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236 lines
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ReStructuredText
236 lines
8.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. highlight:: rst
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.. _toctree-directive:
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The TOC tree
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============
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.. index:: pair: table of; contents
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Since reST does not have facilities to interconnect several documents, or split
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documents into multiple output files, Sphinx uses a custom directive to add
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relations between the single files the documentation is made of, as well as
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tables of contents. The ``toctree`` directive is the central element.
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.. note::
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Simple "inclusion" of one file in another can be done with the
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:dudir:`include` directive.
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.. rst:directive:: toctree
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This directive inserts a "TOC tree" at the current location, using the
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individual TOCs (including "sub-TOC trees") of the documents given in the
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directive body. Relative document names (not beginning with a slash) are
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relative to the document the directive occurs in, absolute names are relative
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to the source directory. A numeric ``maxdepth`` option may be given to
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indicate the depth of the tree; by default, all levels are included. [#]_
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Consider this example (taken from the Python docs' library reference index)::
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 2
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intro
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strings
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datatypes
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numeric
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(many more documents listed here)
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This accomplishes two things:
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* Tables of contents from all those documents are inserted, with a maximum
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depth of two, that means one nested heading. ``toctree`` directives in
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those documents are also taken into account.
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* Sphinx knows that the relative order of the documents ``intro``,
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``strings`` and so forth, and it knows that they are children of the shown
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document, the library index. From this information it generates "next
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chapter", "previous chapter" and "parent chapter" links.
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**Entries**
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Document titles in the :rst:dir:`toctree` will be automatically read from the
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title of the referenced document. If that isn't what you want, you can
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specify an explicit title and target using a similar syntax to reST
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hyperlinks (and Sphinx's :ref:`cross-referencing syntax <xref-syntax>`). This
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looks like::
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.. toctree::
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intro
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All about strings <strings>
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datatypes
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The second line above will link to the ``strings`` document, but will use the
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title "All about strings" instead of the title of the ``strings`` document.
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You can also add external links, by giving an HTTP URL instead of a document
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name.
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**Section numbering**
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If you want to have section numbers even in HTML output, give the
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**toplevel** toctree a ``numbered`` option. For example::
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.. toctree::
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:numbered:
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foo
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bar
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Numbering then starts at the heading of ``foo``. Sub-toctrees are
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automatically numbered (don't give the ``numbered`` flag to those).
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Numbering up to a specific depth is also possible, by giving the depth as a
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numeric argument to ``numbered``.
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**Additional options**
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You can use ``caption`` option to provide toctree caption and you can use
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``name`` option to provide implicit target name that can be referenced by
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using :rst:role:`ref`::
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.. toctree::
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:caption: Table of Contents
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:name: mastertoc
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foo
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If you want only the titles of documents in the tree to show up, not other
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headings of the same level, you can use the ``titlesonly`` option::
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.. toctree::
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:titlesonly:
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foo
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bar
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You can use "globbing" in toctree directives, by giving the ``glob`` flag
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option. All entries are then matched against the list of available
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documents, and matches are inserted into the list alphabetically. Example::
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.. toctree::
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:glob:
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intro*
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recipe/*
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*
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This includes first all documents whose names start with ``intro``, then all
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documents in the ``recipe`` folder, then all remaining documents (except the
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one containing the directive, of course.) [#]_
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The special entry name ``self`` stands for the document containing the
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toctree directive. This is useful if you want to generate a "sitemap" from
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the toctree.
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You can also give a "hidden" option to the directive, like this::
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.. toctree::
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:hidden:
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doc_1
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doc_2
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This will still notify Sphinx of the document hierarchy, but not insert links
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into the document at the location of the directive -- this makes sense if you
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intend to insert these links yourself, in a different style, or in the HTML
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sidebar.
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In cases where you want to have only one top-level toctree and hide all other
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lower level toctrees you can add the "includehidden" option to the top-level
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toctree entry::
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.. toctree::
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:includehidden:
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doc_1
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doc_2
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All other toctree entries can then be eliminated by the "hidden" option.
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In the end, all documents in the :term:`source directory` (or subdirectories)
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must occur in some ``toctree`` directive; Sphinx will emit a warning if it
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finds a file that is not included, because that means that this file will not
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be reachable through standard navigation.
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Use :confval:`exclude_patterns` to explicitly exclude documents or
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directories from building completely. Use :ref:`the "orphan" metadata
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<metadata>` to let a document be built, but notify Sphinx that it is not
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reachable via a toctree.
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The "master document" (selected by :confval:`master_doc`) is the "root" of
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the TOC tree hierarchy. It can be used as the documentation's main page, or
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as a "full table of contents" if you don't give a ``maxdepth`` option.
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.. versionchanged:: 0.3
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Added "globbing" option.
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.. versionchanged:: 0.6
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Added "numbered" and "hidden" options as well as external links and
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support for "self" references.
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.. versionchanged:: 1.0
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Added "titlesonly" option.
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.. versionchanged:: 1.1
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Added numeric argument to "numbered".
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.. versionchanged:: 1.2
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Added "includehidden" option.
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.. versionchanged:: 1.3
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Added "caption" and "name" option.
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Special names
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-------------
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Sphinx reserves some document names for its own use; you should not try to
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create documents with these names -- it will cause problems.
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The special document names (and pages generated for them) are:
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* ``genindex``, ``modindex``, ``search``
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These are used for the general index, the Python module index, and the search
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page, respectively.
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The general index is populated with entries from modules, all index-generating
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:ref:`object descriptions <basic-domain-markup>`, and from :rst:dir:`index`
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directives.
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The Python module index contains one entry per :rst:dir:`py:module` directive.
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The search page contains a form that uses the generated JSON search index and
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JavaScript to full-text search the generated documents for search words; it
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should work on every major browser that supports modern JavaScript.
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* every name beginning with ``_``
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Though only few such names are currently used by Sphinx, you should not create
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documents or document-containing directories with such names. (Using ``_`` as
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a prefix for a custom template directory is fine.)
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.. warning::
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Be careful with unusual characters in filenames. Some formats may interpret
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these characters in unexpected ways:
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* Do not use the colon ``:`` for HTML based formats. Links to other parts
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may not work.
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* Do not use the plus ``+`` for the ePub format. Some resources may not be
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found.
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.. rubric:: Footnotes
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.. [#] The ``maxdepth`` option does not apply to the LaTeX writer, where the
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whole table of contents will always be presented at the begin of the
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document, and its depth is controlled by the ``tocdepth`` counter, which
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you can reset in your :confval:`latex_preamble` config value using
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e.g. ``\setcounter{tocdepth}{2}``.
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.. [#] A note on available globbing syntax: you can use the standard shell
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constructs ``*``, ``?``, ``[...]`` and ``[!...]`` with the feature that
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these all don't match slashes. A double star ``**`` can be used to match
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any sequence of characters *including* slashes.
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