Sphinx Tabs¶
Create tabbed content in Sphinx documentation when building HTML.
Installation¶
pip install sphinx-tabs
To enable the extension in Sphinx, add the following to your conf.py:
extensions = ['sphinx_tabs.tabs']
If you are using Read The Docs for building your documentation, the extension must be added as a requirement. Please add sphinx-tabs to requirements.txt at the root of the project or in your docs folder.
Sphinx Configuration¶
If needed, there is a configuration option to allow additional builders to be considered compatible. For example, to add the linkcheck builder, add the following to your conf.py:
sphinx_tabs_valid_builders = ['linkcheck']
By default, tabs can be closed by selecting the open tab. This functionality can be disabled using the sphinx_tabs_disable_tab_closing configuration option:
sphinx_tabs_disable_tab_closing = True
Custom lexers that have been loaded in the sphinx conf.py can be used with code-tabs:
def setup(app):
app.add_lexer('alias', MyCustomLexer())
By default, the extension loads predefined CSS styles for tabs. To disable the CSS from loading, add the following to your conf.py:
sphinx_tabs_disable_css_loading = True
Basic Tabs¶
All sphinx-tabs use the tabs directive to define a tab set. Basic tabs are added using the tab directive, which takes the tab’s label as an argument:
.. tabs::
.. tab:: Apples
Apples are green, or sometimes red.
.. tab:: Pears
Pears are green.
.. tab:: Oranges
Oranges are orange.
These will appear as:
Apples are green, or sometimes red.
Pears are green.
Oranges are orange.
The contents of each tab can be displayed by clicking on the tab that you wish to show. Clicking on the tab that is currently open will hide the tab’s content, leaving only the tab set labels visible.
Alternatively, tab sets can be focused using Tab. The Left Arrow and Right Arrow keys can then be used to navigate across the tab set and Enter can be used to select a tab.
Nested Tabs¶
Tabs can be nested inside one another:
.. tabs::
.. tab:: Stars
.. tabs::
.. tab:: The Sun
The closest star to us.
.. tab:: Proxima Centauri
The second closest star to us.
.. tab:: Polaris
The North Star.
.. tab:: Moons
.. tabs::
.. tab:: The Moon
Orbits the Earth
.. tab:: Titan
Orbits Jupiter
Nested tabs appear as:
The closest star to us.
The second closest star to us.
The North Star.
Orbits the Earth
Orbits Jupiter
Group Tabs¶
When multiple tab sets contain related content, the group-tab directive can be used to create group tabs:
.. tabs::
.. group-tab:: Linux
Linux tab content - tab set 1
.. group-tab:: Mac OSX
Mac OSX tab content - tab set 1
.. group-tab:: Windows
Windows tab content - tab set 1
.. tabs::
.. group-tab:: Linux
Linux tab content - tab set 2
.. group-tab:: Mac OSX
Mac OSX tab content - tab set 2
.. group-tab:: Windows
Windows tab content - tab set 2
Linux tab content - tab set 1
Mac OSX tab content - tab set 1
Windows tab content - tab set 1
Linux tab content - tab set 2
Mac OSX tab content - tab set 2
Windows tab content - tab set 2
The tab selection in these groups is synchronised, so selecting the ‘Linux’ tab of one tab set will open the ‘Linux’ tab contents in all tab sets on the current page.
If permitted by the user’s browser, the last selected group tab will be remembered when changing page in the current session. As such, if any tabsets on the next page contain a tab with the same label it will be selected.
Code Tabs¶
A common use of group tabs is to show code examples in multiple programming languages. The code-tab directive creates a group tab and treats the tab content as a code-block.
The first argument to a code-tab is the name of the language to use for code highlighting, while the optional second argument is a custom label for the tab. By default, the tab is labelled using the lexer name. The tab label is used to group tabs, so the same custom label should be used to group related tabs.
.. tabs::
.. code-tab:: c
C Main Function
.. code-tab:: c++
C++ Main Function
.. code-tab:: py
Python Main Function
.. code-tab:: java
Java Main Function
.. code-tab:: julia
Julia Main Function
.. code-tab:: fortran
Fortran Main Function
.. code-tab:: r R
R Main Function
.. tabs::
.. code-tab:: c
int main(const int argc, const char **argv) {
return 0;
}
.. code-tab:: c++
int main(const int argc, const char **argv) {
return 0;
}
.. code-tab:: py
def main():
return
.. code-tab:: java
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
}
}
.. code-tab:: julia
function main()
end
.. code-tab:: fortran
PROGRAM main
END PROGRAM main
.. code-tab:: r R
main <- function() {
return(0)
}
C Main Function
C++ Main Function
Python Main Function
Java Main Function
Julia Main Function
Fortran Main Function
R Main Function
int main(const int argc, const char **argv) {
return 0;
}
int main(const int argc, const char **argv) {
return 0;
}
def main():
return
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
}
}
function main()
end
PROGRAM main
END PROGRAM main
main <- function() {
return(0)
}
Code tabs support highlighting using custom syntax highlighters that have been loaded in the sphinx configuration. To use custom lexers, pass the lexers alias as the first argument of code-tab.
Note
Sphinx’s include directive does not work inside code-tab. Use tab or group-tab instead.