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.. highlight:: rst
==========
Directives
==========
:ref:`As previously discussed <rst-directives>`, a directive is a generic block
of explicit markup. While Docutils provides a number of directives, Sphinx
provides many more and uses directives as one of the primary extension
mechanisms.
See :doc:`/usage/domains/index` for roles added by domains.
.. seealso::
Refer to the :ref:`reStructuredText Primer <rst-directives>` for an overview
of the directives provided by Docutils.
.. _toctree-directive:
Table of contents
-----------------
.. index:: pair: table of; contents
Since reStructuredText does not have facilities to interconnect several documents,
or split documents into multiple output files,
Sphinx uses a custom directive to add relations between
the single files the documentation is made of, as well as tables of contents.
The ``toctree`` directive is the central element.
.. note::
Simple "inclusion" of one file in another can be done with the
:dudir:`include` directive.
.. note::
To create table of contents for current document (.rst file), use the
standard reStructuredText :dudir:`contents directive <table-of-contents>`.
.. rst:directive:: toctree
This directive inserts a "TOC tree" at the current location, using the
individual TOCs (including "sub-TOC trees") of the documents given in the
directive body. Relative document names (not beginning with a slash) are
relative to the document the directive occurs in, absolute names are relative
to the source directory. A numeric ``maxdepth`` option may be given to
indicate the depth of the tree; by default, all levels are included. [#]_
The representation of "TOC tree" is changed in each output format. The
builders that output multiple files (e.g. HTML) treat it as a collection of
hyperlinks. On the other hand, the builders that output a single file (e.g.
LaTeX, man page, etc.) replace it with the content of the documents on the
TOC tree.
Consider this example (taken from the Python docs' library reference index)::
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 2
intro
strings
datatypes
numeric
(many more documents listed here)
This accomplishes two things:
* Tables of contents from all those documents are inserted, with a maximum
depth of two, that means one nested heading. ``toctree`` directives in
those documents are also taken into account.
* Sphinx knows the relative order of the documents ``intro``,
``strings`` and so forth, and it knows that they are children of the shown
document, the library index. From this information it generates "next
chapter", "previous chapter" and "parent chapter" links.
**Entries**
Document titles in the :rst:dir:`toctree` will be automatically read from the
title of the referenced document. If that isn't what you want, you can
specify an explicit title and target using a similar syntax to reStructuredText
hyperlinks (and Sphinx's :ref:`cross-referencing syntax <xref-syntax>`). This
looks like::
.. toctree::
intro
All about strings <strings>
datatypes
The second line above will link to the ``strings`` document, but will use the
title "All about strings" instead of the title of the ``strings`` document.
You can also add external links, by giving an HTTP URL instead of a document
name.
**Section numbering**
If you want to have section numbers even in HTML output, give the
**toplevel** toctree a ``numbered`` option. For example::
.. toctree::
:numbered:
foo
bar
Numbering then starts at the heading of ``foo``. Sub-toctrees are
automatically numbered (don't give the ``numbered`` flag to those).
Numbering up to a specific depth is also possible, by giving the depth as a
numeric argument to ``numbered``.
**Additional options**
You can use the ``caption`` option to provide a toctree caption and you can
use the ``name`` option to provide an implicit target name that can be
referenced by using :rst:role:`ref`::
.. toctree::
:caption: Table of Contents
:name: mastertoc
foo
As with :dudir:`most directives <common-options>`,
you can use the ``class`` option to assign `class attributes`_::
.. toctree::
:class: custom-toc
.. _class attributes: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/doctree.html#classes
If you want only the titles of documents in the tree to show up, not other
headings of the same level, you can use the ``titlesonly`` option::
.. toctree::
:titlesonly:
foo
bar
You can use "globbing" in toctree directives, by giving the ``glob`` flag
option. All entries are then matched against the list of available
documents, and matches are inserted into the list alphabetically. Example::
.. toctree::
:glob:
intro*
recipe/*
*
This includes first all documents whose names start with ``intro``, then all
documents in the ``recipe`` folder, then all remaining documents (except the
one containing the directive, of course.) [#]_
The special entry name ``self`` stands for the document containing the
toctree directive. This is useful if you want to generate a "sitemap" from
the toctree.
You can use the ``reversed`` flag option to reverse the order of the entries
in the list. This can be useful when using the ``glob`` flag option to
reverse the ordering of the files. Example::
.. toctree::
:glob:
:reversed:
recipe/*
You can also give a "hidden" option to the directive, like this::
.. toctree::
:hidden:
doc_1
doc_2
This will still notify Sphinx of the document hierarchy, but not insert links
into the document at the location of the directive -- this makes sense if you
intend to insert these links yourself, in a different style, or in the HTML
sidebar.
In cases where you want to have only one top-level toctree and hide all other
lower level toctrees you can add the "includehidden" option to the top-level
toctree entry::
.. toctree::
:includehidden:
doc_1
doc_2
All other toctree entries can then be eliminated by the "hidden" option.
