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Sphinx theme for readthedocs.org

License: MIT License

Ruby 0.34% JavaScript 17.86% Makefile 6.47% Python 14.78% CSS 35.29% HTML 25.25%

sphinx_rtd_theme's Introduction

Read the Docs Sphinx Theme

View a working demo over on readthedocs.org.

This is a mobile-friendly sphinx theme I made for readthedocs.org. It's currently in development there and includes some rtd variable checks that can be ignored if you're just trying to use it on your project outside of that site.

This repo also exists as a submodule within the readthedocs itself, so please make your edits to the SASS files here, rather than the .css files on RTD.

screen_mobile.png

Installation

Via package

Download the package or add it to your requirements.txt file:

$ pip install sphinx_rtd_theme

In your conf.py file:

import sphinx_rtd_theme

html_theme = "sphinx_rtd_theme"

html_theme_path = [sphinx_rtd_theme.get_html_theme_path()]

Via git or download

Symlink or subtree the sphinx_rtd_theme/sphinx_rtd_theme repository into your documentation at docs/_themes/sphinx_rtd_theme then add the following two settings to your Sphinx conf.py file:

html_theme = "sphinx_rtd_theme"
html_theme_path = ["_themes", ]

Configuration

You can configure different parts of the theme.

Project-wide configuration

The theme's project-wide options are defined in the sphinx_rtd_theme/theme.conf file of this repository, and can be defined in your project's conf.py via html_theme_options. For example:

html_theme_options = {
    'collapse_navigation': False,
    'display_version': False,
    'navigation_depth': 3,
}

Page-level configuration

Pages support metadata that changes how the theme renders. You can currently add the following:

  • :github_url: This will force the "Edit on GitHub" to the configured URL
  • :bitbucket_url: This will force the "Edit on Bitbucket" to the configured URL

Changelog

v0.1.10-alpha

Note

This is a pre-release version

  • Removes Sphinx dependency
  • Fixes hamburger on mobile display
  • Adds a body_begin block to the template
  • Add prev_next_buttons_location which can take the value bottom, top, both , None and will display the "Next" and "Previous" buttons accordingly

v0.1.9

  • Intermittent scrollbar visibility bug fixed. This change introduces a backwards incompatible change to the theme's layout HTML. This should only be a problem for derivative themes that have overridden styling of nav elements using direct decendant selectors. See #215 for more information.
  • Safari overscroll bug fixed
  • Version added to the nav header
  • Revision id was added to the documentation footer if you are using RTD
  • An extra block, extrafooter was added to allow extra content in the document footer block
  • Fixed modernizr URL
  • Small display style changes on code blocks, figure captions, and nav elements

v0.1.8

  • Start keeping changelog :)
  • Support for third and fourth level headers in the sidebar
  • Add support for Sphinx 1.3
  • Add sidebar headers for :caption: in Sphinx toctree
  • Clean up sidebar scrolling behavior so it never scrolls out of view

How the Table of Contents builds

Currently the left menu will build based upon any toctree(s) defined in your index.rst file. It outputs 2 levels of depth, which should give your visitors a high level of access to your docs. If no toctrees are set the theme reverts to sphinx's usual local toctree.

It's important to note that if you don't follow the same styling for your rST headers across your documents, the toctree will misbuild, and the resulting menu might not show the correct depth when it renders.

Also note that the table of contents is set with includehidden=true. This allows you to set a hidden toc in your index file with the hidden property that will allow you to build a toc without it rendering in your index.

By default, the navigation will "stick" to the screen as you scroll. However if your toc is vertically too large, it will revert to static positioning. To disable the sticky nav altogether change the setting in conf.py.

Contributing or modifying the theme

The sphinx_rtd_theme is primarily a sass project that requires a few other sass libraries. I'm using bower to manage these dependencies and sass to build the css. The good news is I have a very nice set of grunt operations that will not only load these dependencies, but watch for changes, rebuild the sphinx demo docs and build a distributable version of the theme. The bad news is this means you'll need to set up your environment similar to that of a front-end developer (vs. that of a python developer). That means installing node and ruby.

Set up your environment

  1. Install sphinx into a virtual environment.
pip install sphinx
  1. Install sass
gem install sass
  1. Install node, bower and grunt.
// Install node
brew install node

// Install bower and grunt
npm install -g bower grunt-cli

// Now that everything is installed, let's install the theme dependecies.
npm install

Now that our environment is set up, make sure you're in your virtual environment, go to this repository in your terminal and run grunt:

grunt

This default task will do the following very cool things that make it worth the trouble.

  1. It'll install and update any bower dependencies.
  2. It'll run sphinx and build new docs.
  3. It'll watch for changes to the sass files and build css from the changes.
  4. It'll rebuild the sphinx docs anytime it notices a change to .rst, .html, .js or .css files.

Before you create an issue

I don't have a lot of time to maintain this project due to other responsibilities. I know there are a lot of Python engineers out there that can't code sass / css and are unable to submit pull requests. That said, submitting random style bugs without at least providing sample documentation that replicates your problem is a good way for me to ignore your request. RST unfortunately can spit out a lot of things in a lot of ways. I don't have time to research your problem for you, but I do have time to fix the actual styling issue if you can replicate the problem for me.

Before you send a Pull Request

When you're done with your edits, you can run grunt build to clean out the old files and rebuild a new distribution, compressing the css and cleaning out extraneous files. Please do this before you send in a PR.

Using this theme locally, then building on Read the Docs?

Currently if you import sphinx_rtd_theme in your local sphinx build, then pass that same config to Read the Docs, it will fail, since RTD gets confused. If you want to run this theme locally and then also have it build on RTD, then you can add something like this to your config. Thanks to Daniel Oaks for this.

# on_rtd is whether we are on readthedocs.org, this line of code grabbed from docs.readthedocs.org
on_rtd = os.environ.get('READTHEDOCS', None) == 'True'

if not on_rtd:  # only import and set the theme if we're building docs locally
    import sphinx_rtd_theme
    html_theme = 'sphinx_rtd_theme'
    html_theme_path = [sphinx_rtd_theme.get_html_theme_path()]

# otherwise, readthedocs.org uses their theme by default, so no need to specify it

TODO

  • Separate some sass variables at the theme level so you can overwrite some basic colors.

sphinx_rtd_theme's People

Contributors

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