Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
78 lines (59 loc) · 3.27 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

78 lines (59 loc) · 3.27 KB

Pabutools: PB as easy as ABC

PyPI Status Build badge codecov

Overview

The pabutools are a complete set of tools to work with participatory budgeting instances.

Participatory budgeting (PB) is a democratic tool used to allocate a given amount of money to a collection of projects based on a group of individuals' preferences over the projects. It has been invented in Brazil in the late 80's and is now a widely implemented. See the Wikipedia page for more details.

In this library, we provide tools that

  • handle PB instances of different kinds,
  • compute voting rules to determine the outcome of the elections,
  • analyse outcomes, and
  • provide full support for the instances taken from the pabulib library of PB data.

Installation

The package can be installed from PyPI using:

pip3 install pabutools

Documentation

The complete documentation is available here. It includes

Development

We are more than happy to receive help with the development of the package. If you want to contribute, here are some elements to take into account.

First, install the development dependencies by running the following command:

pip install -e ".[dev]"

You can run the unit tests with the following:

python -m unittest

The doc is generated using sphinx. We use the numpy style guide. The napoleon extension for Sphinx is used and the HTML style is defined by the Book Sphinx Theme.

To generate the doc, first move inside the docs-source folder and run the following:

make clean 
make html

This will generate the documentation locally (in the folder docs-source/build). If you want the documentation to also be updated when pushing, run:

make github

After having pushed, the documentation will automatically be updated.

Note that a large part of the documentation is done by hand (to ensure proper display and correct ordering). This means that if you create new class of functions that should appear in the documentation, you may have to add they yourself using to autodoc directives (take inspiration from the files in docs-source/source).

If you want to help, check the todos.txt file, several todos are described there.