic happens. During the layout the document’s content is, well, laid out on pages. This is when we decide where to do line breaks and page breaks. If a break happens inside of a box, that box is split into two (or more) boxes in the layout result. According to the `box model`_, each box has rectangular margin, border, padding and content areas: .. _box model: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/box.html .. image:: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/images/boxdim.png :alt: CSS Box Model While ``box.style`` contains computed values, the `used values`_ are set as attributes of the ``Box`` object itself during the layout. This include resolving percentages and especially ``auto`` values into absolute, pixel lengths. Once the layout done, each box has used values for margins, border width, padding of each four sides, as well as the ``width`` and ``height`` of the content area. They also have ``position_x`` and ``position_y``, the absolute coordinates of the top-left corner of the margin box (**not** the content box) from the top-left corner of the page.\ [#]_ Boxes also have helpers methods such as ``content_box_y`` and ``margin_width`` that give other metrics that can be useful in various parts of the code. The final result of the layout is a list of ``PageBox`` objects. .. [#] These are the coordinates *if* no `CSS transform`_ applies. Transforms change the actual location of boxes, but they are applied later during drawing and do not affect layout. .. _used values: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/cascade.html#used-value .. _CSS transform: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-transforms-1/ Stacking & Drawing .................. In step 6, the boxes are reordered by the ``stacking`` module to observe `stacking rules`_ such as the ``z-index`` property. The result is a tree of *stacking contexts*. Next, each laid-out page is *drawn* onto a PDF page. Since each box has absolute coordinates on the page from the layout step, the logic here should be minimal. If you find yourself adding a lot of logic here, maybe it should go in the layout or stacking instead. The code lives in the ``draw`` module. .. _stacking rules: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/zindex.html Metadata ........ Finally (step 7), the ``pdf`` adds metadata to the PDF file: document information, attachments, hyperlinks, embedded files, trim box and bleed box.