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Narrative documentation in Sphinx
=================================
Structuring your documentation across multiple pages
----------------------------------------------------
The file ``index.rst`` created by ``sphinx-quickstart`` is the :term:`root
document`, whose main function is to serve as a welcome page and to contain the
root of the "table of contents tree" (or *toctree*). Sphinx allows you to
assemble a project from different files, which is helpful when the project
grows.
As an example, create a new file ``docs/source/usage.rst`` (next to
``index.rst``) with these contents:
.. code-block:: rst
:caption: docs/source/usage.rst
Usage
=====
Installation
------------
To use Lumache, first install it using pip:
.. code-block:: console
(.venv) $ pip install lumache
This new file contains two :ref:`section <rst-sections>` headers, normal
paragraph text, and a :rst:dir:`code-block` directive that renders
a block of content as source code, with appropriate syntax highlighting
(in this case, generic ``console`` text).
The structure of the document is determined by the succession of heading
styles, which means that, by using ``---`` for the "Installation" section
after ``===`` for the "Usage" section, you have declared "Installation" to
be a *subsection* of "Usage".
To complete the process, add a ``toctree`` :ref:`directive <rst-directives>` at
the end of ``index.rst`` including the document you just created, as follows:
.. code-block:: rst
:caption: docs/source/index.rst
Contents
--------
.. toctree::
usage
This step inserts that document in the root of the *toctree*, so now it belongs
to the structure of your project, which so far looks like this:
.. code-block:: text
index
└── usage
If you build the HTML documentation running ``make html``, you will see
that the ``toctree`` gets rendered as a list of hyperlinks, and this allows you
to navigate to the new page you just created. Neat!
.. warning::
Documents outside a *toctree* will result in ``WARNING: document isn't
included in any toctree`` messages during the build process, and will be
unreachable for users.
Adding cross-references
-----------------------
One powerful feature of Sphinx is the ability to seamlessly add
:ref:`cross-references <xref-syntax>` to specific parts of the documentation:
a document, a section, a figure, a code object, etc. This tutorial is full of
them!
To add a cross-reference, write this sentence right after the
introduction paragraph in ``index.rst``:
.. code-block:: rst
:caption: docs/source/index.rst
Check out the :doc:`usage` section for further information.
The :rst:role:`doc` :ref:`role <rst-roles>` you used automatically
references a specific document in the project, in this case the ``usage.rst``
you created earlier.
Alternatively, you can also add a cross-reference to an arbitrary part of the
project. For that, you need to use the :rst:role:`ref` role, and add an
explicit *label* that acts as :duref:`a target <hyperlink-targets>`.
For example, to reference the "Installation" subsection, add a label right
before the heading, as follows:
.. code-block:: rst
:caption: docs/source/usage.rst
:emphasize-lines: 4
Usage
=====
.. _installation:
Installation
------------
...
And make the sentence you added in ``index.rst`` look like this:
.. code-block:: rst
:caption: docs/source/index.rst
Check out the :doc:`usage` section for further information, including how to
:ref:`install <installation>` the project.
Notice a trick here: the ``install`` part specifies how the link will look like
(we want it to be a specific word, so the sentence makes sense), whereas the
``<installation>`` part refers to the actual label we want to add a
cross-reference to. If you do not include an explicit title, hence using
``:ref:`installation```, the section title will be used (in this case,
``Installation``). Both the ``:doc:`` and the ``:ref:`` roles will be rendered
as hyperlinks in the HTML documentation.
What about :doc:`documenting code objects in Sphinx </tutorial/describing-code>`?
Read on!
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