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Setting up navigation

A clear and concise navigation structure is an important aspect of good project documentation. Material for MkDocs provides a multitude of options to configure the behavior of navigational elements, including tabs and sections, and its flag-ship feature: instant loading.

Configuration

Instant loading

Source · Feature flag

When instant loading is enabled, clicks on all internal links will be intercepted and dispatched via XHR without fully reloading the page. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.instant

The resulting page is parsed and injected and all event handlers and components are rebound automatically. This means that Material for MkDocs behaves like a Single Page Application, which is especially useful for large documentation sites that come with a massive search index, as the search index will now remain intact in-between document switches.

Material for MkDocs is the only MkDocs theme offering this feature.

Anchor tracking

Source · Feature flag · Insiders only

When anchor tracking is enabled, the URL in the address bar is automatically updated with the active anchor as highlighted in the table of contents. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.tracking

Source · Feature flag

When tabs are enabled, top-level sections are rendered in a menu layer below the header for viewports above 1220px, but remain as-is on mobile.1 Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.tabs

With tabs

Without tabs

Source · Feature flag · Experimental

When sticky tabs are enabled, navigation tabs will lock below the header and always remain visible when scrolling down. Just add the following two feature flags to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.tabs
    - navigation.tabs.sticky

With sticky tabs

Without sticky tabs

Source · Feature flag

When sections are enabled, top-level sections are rendered as groups in the sidebar for viewports above 1220px, but remain as-is on mobile. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.sections

With sections

Without sections

Both feature flags, tabs and sections, can be combined with each other. If both feature flags are enabled, sections are rendered for level 2 navigation items.

Source · Feature flag

When expansion is enabled, the left sidebar will expand all collapsible subsections by default, so the user doesn't have to open subsections manually. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.expand

With expansion

Without expansion

Section index pages

Source · Feature flag · Experimental

When section index pages are enabled, documents can be directly attached to sections, which is particularly useful for providing overview pages. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.indexes

With expansion

Without expansion

In order to link a page to a section, create a new document with the name index.md in the respective folder, and add it to the beginning of your navigation section:

nav:
  - Section:
    - section/index.md
    - Page 1: section/page-1.md
    ...
    - Page n: section/page-n.md

This feature flag can be combined with all other feature flags, e.g. tabs and sections, except for table of contents navigation integration.

Back-to-top button

Source · Feature flag

A back-to-top button can be shown when the user, after scrolling down, starts to scroll up again. It's rendered centered and just below the header. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - navigation.top

back-to-top button

Table of contents

Source · Extension

The Table of contents extension, which is part of the standard Markdown library, provides some options that are supported by Material for MkDocs to customize its appearance:

permalink

Default: false – This option adds an anchor link containing the paragraph symbol or another custom symbol at the end of each headline, exactly like on the page you're currently viewing, which Material for MkDocs will make appear on hover:

markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      permalink: true
markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      permalink: ⚓︎
slugify

Default: headerid.slugify – This option allows for customization of the slug function. For some languages, the default may not produce good and readable identifiers – consider using another slug function like for example those from Python Markdown Extensions:

markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      slugify: !!python/name:pymdownx.slugs.uslugify
markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      slugify: !!python/name:pymdownx.slugs.uslugify_cased
toc_depth

Default: 6 – Define the range of levels to be included in the table of contents. This may be useful for project documentation with deeply structured headings to decrease the length of the table of contents, or to remove the table of contents altogether:

markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      toc_depth: 3
markdown_extensions:
  - toc:
      toc_depth: 0

Material for MkDocs doesn't provide official support for the other options of this extension, so they may be supported but might yield unexpected results. Use them at your own risk.

Source · Feature flag

When integration is enabled, the table of contents is rendered as part of the navigation for viewports above 1220px, but remains as-is on mobile. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

theme:
  features:
    - toc.integrate

Integrate table of contents

Separate table of contents

The content section will now always stretch to the right side, resulting in more space for your content. This feature flag can be combined with all other feature flags, e.g. tabs and sections.

Usage

Hiding the sidebars

Source · Metadata

Sometimes it's desirable to hide the navigation and/or table of contents sidebar, especially when there's a single navigation item. This can be done for any page using the Metadata extension:

---
hide:
  - navigation
  - toc
---

# Document title
...

Hide navigation

Hide table of contents

Hide navigation and table of contents

Customization

Keyboard shortcuts

Source · Difficulty: easy

Material for MkDocs includes several keyboard shortcuts that make it possible to navigate your project documentation via keyboard. There're two modes:

search

This mode is active when the search is focused. It provides several key bindings to make search accessible and navigable via keyboard:

  • Down , Up : select next / previous result
  • Esc , Tab : close search dialog
  • Enter : follow selected result
global

This mode is active when search is not focussed and when there's no other focussed element that is susceptible to keyboard input. The following keys are bound:

  • F , S , / : open search dialog
  • P , , : go to previous page
  • N , . : go to next page

Let's say you want to bind some action to the X key. By using additional JavaScript, you can subscribe to the keyboard$ observable and attach your custom event listener:

keyboard$.subscribe(function(key) {
  if (key.mode === "global" && key.type === "x") {
    /* Add custom keyboard handler here */
    key.claim()
  }
})

The call to key.claim() will essentially execute preventDefault() on the underlying event, so the keypress will not propagate further and touch other event listeners.

Content area width

Source · Difficulty: easy

The width of the content area is set so the length of each line doesn't exceed 80-100 characters, depending on the width of the characters. While this is a reasonable default, as longer lines tend to be harder to read, it may be desirable to increase the overall width of the content area, or even make it stretch to the entire available space.

This can easily be achieved with an additional stylesheet and a few lines of CSS:

.md-grid {
  max-width: 1440px;
}
.md-grid {
  max-width: initial;
}

  1. Prior to version 6.2, navigation tabs had a slightly different behavior. All top-level pages (i.e. all top-level entries that directly refer to an *.md file) defined inside the nav entry of mkdocs.yml were grouped under the first tab which received the title of the first page. This made it impossible to include a top-level page (or external link) as a tab item, as was reported in #1884 and #2072. From version 6.2 on, navigation tabs include all top-level pages and sections. 

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