Sphinx#
The primary driver of this package’s documentation is Sphinx’s autodoc
extension,
using the Furo theme.
High-level details:
sphinx-apidoc
generates package-based documentation to the_autoref/
directory, with navigation available under “Autoref” in the sidebar.Markdown-based documentation files are manually written under the
reference/
directory, showing up under “Contents” in the sidebar.
Detailed directory structure#
All files are placed under docs/sphinx
:
_
-prefixed are Sphinx-managed directories_build/html/
houses output HTML files_autoref/
is the target for module-based RST files written byautodoc
reference/
: houses all manually written documentation (totally separate from auto-generated package docs)conf.py
: single Sphinx configuration fileindex.md
: documentation index, setups up a persistent sidebar across all other pages
For manually written documentation under reference/
, topics are nested as needed. Within
a nested directory reference/<topic>
, an index.md
should created with content like:
# <Topic>
\`\`\`{toctree}
:hidden:
sub-topic-1.rst
sub-topic-2.rst
...
\`\`\`
This will add the nested directory to the sidebar navigation, using the name set under the top-level header. See [Markdown syntax][#markdown-syntax] for more details on the syntax.
Sphinx autodoc#
Sphinx’s autodoc
extension allows automatic generation of documents according to
(Python) subpackage structure and available docstrings. A few notes here:
In the
conf.py
file, autodoc is enabled by adding"sphinx.ext.autodoc"
to the extensions list."sphinx.ext.viewcode"
can also be added to provide links to source code.Documents are actually generated by calling the
sphinx-apidoc
CLI command. The current Makefile uses the following call:sphinx-apidoc --module-first -o docs/sphinx/_autoref/ localsys
This writes the automatically generated docs for modules in the package at the local directory
localsys/
to thedocs/sphinx/_autoref
directory. These are reStructuredText files by default.
Markdown syntax#
The myst_parser
extension enables Markdown (or something close to it) to be used when
writing documentation files. The Sphinx directives can be difficult to track, and
they change slightly under the MyST Markdown syntax. The following are a few common
blocks:
Page hierarchies: the following will generate link hierarchy according to the provided pages:
\`\`\`{toctree}
:maxdepth: <n>
:caption: <caption>
:hidden:
example-file-1
example-file-2
example-dir/index
...
\`\`\`
:maxdepth:
limits the depth of nesting:caption:
title for the group of pages:hidden:
if provided, links will only show in the sidebar (hidden on the page)Constituent files: listed files will be rendered as a link directly. If a listed file has a
{toctree}
directive, this tree will be rendered in place of the page’s link as a dropdown. The dropdown will be named according to the file’s top-level heading, and clicking directly on the dropdown header will show that page’s content. Files found in the tree will be placed as links under the dropdown, recursively subject to same rules described here.
Include files: the following will include file content pages:
\`\`\`{include} README.md
\`\`\`
Reference directives