In the end, all documents in the :term:`source directory` (or subdirectories)
must occur in some ``toctree`` directive; Sphinx will emit a warning if it
finds a file that is not included, because that means that this file will not
be reachable through standard navigation.
Use :confval:`exclude_patterns` to explicitly exclude documents or
directories from building completely. Use :ref:`the "orphan" metadata
<metadata>` to let a document be built, but notify Sphinx that it is not
reachable via a toctree.
The "root document" (selected by :confval:`root_doc`) is the "root" of the TOC
tree hierarchy. It can be used as the documentation's main page, or as a
"full table of contents" if you don't give a ``maxdepth`` option.
.. versionchanged:: 0.3
Added "globbing" option.
.. versionchanged:: 0.6
Added "numbered" and "hidden" options as well as external links and
support for "self" references.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0
Added "titlesonly" option.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
Added numeric argument to "numbered".
.. versionchanged:: 1.2
Added "includehidden" option.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3
Added "caption" and "name" option.
Special names
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. index:: pair: genindex; toctree
pair: modindex; toctree
pair: search; toctree
Sphinx reserves some document names for its own use; you should not try to
create documents with these names -- it will cause problems.
The special document names (and pages generated for them) are:
* ``genindex``
This is used for the general index,
which is populated with entries from :rst:dir:`index` directives
and all index-generating :ref:`object descriptions <basic-domain-markup>`.
For example, see Sphinx's :ref:`genindex`.
* ``modindex``
This is used for the Python module index,
which contains one entry per :rst:dir:`py:module` directive.
For example, see Sphinx's :ref:`py-modindex`.
* ``search``
This is used for the search page,
which contains a form that uses the generated JSON search index and JavaScript
to full-text search the generated documents for search words;
it works on every major browser.
For example, see Sphinx's :ref:`search`.
* Every name beginning with ``_``
Though few such names are currently used by Sphinx,
you should not create documents or document-containing directories with such names.
(Using ``_`` as a prefix for a custom template directory is fine.)
.. warning::
Be careful with unusual characters in filenames.
Some formats may interpret these characters in unexpected ways:
* Do not use the colon ``:`` for HTML based formats.
Links to other parts may not work.
* Do not use the plus ``+`` for the ePub format.
Some resources may not be found.
Paragraph-level markup
----------------------
These directives create short paragraphs and can be used inside information
units as well as normal text.
Admonitions, messages, and warnings
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. index:: admonition, admonitions
pair: attention; admonition
pair: caution; admonition
pair: danger; admonition
pair: error; admonition
pair: hint; admonition
pair: important; admonition
pair: note; admonition
pair: tip; admonition
pair: warning; admonition
The admonition directives create 'admonition' elements,
a standardised system of communicating different types of information,
from a helpful :rst:dir:`tip` to matters of paramount :rst:dir:`danger`.
These directives can be used anywhere an ordinary body element can,
and can contain arbitrary body elements.
There are nine specific named admonitions
and the generic :rst:dir:`admonition` directive.
.. rst:directive:: .. attention::
Information that requires the reader's attention.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. attention::
Please may I have your attention.
.. rst:directive:: .. caution::
Information with regard to which the reader should exercise care.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. caution::
Exercise due caution.
.. rst:directive:: .. danger::
Information which may lead to near and present danger if not heeded.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. danger::
Let none think to fly the danger for soon or late love is his own avenger.
.. rst:directive:: .. error::
Information relating to failure modes of some description.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. error::
ERROR 418: I'm a teapot.
.. rst:directive:: .. hint::
Information that is helpful to the reader.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. hint::
Look under the flowerpot.
.. rst:directive:: .. important::
Information that is of paramount importance
and which the reader must not ignore.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. important::
This is a statement of paramount importance.
.. rst:directive:: .. note::
An especially important bit of information that the reader should know.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. note::
This function is not suitable for sending tins of spam.
.. rst:directive:: .. tip::
Some useful tidbit of information for the reader.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. tip::
Remember your sun cream!
.. rst:directive:: .. warning::
An important bit of information that the reader should be very aware of.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. warning::
Beware of the dog.
.. rst:directive:: .. admonition:: title
A generic admonition, with an optional title.
The content of the directive should be written in complete sentences
and include all appropriate punctuation.
Example:
.. admonition:: This is a title
This is the content of the admonition.
.. rst:directive:: seealso
Many sections include a list of references to module documentation or
external documents.
These lists are created using the :rst:dir:`seealso` directive.
The :rst:dir:`!seealso` directive is typically placed in a section
just before any subsections.
The content of the :rst:dir:`seealso` directive should be
either a single line or a reStructuredText `definition list`_.
.. _definition list: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.html#definition-lists
Example::
.. seealso::
Python's :py:mod:`zipfile` module
Documentation of Python's standard :py:mod:`zipfile` module.
`GNU tar manual, Basic Tar Format <https://example.org>`_
Documentation for tar archive files, including GNU tar extensions.
.. seealso::
Module :py:mod:`zipfile`
Documentation of the :py:mod:`zipfile` standard module.
