# @file README The programs in this directory data/tools/wesnoth are for checking, analysing and maintenance of WML-files, written in python. ### __init__.py Cause Python to execute any code in this directory on "import wesnoth". campaignserver_client.py textmode-client for uploading + downloding campaigns to the server. wescamp.py This utility provides two tools * sync a campaign with the version on wescamp (using the packed campaign as base) * update the translations in a campaign (in the packed campaign) wmldata.py This module represents the internal appearance of WML. wmliterator.py Python routines for navigating a Battle For Wesnoth WML tree wmlparser.py Module implementing a WML parser. wmltools.py Python routines for working with a Battle For Wesnoth WML tree ### From IRC #wesnoth-dev - 2007-11-27 I just don't see the big picture about the files in that directory - who needs it for what task ? well, let's say you want to process some WML files and transform them or understand them in a program if you want to perform lexical analysis, then using wmliterator would save you a lot of work if you want to parse it and get the overall tree, then wmlparser would be the choice Ok, but campaign / scenario-authors rarely do that right... if you want to write tools to help you author those campaigns, you might write some programs or to maintain them so it is only useful if you are a programmer although wmliterator can do a decent job of detecting unbalanced WML if that's all you need to do just run it from the command line for that so it would let you know that [a][/b][/a] is invalid, and give you a line number or [a][b][/a] it just says "reading x.cfg" and "y lines read" right, no errors it iterated successfully # vim: tabstop=4: shiftwidth=4: expandtab: softtabstop=4: autoindent: