t3SphinxThemeRtd

Docs.TYPO3.Org theme for Sphinx, starting 2015.


License
MIT
Install
pip install t3SphinxThemeRtd==3.6.11

Documentation

A new theme for Docs.TYPO3.Org

Project: t3SphinxThemeRtd
Team: TYPO3 Documentation Team
Author: Martin Bless <martin.bless@typo3.org>
License: MIT
Demo: See this demo docs t3SphinxThemeRtdDemoDocs which are kind of a "stresstest" and demonstrate what's possible and how the theme can be used.

This work builds on top of v0.1.8 of https://github.com/snide/sphinx_rtd_theme.

Find notes about the state of development in this blogpost.

Navigate this page:

Installation

Install the Theme Using PIP

PIP is the Python packet manager for PyPi. 't3SphinxThemeRtd' is provided by the TYPO3 Documentation Team and available from PyPi.

Installation with pip:

# fetch from PyPi and install latest version:
pip install --upgrade t3SphinxThemeRtd

# if required for your system, run a superuser:
pip install --upgrade t3SphinxThemeRtd

For your interest: Some quick examples of pip usage:

# find help
pip install --help
pip --help

# install locally for this user only
pip install --upgrade --user t3SphinxThemeRtd

# uninstall - no matter if installed by PIP or setup.py:
pip uninstall t3SphinxThemeRtd

# search PyPi, the Python packet index
pip search t3SphinxThemeRtd
pip search sphinx

Install directly using 'setup.py'

To install directly from the package:

git clone https://github.com/TYPO3-Documentation/t3SphinxThemeRtd.git
cd t3SphinxThemeRtd
(sudo) python setup.py install

# or install locally in user's home:
python setup.py --user install

Usage

In the conf.py file of your documentation project:

Load the module:

import t3SphinxThemeRtd

Choose the theme:

html_theme = "t3SphinxThemeRtd"

Set the theme path:

html_theme_path = [t3SphinxThemeRtd.get_html_theme_path()]

Or, if that's better in your case, add the theme path to to the list of already defined paths:

html_theme_path = []
# ...
html_theme_path.append(t3SphinxThemeRtd.get_html_theme_path())

Special Information for TYPO3 Users

  1. Disable or remove any existing "TYPO3 codeblock"

    If the "TYPO3 codeblock" is part of your conf.py file then you need to remove or disable that code. You can do that easily by writing if 0 instead of if 1.

    How to disable an existing TYPO3 codeblock in conf.py

    Disable any "TYPO3 codeblock" in your conf.py by writing if 0.

  2. Once the "TYPO3 codeblock" is disabled the old t3sphinx module IS NOT used any more. So you finally are being freed from old ballast and some of those old and annoying errors are gone. Rendering of Sphinx Json format will just work fine with the new theme.

  3. On the other hand: Since the t3sphinx module isn't loaded any more there is no processing of Yaml files for configuration at the moment. This means, at least for now:

    • You have to use a conf.py file for configuration.
    • You need to move all necessary settings from possible GlobalSettings.yml and Settings.yml files into the conf.py.
  4. Maybe we add Yaml processing in the future. At the moment this doesn't exist.

  5. To quickly get going: Feel free to copy from this Typoscript Reference conf.py example file. The relevant parts are at the end.

To be done

Check this list in the blogpost

Changelog

v3.1.0

  • publish as 3.1.0
  • use minified jQuery
  • add our "Edit me on GitHub" button

v3.0.0

  • First public version. We start numbering this TYPO3 fork of the RTD theme with version number 3.0.0 to be clearly different from the original sphinx_rtd_theme which is v0.1.8.

Already done

Check this list in the blogpost

How the Table of Contents builds

Read about this in the original README.

Contributing or modifying the theme

This chapter is taken from the original README (and then modified):

The t3SphinxThemeRtd is primarily a Sass project that requires a few other Sass libraries. We are using Bower to manage these dependencies and Sass to build the css. The good news is that there is a 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. The bad news is this means you'll need to set up your environment similar to that of a front-end developer (versus that of a python developer). That means installing Node and Ruby.

Set up a development environment

  1. Install Sphinx. It is a good idea - but not a requirement - to install into a virtual environment:

    # Maybe activate virtualenv first. Then:
    
    pip install sphinx
    
  2. Install Sass:

    gem install sass
    
  3. Install Node, Bower and Grunt:

    # Install node
    brew install node
    
    # Install bower and grunt
    npm install -g bower grunt-cli
    
    # Now that everything is installed, let's install the theme's dependecies.
    cd t3SphinxThemeRtd
    npm install
    
  1. You may want to add the Livereload Addons to your Firefox and Chrome browser.

  2. Now that our environment is set up, make sure you're in your virtual environment, go to our package in the terminal and run Grunt:

    cd t3SphinxThemeRtd
    grunt
    

    Or, mabe even better, run Grunt in the background:

    cd t3SphinxThemeRtd
    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 the demo_docs.
  3. It'll watch for changes to the Sass files and build css from the changes.
  4. It'll rebuild the sphinx demo_docs anytime it notices a change to .rst, .html, .js or .css files.
  5. It'll start a local web server at localhost:1919.
  6. It'll show the demo_docs in the browser.
  7. It'll refresh the browser for localhost:1919 automatically if LiveReload is enabled.

There is a grunt copy command as well that copies files from the components that bower fetches into the actual theme directory. For example fonts are move to the right place that way.

Note: I you want that copy action you need to run grunt copy manually. It is not run by default.

End of README.