`GNU tar manual, Basic Tar Format <https://example.org>`_
Documentation for tar archive files, including GNU tar extensions.
Describing changes between versions
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. index:: pair: added; in version
pair: changes; in version
pair: removed; in version
.. rst:directive:: .. versionadded:: version [brief explanation]
This directive documents the version of the project
which added the described feature.
When this applies to an entire module or component,
it should be placed at the top of the relevant section before any prose.
The first argument must be given and is the version in question; you can add
a second argument consisting of a *brief* explanation of the change.
.. attention::
There must be no blank line between the directive head and the explanation;
this is to make these blocks visually continuous in the markup.
Example::
.. versionadded:: 2.5
The *spam* parameter.
.. versionadded:: 2.5
The *spam* parameter.
.. rst:directive:: .. versionchanged:: version [brief explanation]
Similar to :rst:dir:`versionadded`, but describes when and what changed in
the named feature in some way (new parameters, changed side effects, etc.).
Example::
.. versionchanged:: 2.8
The *spam* parameter is now of type *boson*.
.. versionchanged:: 2.8
The *spam* parameter is now of type *boson*.
.. rst:directive:: .. deprecated:: version [brief explanation]
Similar to :rst:dir:`versionadded`, but describes when the feature was
deprecated.
A *brief* explanation can also be given,
for example to tell the reader what to use instead.
Example::
.. deprecated:: 3.1
Use :py:func:`spam` instead.
.. deprecated:: 3.1
Use :py:func:`!spam` instead.
.. rst:directive:: .. versionremoved:: version [brief explanation]
Similar to :rst:dir:`versionadded`, but describes when the feature was removed.
An explanation may be provided to tell the reader what to use instead,
or why the feature was removed.
.. versionadded:: 7.3
Example::
.. versionremoved:: 4.0
The :py:func:`spam` function is more flexible, and should be used instead.
.. versionremoved:: 4.0
The :py:func:`!spam` function is more flexible, and should be used instead.
Presentational
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. rst:directive:: .. rubric:: title
A rubric is like an informal heading that doesn't correspond to the document's structure,
i.e. it does not create a table of contents node.
.. rst:directive:option:: heading-level: n
:type: number from 1 to 6
.. versionadded:: 7.4.1
Use this option to specify the heading level of the rubric.
In this case the rubric will be rendered as ``<h1>`` to ``<h6>`` for HTML output,
or as the corresponding non-numbered sectioning command for LaTeX
(see :confval:`latex_toplevel_sectioning`).
.. note::
If the *title* of the rubric is "Footnotes" (or the selected language's
equivalent), this rubric is ignored by the LaTeX writer, since it is
assumed to only contain footnote definitions and therefore would create an
empty heading.
.. rst:directive:: centered
This directive creates a centered boldfaced line of text.
.. deprecated:: 1.1
This presentation-only directive is a legacy from older versions.
Use a :ref:`rst-class <rstclass>` directive instead and add an
appropriate style.
.. rst:directive:: hlist
This directive must contain a bullet list. It will transform it into a more
compact list by either distributing more than one item horizontally, or
reducing spacing between items, depending on the builder.
For builders that support the horizontal distribution, there is a ``columns``
option that specifies the number of columns; it defaults to 2. Example::
.. hlist::
:columns: 3
* A list of
* short items
* that should be
* displayed
* horizontally
.. versionadded:: 0.6
.. _code-examples:
Showing code examples
---------------------
.. index:: pair: code; examples
single: sourcecode
There are multiple ways to show syntax-highlighted literal code blocks in
Sphinx:
* using :ref:`reStructuredText doctest blocks <rst-doctest-blocks>`;
* using :ref:`reStructuredText literal blocks <rst-literal-blocks>`, optionally in
combination with the :rst:dir:`highlight` directive;
* using the :rst:dir:`code-block` directive;
* and using the :rst:dir:`literalinclude` directive.
Doctest blocks can only be used
to show interactive Python sessions, while the remaining three can be used for
other languages. Of these three, literal blocks are useful when an entire
document, or at least large sections of it, use code blocks with the same
syntax and which should be styled in the same manner. On the other hand, the
:rst:dir:`code-block` directive makes more sense when you want more fine-tuned
control over the styling of each block or when you have a document containing
code blocks using multiple varied syntaxes. Finally, the
:rst:dir:`literalinclude` directive is useful for including entire code files
in your documentation.
In all cases, Syntax highlighting is provided by `Pygments
<https://pygments.org>`_. When using literal blocks, this is configured using
any :rst:dir:`highlight` directives in the source file. When a ``highlight``
directive is encountered, it is used until the next ``highlight`` directive is
encountered. If there is no ``highlight`` directive in the file, the global
highlighting language is used. This defaults to ``python`` but can be
configured using the :confval:`highlight_language` config value. The following
values are supported:
* ``none`` (no highlighting)
* ``default`` (similar to ``python3`` but with a fallback to ``none`` without
warning highlighting fails; the default when :confval:`highlight_language`
isn't set)
* ``guess`` (let Pygments guess the lexer based on contents, only works with
certain well-recognizable languages)
* ``python``
* ``rest``
* ``c``
* ... and any other `lexer alias that Pygments supports`__
If highlighting with the selected language fails (i.e. Pygments emits an
"Error" token), the block is not highlighted in any way.
.. important::
The list of lexer aliases supported is tied to the Pygment version. If you
want to ensure consistent highlighting, you should fix your version of
Pygments.
__ https://pygments.org/docs/lexers
.. rst:directive:: .. highlight:: language
Example::
.. highlight:: c
This language is used until the next ``highlight`` directive is encountered.
As discussed previously, *language* can be any lexer alias supported by
Pygments.
.. rubric:: options
.. rst:directive:option:: linenothreshold: threshold
:type: number (optional)
Enable to generate line numbers for code blocks.
This option takes an optional number as threshold parameter. If any
threshold given, the directive will produce line numbers only for the code
blocks longer than N lines. If not given, line numbers will be produced
for all of code blocks.
Example::
.. highlight:: python
:linenothreshold: 5
.. rst:directive:option:: force
:type: no value
If given, minor errors on highlighting are ignored.
.. versionadded:: 2.1
.. rst:directive:: .. code-block:: [language]
.. sourcecode:: [language]
.. code:: [language]
Example::
.. code-block:: ruby
Some Ruby code.
The directive's alias name :rst:dir:`sourcecode` works as well. This
directive takes a language name as an argument. It can be `any lexer alias
supported by Pygments <https://pygments.org/docs/lexers/>`_. If it is not
given, the setting of :rst:dir:`highlight` directive will be used. If not
set, :confval:`highlight_language` will be used. To display a code example
*inline* within other text, rather than as a separate block, you can use the
:rst:role:`code` role instead.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
The ``language`` argument becomes optional.
.. rubric:: options
.. rst:directive:option:: linenos
:type: no value
Enable to generate line numbers for the code block::
.. code-block:: ruby
:linenos:
Some more Ruby code.
.. rst:directive:option:: lineno-start: number
:type: number
Set the first line number of the code block. If present, ``linenos``
option is also automatically activated::
.. code-block:: ruby
:lineno-start: 10
Some more Ruby code, with line numbering starting at 10.
.. versionadded:: 1.3
.. rst:directive:option:: emphasize-lines: line numbers
:type: comma separated numbers
Emphasize particular lines of the code block::
.. code-block:: python
:emphasize-lines: 3,5
def some_function():
interesting = False
print('This line is highlighted.')
print('This one is not...')
print('...but this one is.')
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. versionchanged:: 1.6.6
LaTeX supports the ``emphasize-lines`` option.
.. rst:directive:option: force
:type: no value
Ignore minor errors on highlighting
.. versionchanged:: 2.1
.. rst:directive:option:: caption: caption of code block
:type: text
Set a caption to the code block.
.. versionadded:: 1.3
.. rst:directive:option:: name: a label for hyperlink
:type: text
Define implicit target name that can be referenced by using
:rst:role:`ref`. For example::
.. code-block:: python
:caption: this.py
:name: this-py
print('Explicit is better than implicit.')
In order to cross-reference a code-block using either the
:rst:role:`ref` or the :rst:role:`numref` role, it is necessary
that both :strong:`name` and :strong:`caption` be defined. The
argument of :strong:`name` can then be given to :rst:role:`numref`
to generate the cross-reference. Example::
See :numref:`this-py` for an example.
When using :rst:role:`ref`, it is possible to generate a cross-reference
with only :strong:`name` defined, provided an explicit title is
given. Example::
See :ref:`this code snippet <this-py>` for an example.
.. versionadded:: 1.3
.. rst:directive:option:: class: class names
:type: a list of class names separated by spaces
The class name of the graph.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. rst:directive:option:: dedent: number
:type: number or no value
Strip indentation characters from the code block. When number given,
leading N characters are removed. When no argument given, leading spaces
are removed via :func:`textwrap.dedent()`. For example::
.. code-block:: ruby
:linenos:
:dedent: 4
some ruby code
.. versionadded:: 1.3
.. versionchanged:: 3.5
Support automatic dedent.
.. rst:directive:option:: force
:type: no value
If given, minor errors on highlighting are ignored.
.. versionadded:: 2.1
.. rst:directive:: .. literalinclude:: filename
Longer displays of verbatim text may be included by storing the example text
in an external file containing only plain text. The file may be included
using the ``literalinclude`` directive. [#]_ For example, to include the
Python source file :file:`example.py`, use::
.. literalinclude:: example.py
The file name is usually relative to the current file's path. However, if
it is absolute (starting with ``/``), it is relative to the top source
directory.
**Additional options**
Like :rst:dir:`code-block`, the directive supports the ``linenos`` flag
option to switch on line numbers, the ``lineno-start`` option to select the
first line number, the ``emphasize-lines`` option to emphasize particular
lines, the ``name`` option to provide an implicit target name, the
``dedent`` option to strip indentation characters for the code block, and a
``language`` option to select a language different from the current file's
standard language. In addition, it supports the ``caption`` option; however,
this can be provided with no argument to use the filename as the caption.
