.. _faq: Sphinx FAQ ========== This is a list of Frequently Asked Questions about Sphinx. Feel free to suggest new entries! How do I... ----------- ... create PDF files without LaTeX? `rinohtype`_ provides a PDF builder that can be used as a drop-in replacement for the LaTeX builder. .. _rinohtype: https://github.com/brechtm/rinohtype ... get section numbers? They are automatic in LaTeX output; for HTML, give a ``:numbered:`` option to the :rst:dir:`toctree` directive where you want to start numbering. ... customize the look of the built HTML files? Use themes, see :doc:`/usage/theming`. ... add global substitutions or includes? Add them in the :confval:`rst_prolog` or :confval:`rst_epilog` config value. ... display the whole TOC tree in the sidebar? Use the :data:`toctree` callable in a custom layout template, probably in the ``sidebartoc`` block. ... write my own extension? See the :doc:`/development/tutorials/index`. ... convert from my existing docs using MoinMoin markup? The easiest way is to convert to xhtml, then convert `xhtml to reST`_. You'll still need to mark up classes and such, but the headings and code examples come through cleanly. For many more extensions and other contributed stuff, see the sphinx-contrib_ repository. .. _sphinx-contrib: https://github.com/sphinx-contrib/ .. _usingwith: Using Sphinx with... -------------------- Read the Docs `Read the Docs `_ is a documentation hosting service based around Sphinx. They will host sphinx documentation, along with supporting a number of other features including version support, PDF generation, and more. The `Getting Started`_ guide is a good place to start. Epydoc There's a third-party extension providing an `api role`_ which refers to Epydoc's API docs for a given identifier. Doxygen Michael Jones is developing a reST/Sphinx bridge to doxygen called `breathe `_. SCons Glenn Hutchings has written a SCons build script to build Sphinx documentation; it is hosted here: https://bitbucket-archive.softwareheritage.org/projects/zo/zondo/sphinx-scons.html PyPI Jannis Leidel wrote a `setuptools command `_ that automatically uploads Sphinx documentation to the PyPI package documentation area at https://pythonhosted.org/. GitHub Pages Please add :py:mod:`sphinx.ext.githubpages` to your project. It allows you to publish your document in GitHub Pages. It generates helper files for GitHub Pages on building HTML document automatically. MediaWiki See `sphinx-wiki`_, a project by Kevin Dunn. .. _sphinx-wiki: https://bitbucket-archive.softwareheritage.org/projects/ke/kevindunn/sphinx-wiki.html Google Analytics You can use a custom ``layout.html`` template, like this: .. code-block:: html+jinja {% extends "!layout.html" %} {%- block extrahead %} {{ super() }} {% endblock %} {% block footer %} {{ super() }} {% endblock %} Google Search To replace Sphinx's built-in search function with Google Search, proceed as follows: 1. Go to https://cse.google.com/cse/all to create the Google Search code snippet. 2. Copy the code snippet and paste it into ``_templates/searchbox.html`` in your Sphinx project: .. code-block:: html+jinja

{{ _('Quick search') }}

3. Add ``searchbox.html`` to the :confval:`html_sidebars` configuration value. .. _Getting Started: https://docs.readthedocs.io/en/stable/intro/getting-started-with-sphinx.html .. _api role: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/kenozooid.git/tree/doc/extapi.py .. _xhtml to reST: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/sandbox/xhtml2rest/xhtml2rest.py Sphinx vs. Docutils ------------------- tl;dr: *docutils* converts reStructuredText to multiple output formats. Sphinx builds upon docutils to allow construction of cross-referenced and indexed bodies of documentation. `docutils`__ is a text processing system for converting plain text documentation into other, richer formats. As noted in the `docutils documentation`__, docutils uses *readers* to read a document, *parsers* for parsing plain text formats into an internal tree representation made up of different types of *nodes*, and *writers* to output this tree in various document formats. docutils provides parsers for one plain text format - `reStructuredText`__ - though other, *out-of-tree* parsers have been implemented including Sphinx's :doc:`Markdown parser `. On the other hand, it provides writers for many different formats including HTML, LaTeX, man pages, Open Document Format and XML. docutils exposes all of its functionality through a variety of `front-end tools`__, such as ``rst2html``, ``rst2odt`` and ``rst2xml``. Crucially though, all of these tools, and docutils itself, are concerned with individual documents. They don't support concepts such as cross-referencing, indexing of documents, or the construction of a document hierarchy (typically manifesting in a table of contents). Sphinx builds upon docutils by harnessing docutils' readers and parsers and providing its own :doc:`/usage/builders/index`. As a result, Sphinx wraps some of the *writers* provided by docutils. This allows Sphinx to provide many features that would simply not be possible with docutils, such as those outlined above. __ https://docutils.sourceforge.io/ __ https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/dev/hacking.html __ https://docutils.sourceforge.io/rst.html __ https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/user/tools.html .. _epub-faq: Epub info --------- The following list gives some hints for the creation of epub files: * Split the text into several files. The longer the individual HTML files are, the longer it takes the ebook reader to render them. In extreme cases, the rendering can take up to one minute. * Try to minimize the markup. This also pays in