.. _readthedocs.org: http://www.readthedocs.org .. _bower: http://www.bower.io .. _sphinx: http://www.sphinx-doc.org .. _compass: http://www.compass-style.org .. _sass: http://www.sass-lang.com .. _wyrm: http://www.github.com/snide/wyrm/ .. _grunt: http://www.gruntjs.com .. _node: http://www.nodejs.com .. _demo: http://docs.readthedocs.org ************************** Read the Docs Sphinx Theme ************************** View a working demo_ over on readthedocs.org_. This is a prototype mobile-friendly sphinx_ theme I made for readthedocs.org_. It's currently in development 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. .. image:: screen_mobile.png :width: 100% Installation ============ Via package ----------- Download the package or add it to your ``requirements.txt`` file: .. code:: bash $ pip install sphinx_rtd_theme In your ``conf.py`` file: .. code:: python 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: .. code:: python html_theme = "sphinx_rtd_theme" html_theme_path = ["_themes", ] 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. 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 compass_ to build the css. The good news is I have a very nice set of grunt_ operations that will not only load these dependecies, but watch for changes, rebuild the sphinx demo docs and build a distributable version of the theme in the ``dist`` directory. 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. .. code:: pip install sphinx 2. Install sass and compass .. code:: gem install sass compass 2. Install node, bower and grunt. .. code:: // Install node brew install node // Install node package manager curl https://npmjs.org/install.sh | sh // Install bower and grunt npm install -g bower grunt-cli 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: .. code:: 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 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. TODO ==== * Build real demo docs with lots of rst examples * Update to font-awesome 4.0 and have it build from bower, not the copy/paste hack I have now. * Separate some sass variables at the theme level so you can overwrite some basic colors. * Add the ability to set a logo.