Example with options::
.. literalinclude:: example.rb
:language: ruby
:emphasize-lines: 12,15-18
:linenos:
Tabs in the input are expanded if you give a ``tab-width`` option with the
desired tab width.
Include files are assumed to be encoded in the :confval:`source_encoding`.
If the file has a different encoding, you can specify it with the
``encoding`` option::
.. literalinclude:: example.py
:encoding: latin-1
The directive also supports including only parts of the file. If it is a
Python module, you can select a class, function or method to include using
the ``pyobject`` option::
.. literalinclude:: example.py
:pyobject: Timer.start
This would only include the code lines belonging to the ``start()`` method
in the ``Timer`` class within the file.
Alternately, you can specify exactly which lines to include by giving a
``lines`` option::
.. literalinclude:: example.py
:lines: 1,3,5-10,20-
This includes the lines 1, 3, 5 to 10 and lines 20 to the last line.
Another way to control which part of the file is included is to use the
``start-after`` and ``end-before`` options (or only one of them). If
``start-after`` is given as a string option, only lines that follow the
first line containing that string are included. If ``end-before`` is given
as a string option, only lines that precede the first lines containing that
string are included. The ``start-at`` and ``end-at`` options behave in a
similar way, but the lines containing the matched string are included.
``start-after``/``start-at`` and ``end-before``/``end-at`` can have same string.
``start-after``/``start-at`` filter lines before the line that contains
option string (``start-at`` will keep the line). Then ``end-before``/``end-at``
filter lines after the line that contains option string (``end-at`` will keep
the line and ``end-before`` skip the first line).
.. note::
If you want to select only ``[second-section]`` of ini file like the
following, you can use ``:start-at: [second-section]`` and
``:end-before: [third-section]``:
.. code-block:: ini
[first-section]
var_in_first=true
[second-section]
var_in_second=true
[third-section]
var_in_third=true
Useful cases of these option is working with tag comments.
``:start-after: [initialize]`` and ``:end-before: [initialized]`` options
keep lines between comments:
.. code-block:: py
if __name__ == "__main__":
# [initialize]
app.start(":8000")
# [initialized]
When lines have been selected in any of the ways described above, the line
numbers in ``emphasize-lines`` refer to those selected lines, counted
consecutively starting at ``1``.
When specifying particular parts of a file to display, it can be useful to
display the original line numbers. This can be done using the
``lineno-match`` option, which is however allowed only when the selection
consists of contiguous lines.
You can prepend and/or append a line to the included code, using the
``prepend`` and ``append`` option, respectively. This is useful e.g. for
highlighting PHP code that doesn't include the ``<?php``/``?>`` markers.
If you want to show the diff of the code, you can specify the old file by
giving a ``diff`` option::
.. literalinclude:: example.py
:diff: example.py.orig
This shows the diff between ``example.py`` and ``example.py.orig`` with
unified diff format.
A ``force`` option can ignore minor errors on highlighting.
.. versionchanged:: 0.4.3
Added the ``encoding`` option.
.. versionchanged:: 0.6
Added the ``pyobject``, ``lines``, ``start-after`` and ``end-before``
options, as well as support for absolute filenames.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0
Added the ``prepend``, ``append``, and ``tab-width`` options.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3
Added the ``diff``, ``lineno-match``, ``caption``, ``name``, and
``dedent`` options.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4
Added the ``class`` option.
.. versionchanged:: 1.5
Added the ``start-at``, and ``end-at`` options.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6
With both ``start-after`` and ``lines`` in use, the first line as per
``start-after`` is considered to be with line number ``1`` for ``lines``.
.. versionchanged:: 2.1
Added the ``force`` option.
.. versionchanged:: 3.5
Support automatic dedent.
.. _glossary-directive:
Glossary
--------
.. rst:directive:: .. glossary::
This directive must contain a reStructuredText definition-list-like markup
with terms and definitions. The definitions will then be referenceable with the
:rst:role:`term` role. Example::
.. glossary::
environment
A structure where information about all documents under the root is
saved, and used for cross-referencing. The environment is pickled
after the parsing stage, so that successive runs only need to read
and parse new and changed documents.
source directory
The directory which, including its subdirectories, contains all
source files for one Sphinx project.
In contrast to regular definition lists, *multiple* terms per entry are
allowed, and inline markup is allowed in terms. You can link to all of the
terms. For example::
.. glossary::
term 1
term 2
Definition of both terms.
(When the glossary is sorted, the first term determines the sort order.)
If you want to specify "grouping key" for general index entries, you can put
a "key" as "term : key". For example::
.. glossary::
term 1 : A
term 2 : B
Definition of both terms.
Note that "key" is used for grouping key as is.
The "key" isn't normalized; key "A" and "a" become different groups.