rendering time. * For some readers you can use embedded or external fonts using the CSS ``@font-face`` directive. This is *extremely* useful for code listings which are often cut at the right margin. The default Courier font (or variant) is quite wide and you can only display up to 60 characters on a line. If you replace it with a narrower font, you can get more characters on a line. You may even use `FontForge `_ and create narrow variants of some free font. In my case I get up to 70 characters on a line. You may have to experiment a little until you get reasonable results. * Test the created epubs. You can use several alternatives. The ones I am aware of are Epubcheck_, Calibre_, FBreader_ (although it does not render the CSS), and Bookworm_. For Bookworm, you can download the source from https://code.google.com/archive/p/threepress and run your own local server. * Large floating divs are not displayed properly. If they cover more than one page, the div is only shown on the first page. In that case you can copy the :file:`epub.css` from the ``sphinx/themes/epub/static/`` directory to your local ``_static/`` directory and remove the float settings. * Files that are inserted outside of the ``toctree`` directive must be manually included. This sometimes applies to appendixes, e.g. the glossary or the indices. You can add them with the :confval:`epub_post_files` option. * The handling of the epub cover page differs from the reStructuredText procedure which automatically resolves image paths and puts the images into the ``_images`` directory. For the epub cover page put the image in the :confval:`html_static_path` directory and reference it with its full path in the :confval:`epub_cover` config option. * kindlegen_ command can convert from epub3 resulting file to ``.mobi`` file for Kindle. You can get ``yourdoc.mobi`` under ``_build/epub`` after the following command: .. code-block:: bash $ make epub $ kindlegen _build/epub/yourdoc.epub The kindlegen command doesn't accept documents that have section titles surrounding ``toctree`` directive: .. code-block:: rst Section Title ============= .. toctree:: subdocument Section After Toc Tree ====================== kindlegen assumes all documents order in line, but the resulting document has complicated order for kindlegen:: ``parent.xhtml`` -> ``child.xhtml`` -> ``parent.xhtml`` If you get the following error, fix your document structure: .. code-block:: none Error(prcgen):E24011: TOC section scope is not included in the parent chapter:(title) Error(prcgen):E24001: The table of content could not be built. .. _Epubcheck: https://github.com/IDPF/epubcheck .. _Calibre: https://calibre-ebook.com/ .. _FBreader: https://fbreader.org/ .. _Bookworm: https://www.oreilly.com/bookworm/index.html .. _kindlegen: https://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?docId=1000765211 .. _texinfo-faq: Texinfo info ------------ There are two main programs for reading Info files, ``info`` and GNU Emacs. The ``info`` program has less features but is available in most Unix environments and can be quickly accessed from the terminal. Emacs provides better font and color display and supports extensive customization (of course). .. _texinfo-links: Displaying Links ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ One noticeable problem you may encounter with the generated Info files is how references are displayed. If you read the source of an Info file, a reference to this section would look like:: * note Displaying Links: target-id In the stand-alone reader, ``info``, references are displayed just as they appear in the source. Emacs, on the other-hand, will by default replace ``*note:`` with ``see`` and hide the ``target-id``. For example: :ref:`texinfo-links` One can disable generation of the inline references in a document with :confval:`texinfo_cross_references`. That makes an info file more readable with stand-alone reader (``info``). The exact behavior of how Emacs displays references is dependent on the variable ``Info-hide-note-references``. If set to the value of ``hide``, Emacs will hide both the ``*note:`` part and the ``target-id``. This is generally the best way to view Sphinx-based documents since they often make frequent use of links and do not take this limitation into account. However, changing this variable affects how all Info documents are displayed and most do take this behavior into account. If you want Emacs to display Info files produced by Sphinx using the value ``hide`` for ``Info-hide-note-references`` and the default value for all other Info files, try adding the following Emacs Lisp code to your start-up file, ``~/.emacs.d/init.el``. .. code-block:: elisp (defadvice info-insert-file-contents (after sphinx-info-insert-file-contents activate) "Hack to make `Info-hide-note-references' buffer-local and automatically set to `hide' iff it can be determined that this file was created from a Texinfo file generated by Docutils or Sphinx." (set (make-local-variable 'Info-hide-note-references) (default-value 'Info-hide-note-references)) (save-excursion (save-restriction (widen) (goto-char (point-min)) (when (re-search-forward "^Generated by \\(Sphinx\\|Docutils\\)" (save-excursion (search-forward "\x1f" nil t)) t) (set (make-local-variable 'Info-hide-note-references) 'hide))))) Notes ~~~~~ The following notes may be helpful if you want to create Texinfo files: - Each section corresponds to a different ``node`` in the Info file. - Colons (``:``) cannot be properly escaped in menu entries and xrefs. They will be replaced with semicolons (``;``). - Links to external Info files can be created using the somewhat official URI scheme ``info``. For example:: info:Texinfo#makeinfo_options