Browser and install GUI for cookiecutter templates

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% cookiecutter(1) cookiedough/cookiecutter | Version 1.7
% cookiecutter project (audreyfeldroy, freakboy3742, stevepiercy, terryjbates, pokoli, saxix, hackebrot, pfmoore, macrotim, kmike, foobacca, luzfcb, ivanovmg), (c) BSDL-3


NAME
====

**cookiecutter** — expands project templates


SYNOPSIS
========

  **cookiecutter** \[*http://git-repo/*]

  **cookiecutter** \[OPTIONS] *TEMPLATE* \[EXTRA_CONTEXT...]


DESCRIPTION
===========

A command-line utility that creates projects from cookiecutters (project templates), e.g. creating a Python package project from a Python package project template.


OPTIONS
=======

The *TEMPLATE* parameter can either be
a remote repository *http://git.example.com/co.git* (only Git/Mercurial supported),
a local checkout *./local-template/*,
the name of any *previously-ran-template*,
and a local or remote zip file *http://fsl.example.com/repo.zip* even.

-V, -\-version
: Show the version and exit.

-\-no-input
: Do not prompt for parameters and only use cookiecutter.json file content

-c, -\-checkout *TRUNK*
: branch, tag or commit to checkout after git clone

-\-directory *DIR*
: Directory within repo that holds cookiecutter.json file for advanced repositories with multi templates in it

-v, -\-verbose
: Print debug information

-\-replay
: Do not prompt for parameters and only use information entered previously

-f, -\-overwrite-if-exists
: Overwrite the contents of the output directory if it already exists

-s, -\-skip-if-file-exists
:  Skip the files in the corresponding directories if they already exist

-o, -\-output-dir *PATH*
: Where to output the generated project dir into

-\-config-file *FN*
: User configuration file

-\-default-config
: Do not load a config file. Use the defaults instead

-\-debug-file *LOG*
: File to be used as a stream for DEBUG logging


USAGE
=====

Grab a Cookiecutter template
----------------------------

First, clone a Cookiecutter project template::

    $ git clone git@github.com:audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage.git

Make your changes
-----------------

Modify the variables defined in `cookiecutter.json`.

Open up the skeleton project. If you need to change it around a bit, do so.

You probably also want to create a repo, name it differently, and push it as
your own new Cookiecutter project template, for handy future use.

Generate your project
---------------------

Then generate your project from the project template::

    $ cookiecutter cookiecutter-pypackage/

The only argument is the input directory. (The output directory is generated
by rendering that, and it can't be the same as the input directory.)

.. note:: see :ref:`command_line_options` for extra command line arguments

Try it out!



Works directly with git and hg (mercurial) repos too
------------------------------------------------------

To create a project from the cookiecutter-pypackage.git repo template::

    $ cookiecutter gh:audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage

Cookiecutter knows abbreviations for Github (``gh``), Bitbucket (``bb``), and
GitLab (``gl``) projects, but you can also give it the full URL to any
repository::

    $ cookiecutter https://github.com/audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage.git
    $ cookiecutter git+ssh://git@github.com/audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage.git
    $ cookiecutter hg+ssh://hg@bitbucket.org/audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage

You will be prompted to enter a bunch of project config values. (These are
defined in the project's `cookiecutter.json`.)

Then, Cookiecutter will generate a project from the template, using the values
that you entered. It will be placed in your current directory.

And if you want to specify a branch you can do that with::

    $ cookiecutter https://github.com/audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage.git --checkout develop

Works with private repos
------------------------

If you want to work with repos that are not hosted in github or bitbucket you can indicate explicitly the
type of repo that you want to use prepending `hg+` or `git+` to repo url::

    $ cookiecutter hg+https://example.com/repo

In addition, one can provide a path to the cookiecutter stored
on a local server::

    $ cookiecutter file://server/folder/project.git

Works with Zip files
--------------------

You can also distribute cookiecutter templates as Zip files. To use a Zip file
template, point cookiecutter at a Zip file on your local machine::

    $ cookiecutter /path/to/template.zip

Or, if the Zip file is online::

    $ cookiecutter https://example.com/path/to/template.zip

If the template has already been downloaded, or a template with the same name
has already been downloaded, you will be prompted to delete the existing
template before proceeding.

The Zip file contents should be the same as a git/hg repository for a template -
that is, the zipfile should unpack into a top level directory that contains the
name of the template. The name of the zipfile doesn't have to match the name of
the template - for example, you can label a zipfile with a version number, but
omit the version number from the directory inside the Zip file.

If you want to see an example Zipfile, find any Cookiecutter repository on Github
and download that repository as a zip file - Github repository downloads are in
a valid format for Cookiecutter.

Password-protected Zip files
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If your repository Zip file is password protected, Cookiecutter will prompt you
for that password whenever the template is used.

Alternatively, if you want to use a password-protected Zip file in an
automated environment, you can export the `COOKIECUTTER_REPO_PASSWORD`
environment variable; the value of that environment variable will be used
whenever a password is required.

Keeping your cookiecutters organized
------------------------------------

As of the Cookiecutter 0.7.0 release:

* Whenever you generate a project with a cookiecutter, the resulting project
  is output to your current directory.

* Your cloned cookiecutters are stored by default in your `~/.cookiecutters/`
  directory (or Windows equivalent). The location is configurable: see
  :doc:`advanced/user_config` for details.

Pre-0.7.0, this is how it worked:

* Whenever you generate a project with a cookiecutter, the resulting project
  is output to your current directory.

* Cloned cookiecutters were not saved locally.


DOCS
====

 * Documentation: https://cookiecutter.readthedocs.io
 * GitHub: https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter
 * PyPI: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/cookiecutter


FILES
=====


**~/.cookiecutterrc**
 : config store

**~/.cookiecutters/**
 : cache dir

These default paths are not XDG-compliant
(https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter/issues/104).
**cookiedough**(1) always overrides those settings, but also
provides a patch to permanently fix the builtin defaults
to **~/.config/cookiecutter/config**
and **~/.cache/cookiecutters/** respectively.


ENV
===

**COOKIECUTTER_CONFIG**
 : Location of YAML file to use in place of `~/.cookiecutterrc`.  
 : Can also be specified per *\--config-file* option.


SEE ALSO
========

**cookiedough**(1), **python3**(1)