The whole characters in "key" is used instead of a first character; it is
used for "Combining Character Sequence" and "Surrogate Pairs" grouping key.
In i18n situation, you can specify "localized term : key" even if original
text only have "term" part. In this case, translated "localized term" will be
categorized in "key" group.
.. versionadded:: 0.6
You can now give the glossary directive a ``:sorted:`` flag that will
automatically sort the entries alphabetically.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
Now supports multiple terms and inline markup in terms.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4
Index key for glossary term should be considered *experimental*.
.. versionchanged:: 4.4
In internationalized documentation, the ``:sorted:`` flag sorts
according to translated terms.
Meta-information markup
-----------------------
.. rst:directive:: .. sectionauthor:: name <email>
Identifies the author of the current section. The argument should include
the author's name such that it can be used for presentation and email
address. The domain name portion of the address should be lower case.
Example::
.. sectionauthor:: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>
By default, this markup isn't reflected in the output in any way (it helps
keep track of contributions), but you can set the configuration value
:confval:`show_authors` to ``True`` to make them produce a paragraph in the
output.
.. rst:directive:: .. codeauthor:: name <email>
The :rst:dir:`codeauthor` directive, which can appear multiple times, names
the authors of the described code, just like :rst:dir:`sectionauthor` names
the author(s) of a piece of documentation. It too only produces output if
the :confval:`show_authors` configuration value is ``True``.
Index-generating markup
-----------------------
Sphinx automatically creates index entries from all object descriptions (like
functions, classes or attributes) like discussed in
:doc:`/usage/domains/index`.
However, there is also explicit markup available, to make the index more
comprehensive and enable index entries in documents where information is not
mainly contained in information units, such as the language reference.
.. rst:directive:: .. index:: <entries>
This directive contains one or more index entries. Each entry consists of a
type and a value, separated by a colon.
For example::
.. index::
single: execution; context
pair: module; __main__
pair: module; sys
triple: module; search; path
seealso: scope
The execution context
---------------------
...
This directive contains five entries, which will be converted to entries in
the generated index which link to the exact location of the index statement
(or, in case of offline media, the corresponding page number).
Since index directives generate cross-reference targets at their location in
the source, it makes sense to put them *before* the thing they refer to --
e.g. a heading, as in the example above.
The possible entry types are:
single
Creates a single index entry.
Can be made a sub-entry by separating the sub-entry text with a semicolon
(this notation is also used below to describe what entries are created).
Examples:
.. code-block:: rst
.. index:: single: execution
single: execution; context
- ``single: execution`` creates an index entry labelled ``execution``.
- ``single: execution; context`` creates an sub-entry of ``execution``
labelled ``context``.
pair
A shortcut to create two index entries.
The pair of values must be separated by a semicolon.
Example:
.. code-block:: rst
.. index:: pair: loop; statement
This would create two index entries; ``loop; statement`` and ``statement; loop``.
triple
A shortcut to create three index entries.
All three values must be separated by a semicolon.
Example:
.. code-block:: rst
.. index:: triple: module; search; path
This would create three index entries; ``module; search path``,
``search; path, module``, and ``path; module search``.
see
A shortcut to create an index entry that refers to another entry.
Example:
.. code-block:: rst
.. index:: see: entry; other
This would create an index entry referring from ``entry`` to ``other``
(i.e. 'entry': See 'other').
seealso
Like ``see``, but inserts 'see also' instead of 'see'.
module, keyword, operator, object, exception, statement, builtin
These **deprecated** shortcuts all create two index entries.
For example, ``module: hashlib`` creates the entries ``module; hashlib``
and ``hashlib; module``.
.. deprecated:: 1.0
These Python-specific entry types are deprecated.
.. versionchanged:: 7.1
Removal version set to Sphinx 9.0.
Using these entry types will now emit warnings with the ``index`` category.
You can mark up "main" index entries by prefixing them with an exclamation
mark. The references to "main" entries are emphasized in the generated
index. For example, if two pages contain ::
.. index:: Python
and one page contains ::
.. index:: ! Python
then the backlink to the latter page is emphasized among the three backlinks.
For index directives containing only "single" entries, there is a shorthand
notation::
.. index:: BNF, grammar, syntax, notation
This creates four index entries.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
Added ``see`` and ``seealso`` types, as well as marking main entries.
.. rubric:: options
.. rst:directive:option:: name: a label for hyperlink
:type: text
Define implicit target name that can be referenced by using
:rst:role:`ref`. For example::
.. index:: Python
:name: py-index
.. versionadded:: 3.0
.. rst:role:: index
While the :rst:dir:`index` directive is a block-level markup and links to the
beginning of the next paragraph, there is also a corresponding role that sets
the link target directly where it is used.
The content of the role can be a simple phrase, which is then kept in the
text and used as an index entry. It can also be a combination of text and
index entry, styled like with explicit targets of cross-references. In that
case, the "target" part can be a full entry as described for the directive
above. For example::
This is a normal reStructuredText :index:`paragraph` that contains several
:index:`index entries <pair: index; entry>`.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. _tags:
Including content based on tags
-------------------------------
.. rst:directive:: .. only:: <expression>
Include the content of the directive only if the *expression* is true. The
expression should consist of tags, like this::
.. only:: html and draft
Undefined tags are false, defined tags are true
(tags can be defined via the :option:`--tag <sphinx-build --tag>`
command-line option or within :file:`conf.py`, see :ref:`here <conf-tags>`).
Boolean expressions (like ``(latex or html) and draft``) are supported
and may use parentheses.
The *format* and the *name* of the current builder (``html``, ``latex`` or
``text``) are always set as a tag [#]_. To make the distinction between
format and name explicit, they are also added with the prefix ``format_`` and
``builder_``, e.g. the epub builder defines the tags ``html``, ``epub``,
``format_html`` and ``builder_epub``.
These standard tags are set *after* the configuration file is read, so they
are not available there.
All tags must follow the standard Python identifier syntax as set out in
the `Identifiers and keywords
<https://docs.python.org/3/reference/lexical_analysis.html#identifiers>`_
documentation. That is, a tag expression may only consist of tags that
conform to the syntax of Python variables. In ASCII, this consists of the
uppercase and lowercase letters ``A`` through ``Z``, the underscore ``_``
and, except for the first character, the digits ``0`` through ``9``.
.. versionadded:: 0.6
.. versionchanged:: 1.2
Added the name of the builder and the prefixes.
.. warning::
This directive is designed to control only content of document. It could
not control sections, labels and so on.
.. _table-directives:
Tables
------
Use :ref:`reStructuredText tables <rst-tables>`, i.e. either
- grid table syntax (:duref:`ref <grid-tables>`),
- simple table syntax (:duref:`ref <simple-tables>`),
- :dudir:`csv-table` syntax,
- or :dudir:`list-table` syntax.
The :dudir:`table` directive serves as optional wrapper of the *grid* and
*simple* syntaxes.
They work fine in HTML output, but rendering tables to LaTeX is complex.
Check the :confval:`latex_table_style`.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6
Merged cells (multi-row, multi-column, both) from grid tables containing
complex contents such as multiple paragraphs, blockquotes, lists, literal
blocks, will render correctly to LaTeX output.
.. rst:directive:: .. tabularcolumns:: column spec
This directive influences only the LaTeX output for the next table in
source. The mandatory argument is a column specification (known as an
"alignment preamble" in LaTeX idiom). Please refer to a LaTeX
documentation, such as the `wiki page`_, for basics of such a column
specification.
.. _wiki page: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Tables
.. versionadded:: 0.3
.. note::
:rst:dir:`tabularcolumns` conflicts with ``:widths:`` option of table
directives. If both are specified, ``:widths:`` option will be ignored.
Sphinx will render tables with more than 30 rows with ``longtable``.
Besides the ``l``, ``r``, ``c`` and ``p{width}`` column specifiers, one can
also use ``\X{a}{b}`` (new in version 1.5) which configures the column
width to be a fraction ``a/b`` of the total line width and ``\Y{f}`` (new
in version 1.6) where ``f`` is a decimal: for example ``\Y{0.2}`` means that
the column will occupy ``0.2`` times the line width.
When this directive is used for a table with at most 30 rows, Sphinx will
render it with ``tabulary``. One can then use specific column types ``L``
(left), ``R`` (right), ``C`` (centered) and ``J`` (justified). They have
the effect of a ``p{width}`` (i.e. each cell is a LaTeX ``\parbox``) with
the specified internal text alignment and an automatically computed
``width``.
.. warning::
- Cells that contain list-like elements such as object descriptions,
blockquotes or any kind of lists are not compatible with the ``LRCJ``
column types. The column type must then be some ``p{width}`` with an
explicit ``width`` (or ``\X{a}{b}`` or ``\Y{f}``).
- Literal blocks do not work with ``tabulary`` at all. Sphinx will
fall back to ``tabular`` or ``longtable`` environments and generate a
suitable column specification.
In absence of the :rst:dir:`tabularcolumns` directive, and for a table with at
most 30 rows and no problematic cells as described in the above warning,
Sphinx uses ``tabulary`` and the ``J`` column-type for every column.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6
Formerly, the ``L`` column-type was used (text is flushed-left). To revert
to this, include ``\newcolumntype{T}{L}`` in the LaTeX preamble, as in fact
Sphinx uses ``T`` and sets it by default to be an alias of ``J``.
.. hint::
A frequent issue with ``tabulary`` is that columns with little contents
appear to be "squeezed". One can add to the LaTeX preamble for example
``\setlength{\tymin}{40pt}`` to ensure a minimal column width of ``40pt``,
the ``tabulary`` default of ``10pt`` being too small.
.. hint::
To force usage of the LaTeX ``longtable`` environment pass ``longtable`` as
a ``:class:`` option to :dudir:`table`, :dudir:`csv-table`, or
:dudir:`list-table`. Use :ref:`rst-class <rstclass>` for other tables.
Math
----
The input language for mathematics is LaTeX markup. This is the de-facto
standard for plain-text math notation and has the added advantage that no
further translation is necessary when building LaTeX output.
Keep in mind that when you put math markup in **Python docstrings** read by
:mod:`autodoc <sphinx.ext.autodoc>`, you either have to double all backslashes,
or use Python raw strings (``r"raw"``).
.. rst:directive:: math
Directive for displayed math (math that takes the whole line for itself).
The directive supports multiple equations, which should be separated by a
blank line::
.. math::
(a + b)^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2
(a - b)^2 = a^2 - 2ab + b^2
In addition, each single equation is set within a ``split`` environment,
which means that you can have multiple aligned lines in an equation,
aligned at ``&`` and separated by ``\\``::
.. math::
(a + b)^2 &= (a + b)(a + b) \\
&= a^2 + 2ab + b^2
For more details, look into the documentation of the `AmSMath LaTeX
package`_.
When the math is only one line of text, it can also be given as a directive
argument::
.. math:: (a + b)^2 = a^2 + 2ab + b^2
Normally, equations are not numbered. If you want your equation to get a
number, use the ``label`` option. When given, it selects an internal label
for the equation, by which it can be cross-referenced, and causes an equation
number to be issued. See :rst:role:`eq` for an example. The numbering
style depends on the output format.
There is also an option ``nowrap`` that prevents any wrapping of the given
math in a math environment. When you give this option, you must make sure
yourself that the math is properly set up. For example::
.. math::
:nowrap:
\begin{eqnarray}
y & = & ax^2 + bx + c \\
f(x) & = & x^2 + 2xy + y^2
\end{eqnarray}
.. _AmSMath LaTeX package: https://www.ams.org/publications/authors/tex/amslatex
.. seealso::
:ref:`math-support`
Rendering options for math with HTML builders.
:confval:`latex_engine`
Explains how to configure LaTeX builder to support Unicode literals in
math mark-up.
Grammar production displays
---------------------------
Special markup is available for displaying the productions of a formal grammar.
The markup is simple and does not attempt to model all aspects of BNF (or any
derived forms), but provides enough to allow context-free grammars to be
displayed in a way that causes uses of a symbol to be rendered as hyperlinks to
the definition of the symbol. There is this directive:
.. rst:directive:: .. productionlist:: [productionGroup]
This directive is used to enclose a group of productions. Each production
is given on a single line and consists of a name, separated by a colon from
the following definition. If the definition spans multiple lines, each
continuation line must begin with a colon placed at the same column as in
the first line.
Blank lines are not allowed within ``productionlist`` directive arguments.
The definition can contain token names which are marked as interpreted text
(e.g., "``sum ::= `integer` "+" `integer```") -- this generates
cross-references to the productions of these tokens. Outside of the
production list, you can reference to token productions using
:rst:role:`token`.
The *productionGroup* argument to :rst:dir:`productionlist` serves to
distinguish different sets of production lists that belong to different
grammars. Multiple production lists with the same *productionGroup* thus
define rules in the same scope.
Inside of the production list, tokens implicitly refer to productions
from the current group. You can refer to the production of another
grammar by prefixing the token with its group name and a colon, e.g,
"``otherGroup:sum``". If the group of the token should not be shown in
the production, it can be prefixed by a tilde, e.g.,
"``~otherGroup:sum``". To refer to a production from an unnamed
grammar, the token should be prefixed by a colon, e.g., "``:sum``".
Outside of the production list,
if you have given a *productionGroup* argument you must prefix the
token name in the cross-reference with the group name and a colon,
e.g., "``myGroup:sum``" instead of just "``sum``".
If the group should not be shown in the title of the link either
an explicit title can be given (e.g., "``myTitle <myGroup:sum>``"),
or the target can be prefixed with a tilde (e.g., "``~myGroup:sum``").
Note that no further reStructuredText parsing is done in the production,
so that you don't have to escape ``*`` or ``|`` characters.
The following is an example taken from the Python Reference Manual::
.. productionlist::
try_stmt: try1_stmt | try2_stmt
try1_stmt: "try" ":" `suite`
: ("except" [`expression` ["," `target`]] ":" `suite`)+
: ["else" ":" `suite`]
: ["finally" ":" `suite`]
try2_stmt: "try" ":" `suite`
: "finally" ":" `suite`
.. rubric:: Footnotes
.. [#] The LaTeX writer only refers the ``maxdepth`` option of first toctree
directive in the document.
.. [#] A note on available globbing syntax: you can use the standard shell
constructs ``*``, ``?``, ``[...]`` and ``[!...]`` with the feature that
these all don't match slashes. A double star ``**`` can be used to
match any sequence of characters *including* slashes.
.. [#] There is a standard ``.. include`` directive, but it raises errors if the
file is not found. This one only emits a warning.
.. [#] For most builders name and format are the same. At the moment only
builders derived from the html builder distinguish between the builder
format and the builder name.
Note that the current builder tag is not available in ``conf.py``, it is
only available after the builder is initialized.
|